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View Full Version : Follow the Money ... Always!!!



Calz
9th August 2011, 02:03
The world is a stage and those that call the shots add to their immense wealth simply by knowing what will happen.

Remember all the "shorts" for related airline carriers right before 9/11???

Here is another example:


$1 Billion bet in July of US downgrade brings questions of insider information

In late July, a mystery investor or hedge fund made a nearly $1 Billion bet that the US would lose their AAA credit rating, and on August 5th when S&P issued its downrade to AA+, that investor now stands to make a return of 1000%, and leads to serious questions of who the mystery trader is, and did they have insider information well before hand.

In 1992, George Soros nearly destroyed the British Pound, and made a profit of $1 Billion by betting agains the currency. The British government had been propping up the Sterling for some time, and this led to a weakness that Soros was able to exploit when rejection of the Maastricht Treaty led to a massive devaulation of the Pound, and a huge profit for his bet.

That belief, or perhaps knowledge of events is very similar to the bet placed against the American credit rating just two weeks ago.


Someone dropped a bomb on the bond market Thursday – a $1 billion Armageddon trade betting the United States will lose its AAA credit rating.

In one moment, an invisible trader placed a single trade that moved the most liquid debt market in the world.

The massive trade wasn’t placed in bonds themselves; it was placed in the futures market.

The trade was for block trades of 5,370 10-year Treasury futures executed at 124-03 and 3,100 Treasury bond futures executed at 125-01.

The value of the trade was about $850 million dollars. In simple terms, if that was a direct bond buy, no one would be talking about it.

However, with the use of futures, you have to have margin capacity behind the trade. That means with a single push of a button someone was willing to commit more than $1 billion of real capital to this trade with expectations of a 10-to-1 return ratio. – ETF DAILY News
While the identity of the 'mystery investor' remains unknown, many indicators do point to George Soros as the principal benefactor. First, Soros has been tied to the Obama administration since the 2008 elections. In February of this year in fact, a Soros investment fund profited well on President Obama's new green energy policies. Secondly, right about the exact same time as the $1 Billion bet took place on the US credit rating downgrade, Soros made public the move to divest his management fund of outside investors, and quietly go private. This move allows him to make trades and investments without being required to notify the SEC under the new Dodd-Frank act passed in Congress last year.

http://www.examiner.com/finance-examiner-in-national/1-billion-bet-july-of-us-downgrade-brings-questions-of-insider-information#ixzz1UMBCDuNd

TWINCANS
9th August 2011, 02:18
By all laws that have ever governed stocks & bonds this is a blatant insider move and that's illegal. No loopholes should be allowed with this.
Nail the guy. Except who in authority has the courage?

norman
9th August 2011, 02:25
Well.....

I guess the guy who placed the short bet was also one of the guys who ripped the breast stripe off old uncle sam.


EDIT:

It's not even insider trading.

It's an Assualt.

However, considering all the stuff we know, it might even be a fake fight all together.

After all, isn't there a world plan to take down the dollar?

Ria
9th August 2011, 02:59
Now they have won the money who stumps up the cash?

Tane Mahuta
9th August 2011, 05:15
Now they have won the money who stumps up the cash?


The American taxpayer, & the rest of the nations of the world which economies are backed by the $US.

A Scam folks, it's a "fricken" Scam!!...Aint gonna last long thou!

nuff said

TM

Lost Soul
17th August 2011, 13:50
Like Webster Tarpley says, outlaw it. No more hedge funds or betting on potential losses.

Calz
17th August 2011, 15:15
Initially the futures markets were not a bad thing. They were used mostly by farmers as "insurance" of sorts against crop failure.

Things have changed dramatically over the years (although farmers can and do still use the markets).

Now you can trade futures on the most rediculous things ... really no more than a casino mechanism to steal money.