Euro Currency Trust (FXE)

All Comments on FXE

  • commenter
    Sep 30 10:02 PM
    Rescuing the U.S. Dollar [view article]
    where's the IMF when we need them? Reply
  • commenter
    Sep 30 02:54 PM
    Profiting from the $700 Billion Bailout [view article]
    If the credit crisis is real why not get $700b by cutting 5% waste in each government department and slashing some of the lifetime benefits and goodies our inept leaders have awarded themselves? Most Americans have seen salaries and benefits cut, why not these clowns that allowed this mess to happen? Reply
  • commenter
    Sep 30 02:41 PM
    Eight ETFs to Preserve Your Wealth [view article]
    Deflation is on the way or we are in it..
    Too many things worth less then cash and cash in supply amounts under the number of nearly invaluable things..
    Cash, Gold and maybe muni-bonds..the end
    Reply
  • commenter
    Sep 30 11:12 AM
    Rescuing the U.S. Dollar [view article]
    Yep. Keep the credit markets open so we can continue to spend. We can get deeper into debt by borrowing our own tax dollars. What's left? Our productive assets, our homes, and our gold are all pawned off. Reply
  • commenter
    Sep 30 10:34 AM
    My Website
    European Finance Now Under Attack [view article]
    I am playing this by staying well clear of financial services until they have put in a bottom. No one knows how things will play out, so calling a bottom is more gambling and less investing -- unless, of course, you can get a sweetheart deal like JPM on the WaMu acquisition or like Warren Buffett at Goldmans. Reply
  • commenter
    Sep 29 09:38 PM
    Eight ETFs to Preserve Your Wealth [view article]
    You wrote VEU down 10.08% this year? Morningstar says -23%!
    quicktake.morningstar....
    Reply
  • commenter
    Sep 29 07:37 PM
    My Website
    Eight ETFs to Preserve Your Wealth [view article]
    THANK YOU
    DIEGOjames
    Reply
  • Rescuing the U.S. Dollar [view article]
    After seeing the movie IOUSA, and doing some government debt analysis, something has to give here, and I sure hope the foreign countries that own 50% of our debt will keep us around if the consumer/business slows, and remember we are a huge net importer of goods which is why we're being financed right?? www.distressedvolatili... Reply
  • commenter
    Sep 29 03:06 PM
    Rescuing the U.S. Dollar [view article]
    Well, it's mute now. The bail out, er, I mean buy in plan failed. We're in uncharted waters. We've been there before. There's rocks on the shore.

    If there were some way to let the banks fail and survive, I would vote for that. It was credit that got us in trouble. Remember the plethora of credit cards we all got in the mail?

    It seems kind of strange congress and Paulson wanted to give the banks our money so they could in turn lend it back to us so we can get deeper into debt...keeping the debt economy flowing.

    Why don't we just give each American half a million dollars and let them pay off their homes? Let the money trickle up for a change. There's an email going around to that effect and it's beginning to make sense.

    As for what it means for the dollar? Your guess is as good as any. But we need to take it in context. Europe is in trouble, too. So, let's see what happens to the troubled euro and pound.

    But, yes, the massive derivative market has inflated the dollar beyond Fed control.
    Reply
  • commenter
    Sep 29 01:09 PM
    Rescuing the U.S. Dollar [view article]
    "The US financial rescue will also calm the world’s financial markets and rescue the dollar"

    How will it rescue the dollar exactly? It's going to be a bit of a balancing act between saving our economy and inflating the hell out of the currency, isn't it?
    Reply
  • commenter
    Sep 29 01:08 PM
    Rescuing the U.S. Dollar [view article]
    You cannot tax people without jobs. If you try, you will have revolution, riots, and a burning white house.
    Hyperinflation is what is left.
    Reply
  • commenter
    Sep 29 12:59 PM
    Rescuing the U.S. Dollar [view article]
    The US should begin issuing debt free currency, and buy the banks that cannot survive without a cash injection.

    This includes the owners of the shares of the Federal Reserve System.
    Reply
  • commenter
    Sep 29 12:55 PM
    Rescuing the U.S. Dollar [view article]
    " As this crisis is one of bank confidence, the Federal rescue with its real relief for bank balance sheets, should succeed in restoring over time a functioning US market, if not in returning unbounded confidence. Banks will lend to each other and the normal round of electronic credit will gradually resume" -and the magic fairy will spread love all over the world and there will be peace- while Santa gives everyone money to buy new cars from GM and pay off their mortgages they cant afford and everbody will hold hands and sing "kumbaya " at the close of the bell on wall street in a month when the dow reaches a new high of 20,000-
    dose of reality 700 billion doesnt begin to touch the problem and once again the Fed and Paulson have underestimated the "housing problem" as they like to call it -this bailout may not even buy time at this point
    Reply
  • commenter
    Sep 29 12:54 PM
    Rescuing the U.S. Dollar [view article]
    With the deficit looming larger and larger and no possiblity of improvement anytime in the future our credit instruments have and will collapse worldwide.
    Super Inflation is on the horizon.
    The average guy on the street has felt nothing yet but watch out...
    the bread lines are coming...MarvinMBA
    Reply
  • commenter
    Sep 29 12:38 PM
    My Website
    Rescuing the U.S. Dollar [view article]
    "If investors begin to consider the unthinkable for US debt, then no amount of US economic growth will suffice to support the US dollar. If the world’s investors begin to reconsider US credit, this current crisis will have been like the earthquake that produces a tsunami five thousand miles away."

    Bingo. And look to see government collect aggressively from taxpayers over the next two years as foreigners stop subsidizing the debt. Main street was thrown to the wolves over four years ago. It's now going to be picked apart. There are consequences for this sort of behavior to a citizenship, but for now those in charge feel they have passed the baton to the next government who will receive the lion's share of blame. I am happy that database technology exists to remember the largest proliferators of this giant scam on it's own people, ever conducted in history.
    Reply