Posts Tagged ‘investing’

22
Oct

Stocks open lower as investors watch earnings

   Posted by: Wei   in options

NEW YORK (AP) — Wall Street tumbled again Wednesday as investors again shifted their focus away from improving credit markets and fixated on worrisome corporate earnings that are raising fears of a deep and painful recession. The major indexes fell more than 1 percent, including the Dow Jones industrial average, which fell 280 points.

While reduced strains in world credit markets have eased some investors’ nervousness about the economy, market anxiety remains high as hundreds of companies this week release third-quarter earnings and in some cases fourth-quarter forecasts that offer a glimpse of the rough conditions that may lay ahead.
On Wednesday, commercial and personal property insurer Travelers Cos. said hurricane-related losses pushed third-quarter profit down 82 percent and forced it to lower its full-year forecast.

In other earnings, Wachovia Corp., which is being bought by Wells Fargo & Co., said it swung to a huge loss in the third quarter while the drug maker Merck & Co. said its quarterly profit fell 28 percent and that it would cut more than 10 percent of its work force.
In the first half-hour of trading, the Dow fell 279.25, or 3.1 percent, to 8,754.41. On Tuesday, the Dow retreated 231 points after forecasts from DuPont Co., Sun Microsystems Inc. and Texas Instruments Inc. raised fears that companies’ outlooks for the fourth quarter and beyond could signal a severe economic downturn.

Broader stock indicators also fell. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index fell 29.37, or 3.08 percent, to 925.68, and the Nasdaq composite index fell 30.01, or 1.77 percent, to 1,666.67.
Meanwhile, credit markets showed more signs of improvement after virtually freezing up last week. Bank-to-bank lending rates fell sharply overnight, indicating that credit is becoming easier to obtain. The London Interbank Offered Rate, or Libor, on three-month loans in dollars fell to 3.54 percent from 3.83 percent, dropping for an eighth straight day.

Post by wei
SOURCES : AP - Associated Press © weihongoei.com 2008 All rights reserved

11
Oct

The five-point rescue plan

   Posted by: Wei   in in english, options

The details of the five-poing rescue plan drawn up to stem the global financial crisis.
By Edmund Conway, Economics Editor
Last Updated: 11 Oct 2008

  • 1. Take decisive action using all available tools to support struggling financial institutions and prevent their failure.
  • 2. Take all necessary steps to unfreeze credit and money markets.
  • 3. Ensure that banks can raise capital from public as well as private sources, in sufficient amounts to re-establish confidence and permit them to continue lending to households and businesses.
  • 4. Ensure that savers’ deposit insurance and guarantee programs are robust so savers have confidence in the safety of their deposits.
  • 5. Take action, where appropriate, to restart the mortgage securitisation markets.

Post by wei
SOURCES : Telegraph.co.uk © weihongoei.com 2008 All rights reserved

s&p below 1000

Oct. 7 (Bloomberg)

U.S. stocks fell, sending the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index below 1,000 for the first time since 2003, on speculation banks and real-estate companies are running short of money as the credit crisis worsens.
Bank of America Corp. tumbled 26 percent after cutting its dividend in half and saying it plans to sell $10 billion in common stock to brace for a recession. Morgan Stanley, KeyCorp and JPMorgan Chase & Co. slid more than 10 percent as investors shrugged off signs the Federal Reserve will reduce interest rates. General Growth Properties Inc., a mall owner, plunged 42 percent on concern it won’t be able to repay debt.
The S&P 500 slid 60.66 points, or 5.7 percent, to 996.23, extending its 2008 tumble to 32 percent in the market’s worst yearly slump since 1937. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 508.39, or 5.1 percent, to 9,447.11, giving it a 29 percent retreat in 2008 that would also be the worst in 71 years. The Nasdaq Composite Index lost 5.8 percent to 1,754.88.

Read more…

Post by wei
SOURCES : Bloomberg © weihongoei.com 2008 All rights reserved

fraud streetThe planned $700bn bailout has outraged and appalled everyday Americans

It was the week that an angry Main Street finally fought back after a decade when the financial masters of Wall Street were seemingly invincible. As President George Bush looked straight into the television cameras last week and spelt out to the nation the economic peril facing America, the fury and fear were mounting in millions of homes.

‘Without immediate action by Congress, America could slip into a financial panic,’ Bush warned. He sketched out a scenario of failing banks and plunging share prices which would savage retirement plans and put millions out of work. It was a terrifying scenario. Having waged two wars that are not yet over, Bush faced the final legacy of his tumultuous two-term period in office: the possible collapse of the American economy.

But the action he was calling for stuck in the throats of the American people. The administration’s planned $700bn bail-out for the financial sector has outraged and appalled many on the country’s Main Streets. It has led to anger on the left of American politics, shocked at such aid to wealthy bankers when the millions of families losing their homes get little direct help. At the same time many on the right have expressed equal disbelief, watching in amazement as the previously free-marketeer Bush suddenly embarked on the biggest government intervention since the Great Depression.

The US media have turned on Wall Street like a pack of wolves. ‘Fraud Street,’ screamed the banner scrolling beneath the concerned features of Fox Business Network’s Liz Claman, who told viewers: ‘You know what? I think the American public deserves some answers.’ Time magazine declared that the nation’s current troubles were ‘the price of greed’. ‘Blame greed,’ echoed the Chicago Tribune

At the United Nations, an Australian reporter accosted the actor Michael Douglas during a press conference and demanded to know - with a straight face, mind you - whether he felt any responsibility for the crisis because he delivered the line ‘greed is good’ as the character Gordon Gekko in the film Wall Street. ‘Are you now saying, Gordon, that greed is not good?’ the reporter asked.

‘I’m not saying that,’ a bemused Douglas replied. ‘And my name is not Gordon. He’s a character I played 20 years ago.’

The huge bail-out plan has also fundamentally changed the battlefield of the American election, which is just five weeks away from deciding who will be the next president. The sheer scale of the economic crisis, and the enormous sums of taxpayers’ money demanded to sort it out, are the biggest game in town.

In the UK, the red mists of anger have been slower to appear but the frustration is emerging with millions of savers and shareholders in Bradford and Bingley recognising that it will become the latest high street bank to fall victim to the financial contagion that has its roots in sub-prime lending to poor American homebuyers. Gordon Brown, who had been in Washington conferring with Bush about the crisis, branded the past few years an ‘age of irresponsibility’ and demanded the banks stop behaving recklessly. Until recently, Brown and his Chancellor, Alistair Darling, had been boasting that the past decade was an era of unprecedented prosperity and stability, and the Prime Minister’s volte-face drew immediate accusations of hypocrisy from the Conservatives.

As the deadlock on Capitol Hill continued last week, it must have been painfully obvious to Brown that the consequences of failure would reverberate throughout the world financial system - and straight to the pockets of Britain’s homeowners. The cost of interbank lending on the London money markets has shot up, as shocked investors feared more banks could be at risk of going bust. Mortgage rates in the UK quickly followed, leaving thousands of homeowners struggling to find affordable finance.

Here in Britain, analysts believe the impact of the financial crisis on the real economy has only just begun to bite. But to millions of Americans, it seems as though the doomsday picture is already upon them, especially in crucial battleground states such as Ohio, Michigan and Pennsylvania, America’s former manufacturing heartland.

These are people like Ken Karasek. The 47-year-old union organiser in the city of Wilkes-Barre has lived all his life among the hardscrabble towns of eastern Pennsylvania. He has seen factory after factory close and jobs move overseas. He feels that the economic crisis of the past year has merely brought the rest of America up to speed with what has happened in his home patch for the past three decades, and he is angry that the government has been so quick to bail out Wall Street with hundreds of billions. ‘It disgusts me. I have seen huge plants close down all over this area. I have seen good union jobs go and get replaced by service jobs, like McDonalds or Wendy’s. Now we give all this money to Wall Street just like that?’ he protested.

The panic around the economy has infected the political system, upending traditional alliances, pushing Democrats closer to Bush’s plan and Republicans further away. It has created ructions in the race between Barack Obama and John McCain, seeing a dangerous game of political brinksmanship that ended with McCain suspending his campaign and rushing back to Washington.

The events which led to that astonishing twist began at 8.30am on Wednesday. Obama had placed the call to McCain, reaching out with the idea that the two rival candidates could draft a common statement on the financial crisis gripping America. Such a move was far from altruistic. A Washington Post poll that morning showed Obama opening up a nine-point lead in the race. The poll was perhaps the strongest sign that voters were beginning to decisively break for the Democrats. By reaching out to McCain across party divides, Obama could stamp his ownership on the economic issue and also appear as a unifying president-in-waiting.

McCain finally returned the call at 2.30pm that afternoon. The two men agreed in principle to a joint statement and McCain mentioned he was thinking of returning to Washington to address the crisis. He also suggested suspending Friday night’s first televised presidential debate. Obama, apparently, assumed McCain was not serious - but he misjudged his opponent. A few minutes later, McCain called a press conference, suspended his campaign and said he was heading back to the capital.

It was a high-stakes move, dictated by political needs of the moment. It showed leadership and his maverick streak that is always popular with swing voters, as McCain also struck a new populist tone, railing against the freewheeling excesses of the wealthy bankers who had caused the mess. But the plan had a huge risk, not least due to McCain’s long record of supporting deregulation and his close ties to big business. Voters are unlikely to see McCain as a convincing populist. ‘He has an uphill fight to persuade people that this is what he believes,’ said Professor Rogers Smith, a political scientist at the University of Pennsylvania.

Instead of following his lead, the Democrats slammed McCain for interfering in something about which he knew nothing. He returned to Washington, leading a train of reporters in his wake, though he had no meaningful appointments scheduled there. Bush himself rescued McCain, inviting him and Obama to a White House meeting which caused gridlock in Washington as competing motorcades darted around the White House. As predicted, it also derailed the bail-out plan, producing only partisan rancour. At one stage a frustrated Bush said: ‘If money isn’t loosened up, this sucker could go down.’ But even such frank language from the most powerful man in the world could not secure agreement.

Suddenly Republican politicians broke away from the plan, leaving only Democrats still willing to work on it. In an astonishing scene, Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson walked into a room where top Democrats were meeting. He got down on one knee before Speaker Nancy Pelosi and begged Democrats not to ‘blow up’ the deal. Pelosi and other Democrats furiously told Paulson that they blamed Republicans for the mess. ‘I know, I know,’ Paulson replied.

By Friday the meetings had begun again, seeking to rescue some of the plan or come up with a better alternative. But by that time the huge Washington Mutual bank had failed overnight, the biggest such event in US history - though even such a momentous collapse was relegated to almost an afterthought on the morning TV news shows. Bush again appeared before the TV cameras, vowing that a bail-out plan would be passed but offering nothing concrete as to what or when. The political theatre took on a rare tinge of humour when Gawker, the Manhattan media gossip website, declared Paulson a ‘hotty’ after digging up an old photo of him standing bare-chested on a beach brandishing a large fish. ‘Look at that chest,’ Gawker gushed. ‘The power of Paulson, indeed… Hank can bail us out any time.’

But in Wilkes-Barre, Ken Karasek and others at a rally for Obama’s running mate, Joe Biden, were not interested in Hank the Hunk’s manly musculature - they were just furious at being asked to pay for his extraordinary proposal.

Retired nurse Betty Daniels, wearing a baseball cap emblazoned with the words ‘Jesus is my boss’, was furious at the bail-out. ‘I feel angry. People are losing their homes. They are barely making enough money to feed their families. I would like to see that money go to those people, not banks who just wasted it,’ she said.

In an already distressed area such as Wilkes-Barre the impact of the economic crisis has been profound. Over the past year more businesses have closed and many homes have been lost as the mortgage crisis has reached out and cast people out of their houses.

When Biden took to the stage in front of the small crowd, he dished out lashings of angry politics which struck a chord with many of those present. Biden attacked Wall Street executives and a culture in Washington that had been too friendly to big business. ‘The wealthy and the powerful have a seat at the table and everybody else is on the menu,’ he said.

There were echoes of that populist mood in the UK, where the Archbishops of Canterbury and York intervened in the debate, describing City speculators as asset strippers and bank robbers. Only a few months ago the churchmen would have been ridiculed for their outbursts, but now there were even some in the Square Mile prepared to admit they have a point. Investment banker John Reynolds, chairman of the Ethical Investment Advisory Group (see right) said: ‘It is easy to see how abusive market practices have developed, harder to see why they have been allowed to grow unchecked by regulators. To avoid repeating the mistakes we need regulators to be more interested in understanding markets and politicians to be less in awe of money and less influenced by the seemingly munificent gestures of large companies seeking to show that they aren’t just greedy bastards - when in fact they are.’

The financial crisis has called into question a whole philosophy on both sides of the Atlantic: the so-called ‘Anglo-Saxon model’ of liberal capitalism which has dominated the US and the UK economies for 30 years, now with disastrous results.

Even Irwin Stelzer, Rupert Murdoch’s economic adviser, and arch-defender of free markets, admitted: ‘The day when that engine of capitalism, the financial market, will be allowed to operate more or less unimpeded by government, has passed.’ Veteran investor George Soros has argued that we are suffering the after-effects of a ’super bubble’ fuelled by decades of deregulation and hands-off economic management - and it is time for the political tide to turn.

The financial markets’ extraordinary ascendancy can be traced back to the Ronald Reagan-Margaret Thatcher era of the 1980s. They slashed controls on markets and set finance free. In 1986, a whole series of rules and restraints were abolished in one fell swoop, the ‘Big Bang’. For consumers up and down Britain, the liberation of the financial markets made it much easier to borrow. The days of queuing anxiously to see the bank manager, to persuade him to give the nod to a mortgage, or agree to an overdraft, were over. Owning shares was no longer the preserve of the wealthy few, sauntering to their brokers after lunch in a London club.

When the Berlin Wall fell in 1989, exposing the shattered state of the centrally planned Soviet economy, defenders of market freedom felt vindicated. It was, said one darling of the free-marketeers, Francis Fukuyama, ‘the end of history’ because the Cold War was over and the power of the market had triumphed.

During his decade as Chancellor, from 1997, Gordon Brown worked hard to keep the City on side, boasting of its competitiveness, and nurturing it with ‘light-touch’ regulation. But with the crisis-hit banks now forced into pleading for charity from the state, many observers are arguing that the financial firms have surrendered their right to demand an easy ride. One stunned City veteran trying to absorb the magnitude of Paulson’s plan said: ‘We’ve just turned the clock back on 25 years of Neanderthal capitalism.’

Already, the Treasury and the Federal Reserve are busily drawing up plans to tighten the rules on the level of assets banks must hold to secure their loans; and to ensure that financial regulators from different countries keep in closer contact. French President Nicolas Sarkozy has called for a global summit in November to rebuild the whole world financial and monetary system from scratch, saying: ‘The idea that markets are always right was a mad idea.’

Even if the Paulson plan is clinched without further delay, there is no hope of an imminent recovery either in the US or the UK. The pain for ordinary homeowners on Main Street USA is already being felt, and in Britain unemployment is rising quickly, and consumers are tightening their belts. Rosebys, the home furnishing chain, became the latest casualty in the retail sector on Friday, when it collapsed into administration, leaving its 2,000 staff uncertain about their future.

‘Folks, it’s not just finance,’ Citigroup economist Steven Wieting warned the world. ‘The recession bus left the station earlier this year.’

Additional reporting by James Doran, Elana Schor and Lisa Bachelor

Post by wei
SOURCES : guardian.co.uk » © weihongoei.com 2008 All rights reserved

4
Oct

Keynes and the Market

   Posted by: Wei   in books, in english, options

keynes and the marketKeynes and the Market: How the Worlds Greatest Economist Overturned Conventional Wisdom and Made a Fortune on the Stock Market 
Publisher: Wiley (October 6, 2008)
 

One of the most influential and unexpected economic luminaries of his time and the original value investor, John Maynard Keynes was a British economist whose ideas, called Keynesian economics, had a major impact on modern economic and political theory as well as on many governments’ fiscal policies. Keynes explored new economic thoughts through speculating heavily in foreign markets and becoming one of the first proponents of investing in common stocks. Keynes was a world-changing economist who, almost uniquely among his professional brethren, also mastered the financial markets in practice. His theories uncannily prefigure those of Warren Buffett and other well-known value investors. He is particularly remembered for advocating interventionist government policy, by which the government would use fiscal and monetary measures to aim to mitigate the adverse effects of economic recessions, depressions, and books. Economists consider him one of the main founders of modern theoretical macroeconomics.

This book sheds new light on both the personal and professional aspects of Keynes’ life that helped shape his economic theories, and in turn, those of today’s financial leaders by outlining Keynes’ 6 key investment principles. 

From the Inside Flap
John Maynard Keynes was a many-sided figure—world-changing economist, architect of the post-War international monetary system, bestselling author, a Baron in the House of Lords, and key member of the Bloomsbury group.

One of his lesser-known talents was the ability to make vast sums of money on the stock market. At the time of his death, Keynes’ net worth—almost entirely built through successful stock investments—amounted to the present-day equivalent of more than $30 million, and the college endowment fund he managed had massively outperformed the broader market over a two-decade period. Keynes was a member of that rare breed—an economist who flourished not only in the rarefied heights of ivory tower academia, but also amidst the bustle and hubbub of the financial markets.

But can an analysis of this particular incarnation of Keynes—the shrewd stock picker and star fund manager—be of any benefit to the modern investor? The answer, author Justyn Walsh demonstrates, is a resounding yes. In this era of day traders, delta ratios, and dot-coms, Keynes’ observations on stock market behavior, in fact, are more relevant than ever.

The author reveals how, after twice being brought to the precipice of financial ruin as a result of financial speculation, Keynes developed the investment principles that would win him singular stock market success. He completely inverted his investment philosophy, switching from short-term speculator to a long-term investor—one who seeks to profit from pendulum swings in the market rather than participating in them. By effecting this transformation, Keynes became one of the world’s first value investors, the forefather of a long line of venerable and highly successful stock market practitioners such as Warren Buffett and Sir John Templeton.

Keynes and the Market is an entertaining guide to John Maynard Keynes’ amazing stock market success, weaving the economist’s value investing tenets around key events in his richly lived life. Accessible and informative, it identifies what modern masters of the market have taken from Keynes and used in their own investing styles—and what you too can learn from one of the greatest economic thinkers of the twentieth century. 

keynes and the market

the new paradigm for financial markets
The New Paradigm for Financial Markets: The Credit Crisis of 2008 and What It Means (Hardcover)
Publisher: PublicAffairs (May 5, 2008) 

In the midst of the most serious financial upheaval since the Great Depression, legendary financier George Soros explores the origins of the crisis and its implications for the future. Soros, whose breadth of experience in financial markets is unrivaled, places the current crisis in the context of decades of study of how individuals and institutions handle the boom and bust cycles that now dominate global economic activity. “This is the worst financial crisis since the 1930s,” writes Soros in characterizing the scale of financial distress spreading across Wall Street and other financial centers around the world. In a concise essay that combines practical insight with philosophical depth, Soros makes an invaluable contribution to our understanding of the great credit crisis and its implications for our nation and the world.

Review

Tucson Citizen
“Brilliant…examines a complex problem with both insight and philosophical depth….A much-needed contribution that should help many of us better understand the great credit crisis and what it means, not just for the United States but the entire world.”
 
BBC Business editor Robert Peston
“Totally compelling”
 
The London Times “They’re wrong about oil, by George: In short, the standard economic assumption that supply and demand drive prices is only a starting point for understanding financial markets. In boom-bust cycles, the textbook theory is not just slightly inaccurate but totally wrong. This is the main argument made by George Soros in his fascinating book on the credit crunch, The New Paradigm for Financial Markets, launched at an LSE lecture last night.”
 
Reuters
“Soros says market rebound a bear-market rally: Billionaire hedge-fund manager George Soros said at LSE on Wednesday that the current rebound in stock markets is only a bear-market rally, because monetary authorities are unlikely to be able to handle the credit crisis.”

the new paradigm for financial markets

the snowball : warren buffett
The Snowball: Warren Buffett and the Business of Life
Publisher: Bantam (September 29, 2008) 

Here is THE book recounting the life and times of one of the most respected men in the world, Warren Buffett. The legendary Omaha investor has never written a memoir, but now he has allowed one writer, Alice Schroeder, unprecedented access to explore directly with him and with those closest to him his work, opinions, struggles, triumphs, follies, and wisdom. The result is the personally revealing and complete biography of the man known everywhere as “The Oracle of Omaha.”

Although the media track him constantly, Buffett himself has never told his full life story. His reality is private, especially by celebrity standards. Indeed, while the homespun persona that the public sees is true as far as it goes, it goes only so far. Warren Buffett is an array of paradoxes. He set out to prove that nice guys can finish first. Over the years he treated his investors as partners, acted as their steward, and championed honesty as an investor, CEO, board member, essayist, and speaker. At the same time he became the world’s richest man, all from the modest Omaha headquarters of his company Berkshire Hathaway. None of this fits the term “simple.”

When Alice Schroeder met Warren Buffett she was an insurance industry analyst and a gifted writer known for her keen perception and business acumen. Her writings on finance impressed him, and as she came to know him she realized that while much had been written on the subject of his investing style, no one had moved beyond that to explore his larger philosophy, which is bound up in a complex personality and the details of his life. Out of this came his decision to cooperate with her on the book about himself that he would never write.

Never before has Buffett spent countless hours responding to a writer’s questions, talking, giving complete access to his wife, children, friends, and business associates—opening his files, recalling his childhood. It was an act of courage, as The Snowball makes immensely clear. Being human, his own life, like most lives, has been a mix of strengths and frailties. Yet notable though his wealth may be, Buffett’s legacy will not be his ranking on the scorecard of wealth; it will be his principles and ideas that have enriched people’s lives. This book tells you why Warren Buffett is the most fascinating American success story of our time.

the new paradigm for financial markets

28
Sep

DeMark Indicators

   Posted by: Wei   in books, in english, options

DeMark Indicators (Bloomberg Market Essentials: Technical Analysis) (Hardcover)
Publisher: Bloomberg Press (September 28, 2008)
 

Long a secret weapon for the hedge-fund elite, says Trader Monthly, the DeMark Indicators are now used by more than 35,000 traders. This book provides an easy-to-follow system for using the indicators to identify market turns as they happen. 

Author Jason Perl gives a concise introduction to thirty-nine of the DeMark Indicators, and then shows how to combine the indicators and time frames to achieve a higher probability of trading success.  

Thomas R. DeMark, the creator of the DeMark Indicators and one of the most well-respected practitioners of technical analysis wrote the Foreword to this book.   
 

This is the second book in the Bloomberg Market Essentials: Technical Analysis series, which covers the key elements of the most widely used technical analysis tools.  

Review
“Having observed his market calls real time over the years, I can say that Jason Perl’s application of the DeMark indicators distinguishes his work from industry peers when it comes to market timing. This book demonstrates how traders can benefit from his insight, using the studies to identify the exhaustion of established trends or the onset of new ones. Whether you’re fundamentally or technically inclined, Perl’s DeMark Indicators is an invaluable trading resource.”
– Leon G. Cooperman, chairman, Omega Advisors

“Jason Perl has created a trading primer that will help both the professional and the layman interpret the DeMark indicators, which I believe represent the most robust and powerful methods to track securities and establish timely investment positions. Think of DeMark Indicators as the Rosetta stone of market-timing technology.”
– John Burbank, founder and CIO, Passport Capital

“Jason Perl has taken the playbook from the market’s John Wooden, Tom DeMark, and translated it engagingly in a format that traders of all levels will appreciate. As one who has used these indicators for more than twenty years, I too am appreciative of Jason’s clarity.”
– Peter Borish, chairman and CEO, Computer Trading Corporation

“Jason Perl is the trader’s technician. DeMark indicators are a difficult subject matter, but Jason shows simply how the theory can be applied practically to markets. Whether you’re day-trading or taking medium-term positions, using the applications can only be of increased value.”
– David Kyte, founder, Kyte Group Limited

“Tom DeMark, the man whose work inspired this book, is a unique, interesting, and ofttimes iconoclastic technical analyst. Simply put, he thinks about the markets differently from the way you or I do. So why should you read this book? Because, having read it, you will almost certainly think about the markets and technical analysis differently.”
– John Bollinger, CFA, CMT, www.BollingerBands.com

Jason Perl has taken the playbook from the market s John Wooden, Tom DeMark, and translated it engagingly in a format that traders of all levels will appreciate. As one who has used these indicators for more than twenty years, I too am appreciative of Jason s clarity.
–Peter Borish, Chairman and CEO, Computer Trading Corporation

Jason Perl is the trader’s technician. DeMark Indicators are a difficult subject matter, but Jason shows simply how the theory can be applied practically to markets. Whether you’re day-trading or taking medium-term positions, using the applications can only be of increased value.
–David Kyte, Founder, Kyte Group Limited 

the new paradigm for financial markets

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