Thursday, 26 April 2018
Monday, 23 April 2018
Monday, 9 April 2018
The future remains brighter than ever despite of social unrest due to tough economic times around the world
'Satoshi
Nakamoto knew that governments and central banks are artificially constructed
TTP (trusted third party) monopolies which was the inspiration behind bitcoin
when he wrote "“I’ve been working on a new electronic cash system
that’s fully peer-to-peer, with no trusted third party.” This is
arguably the greatest invention in the history of humanity, not just because
it propels existing paradigms into a much higher order of efficiency, but
because it frees people from the shackles of government. It therefore comes
as no surprise that the migration of top minds from their respective
professions into the blockchain space well exceeds the migration witnessed
during the internet boom in the 1990s.
The issue at hand is that different systems of government offer varying levels of freedoms but eventually devolve into concentrating power into the hands of the few who then use financial, judicial, and military means to control the many. The US is an oligarchy as is the UK and Canada even though on the surface they say otherwise. Such power structures could not exist under a decentralized form of government. Such decentralized governance would truly empower the individual far greater than any other system of government, past or present. The future remains brighter than ever despite amplified levels of social unrest due to tough economic times around the world'
The issue at hand is that different systems of government offer varying levels of freedoms but eventually devolve into concentrating power into the hands of the few who then use financial, judicial, and military means to control the many. The US is an oligarchy as is the UK and Canada even though on the surface they say otherwise. Such power structures could not exist under a decentralized form of government. Such decentralized governance would truly empower the individual far greater than any other system of government, past or present. The future remains brighter than ever despite amplified levels of social unrest due to tough economic times around the world'
Monday, 2 April 2018
An important trading session tomorrow.
The second quarter got off to an unpleasant start for the bulls, as the S&P 500 sank by more than 2% to close near the interim lows logged on Feb. 8, setting up an important session tomorrow with either a bounce or fresh lows.
Sunday, 1 April 2018
Thursday, 22 March 2018
Today, stocks were hammered, with the S&P 500 breaking to fresh lows into the bell to finish more than 2.5% in the red.
Treasurys were bid across the board to leave yields sharply lower. The dollar trended higher throughout the day to reverse overnight weakness. The VIX jumped by more than 30%, and settled above 24, its highest close since the immediate aftermath of the short-vol-blowup on Feb. 13.
Tuesday, 20 March 2018
Saturday, 17 March 2018
“Money of the mind is the broadest definition of money. It’s bounded only by the imagination.”
Bitcoin, which traded at less than $1,000 and nearly $20,000 at different points last year, has generally remained in a $7,000 to $11,000 per coin range in recent weeks. Bloomberg notes that the narrower trading range has coincided with waning public interest:
Internet searches for ‘Bitcoin’ have plunged . . . Online searches for ‘bitcoin’ fell 82 percent from December highs, according to Google Trends. Tweets that mention the coin peaked Dec. 7, at 155,600, and are now down to about 63,000, BitInfoCharts says. And the number of bitcoin transactions is off 60 percent from its record on Dec. 13, according to Blockchain.info.
Monday, 12 March 2018
market observations
While the global economy runs on QE-fumes suggesting growth, the economic engine seems to be, in reality, running on a couple cylinders in great need of an overhaul while central banks continue to pour fuel into the tank hoping for some continued measure of progress. Since 2016, major averages have corrected beyond a few percent just once. The fast bounce back to new highs suggests global QE will win the tug-o-war vs. higher rates in the U.S.
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