Trump Presidency and the Consequences

How's this as a piece of childhood wisdom from one of our 12-year-old members in the extended family who is taking a serious interest in politics -

This young man has been following the United States political scene and has come up with the following hypothesis regarding the possibility of the President being assassinated. His considered opinion is that Donald Trump is unlikely to be assassinated because all the idiots who would do that sort of thing, have in fact, voted for him and therefore he is reasonably protected at the moment.

(Perhaps I should get him to come and help me with trading?)

http://www.breitbart.com/texas/2016/07/07/report-cops-shot-dallas-protest/

Live coverage from Breitbart News of the coordinated attack on police in Dallas, Texas. All times CDT.
*** TOP UPDATES ***
Slain officer "just wanted to make a positive difference"
• Five police officers killed, seven wounded in Dallas, Texas ambush attack
• One suspect killed, three in custody… Police: Potentially more
• Police: Suspect said he wanted to kill white people
• Black Lives Matter protesters celebrated and taunted officers after the attack
• Trump cancels rally: “We must restore law and order… Our nation has become too divided.”
• Slain suspect identified as Micah Xavier Johnson, 25, a former Army Reservist
• Investigators change course, claim Johnson acted alone
micah-xavier-johnson-640x480.jpg
 
North Korea will need to be dealt with sooner or later. Monitoring, sanctions and isolationism are only holding tactics, but they seem to be digging their heels in, getting worse and showing no signs of reforming. As for action, probably now a question of when not if.


Makes one wonder, why Trump is so tuffty against the Mexicans, 6/7 muslim countries, Iran and Russia when they are no threat and then there is N.Korea firing missiles in her direction?

Let's take time out to figure...


China can deal with her mess in her back yard. Everybody knows without China, N.Korea is FA.

Moreover, I reckon N.Korea is just killing of her own population keeping them in almost starving subsistence levels. What can anyone do against N.Korea? Her people hate their leader more than the West that I'm sure of. It will become a scab on glowing China's ascendance and she will have to deal with NK sooner or later.

China will also have to deal with fall out if it steps out of line and that's in our interest to a large extent.



Personally, I'd let sleeping dogs lie. If you want to stir sh1t with a stick go ahead, knock your selves out ;)
 
Makes one wonder, why Trump is so tuffty against the Mexicans, 6/7 muslim countries, Iran and Russia when they are no threat and then there is N.Korea firing missiles in her direction?

Let's take time out to figure...


China can deal with her mess in her back yard. Everybody knows without China, N.Korea is FA.

Moreover, I reckon N.Korea is just killing of her own population keeping them in almost starving subsistence levels. What can anyone do against N.Korea? Her people hate their leader more than the West that I'm sure of. It will become a scab on glowing China's ascendance and she will have to deal with NK sooner or later.

China will also have to deal with fall out if it steps out of line and that's in our interest to a large extent.



Personally, I'd let sleeping dogs lie. If you want to stir sh1t with a stick go ahead, knock your selves out ;)

Your flawed reasoning could be applied to the Obama administration just as easily to ask why he was pursuing his social justice warrior agenda instead of solely focusing on greater immediate threats like North Korea.


http://dailycaller.com/2017/03/04/the-pentagons-been-secretly-hacking-kim-jong-uns-missiles/

The U.S. is reportedly engaging in a cyber warfare campaign against North Korea’s missile program.
 
CEO Darren Woods announces #GrowingTheGulf expansion program: 45k+ jobs, $20B investment in America. #CERAWeek http://www.exxonmobil.com/growingthegulf

More high paying jobs, thanks to Trump. Exxon Mobil confirmed today that this investment is a direct result of new policies in effect. (y)(y)(y)

http://news.exxonmobil.com/press-re...0-billion-expand-manufacturing-us-gulf-region

"New projects expected to create more than 45,000 high-paying jobs across the region and thousands more through multiplier effect(...)Importantly, Growing the Gulf also creates jobs and lasting economic benefits for the communities where they’re located,” Woods said. “All told, we expect these 11 projects to create over 45,000 jobs. Many of these are high-skilled, high-paying jobs averaging about $100,000 a year. And these jobs will have a multiplier effect, creating many more jobs in the communities that service these new investments.”

Peter
 
Makes one wonder, why Trump is so tuffty against the Mexicans, 6/7 muslim countries, Iran and Russia when they are no threat and then there is N.Korea firing missiles in her direction?

Because Trump peeps don't care about N Korea. They can't even find it on a map.

Of course, they can't find Iran, either. :(
 
Trump on, Trump off’ (TOTO) is the new ‘risk on, risk off’.:LOL:




It was a strange trading session yesterday, with S&P 500 and Dow futures trading lower through Asian trade without any really clear smoking gun. However, Asian equities actually deviated and were largely supported.

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Chris Weston

Chris Weston g+ ChrisWeston_IG
Market Analyst, Melbourne

Tuesday 07 March 2017 07:30
Market Data
Source: Bloomberg

Some attributed this weakness in US futures to the reported North Korea missile test, others to the weekend news that Donald Trump was acting ‘less presidential’ by accusing Barack Obama of tapping his phones’, without any real immediate evidence. It’s amazing that markets have given these sort of accusations such little genuine concern, given the magnitude of the allegations. It almost seems traders are comfortable with almost anything Trump says these days. What we do like, judging by the strong rally last Wednesday (of 1.3%), was when he sticks to an autocue and a script; then the market will reward him with a renewed feel-good factor. This is when he sounds presidential and confidence flourishes through markets.

‘Trump on, Trump off’ (TOTO) is the new ‘risk on, risk off’.

In an overnight trading session devoid of any major market moving news, there has been very low ranges in prices across multiple financial markets. The focus has been on Trump’s second attempt at pushing through the controversial travel ban. By all accounts, it bans travellers from similar regions as the first and rejected attempt with the exception of Iraq. Again, this story is not really one for markets to be concerned with, but it highlights the lack of news focus in the session.

Aside from Trump, there has been some good buying of Japanese yen, which one could interpret as giving the trading session somewhat of a negative bias. There has also been a turn of focus from the trading community on whether the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) - at 2.30pm ADST today - move to a modestly more hawkish setting and acknowledge the improvement in global economics. It’s interesting to note that on one hand the swaps market are pricing in 13 basis points of tightening over the coming 12 months. In simplistic terms (i.e. not taking into consideration time value) there is a 52% chance of one rate hike over the coming 12 months, so the market is of the view that the argument should be when the RBA hike rates, not cut.

However, if we look at inflation expectations in the Aussie bond market, we can see five-year inflation expectations have dropped from around 1.93% in January to sit at 1.68%. This is interesting as the US and European inflation expectations have actually been increasing of late, while Aussie generic Aussie bonds yields have stayed firm.

It suggests to me that the RBA should err on the side of caution for now and clearly not signal a bias to tighten policy. However, they should maintain its recent adopted optimistic setting. They can be more upbeat on key commodity exports, especially as we head into a seasonally strong period for the likes of iron ore. However, a number of commodity analysts have suggested the wheels could fall off as we head into the second half of the year, especially HSBC who recently put out a note suggesting ‘iron ore is set for a massive fall this year’.

Watch the Aussie fixed income market today on the RBA’s narrative, and naturally the AUD will be especially sensitive to any changes in outlook. AUD/USD has traded in a tight range on the session of $0.7571 to $0.7610, with price struggling to break back above the 7 February low and we can see some indecision from market participants. On the USD side of the ledger, I think it’s important to also point out that the USD is missing a short-term catalyst (that could push AUD/USD lower), with a hike at next week’s Federal Reserve meeting almost fully priced in.

We can also see some weakness creeping into the commodity complex, with copper down 1.6%, while iron ore and steel futures are 1.7% and 0.8% lower respectively. We can certainly put iron ore futures on the radar, with price trending lower and since the peak on the 21 February we have seen price trade above the prior day's high, only for the sellers to smack the price back down. Is this the start of something more sinister or is the pullback of the bulls needed within a bullish longer-term trend? This argument needs to be resolved and will be interesting viewing.

It’s worth highlighting that even though the materials sector had a strong day yesterday, it suggests those who bought yesterday may be somewhat disappointed. If we use BHP’s ADR (which is currently down 2%) as a proxy, then the fact that the SPI futures are down a mere four points suggests that if there is any weakness in the miners, we should see signs of stability in the bank's staples and utilities.
 
Because Trump peeps don't care about N Korea. They can't even find it on a map.

Of course, they can't find Iran, either. :(

That's all you have?
Nothing to say about about the good things Trump is doing...:whistling
because he is fulfilling many campaign promises, even those you don't like
(y):clap:

Peter
 
Because Trump peeps don't care about N Korea. They can't even find it on a map.

Of course, they can't find Iran, either. :(

They will probably notice N. Korea a bit more when they get Hawaii in range or even Los Angeles.
Interesting how mighty empires have been humbled by the most unlikely foes. To name some:-
Afghanistan has humbled Britain, Russia and the USA
Iran humbled the Roman empire.

Will the foolish ever learn the obvious ? I doubt it.
 
They will probably notice N. Korea a bit more when they get Hawaii in range or even Los Angeles.
Interesting how mighty empires have been humbled by the most unlikely foes. To name some:-
Afghanistan has humbled Britain, Russia and the USA
Iran humbled the Roman empire.

Will the foolish ever learn the obvious ? I doubt it.

All of your historical examples are foolishly glib oversimplifications or obviously factually incorrect when compared to better examples of decisive wars leading to turning points in the history of "mighty" empires.
 
All of your historical examples are foolishly glib oversimplifications or obviously factually incorrect when compared to better examples of decisive wars leading to turning points in the history of "mighty" empires.

Non educandi stulti
 
"Nearly 70 percent of Americans said a Trump presidency would make them 'anxious.' And 30 percent said a Trump presidency would make them 'Canadian.'" –Conan O'Brien
*:LOL:
So much for banana republics based on ...............greed, graft and hot air.
 
"Nearly 70 percent of Americans said a Trump presidency would make them 'anxious.' And 30 percent said a Trump presidency would make them 'Canadian.'" –Conan O'Brien
*:LOL:
So much for banana republics based on ...............greed, graft and hot air.

Income inequality grew at its highest rate under Obama in the US, the Trump obsession is a great way to legitimize and deflect the corruption of recent previous Presidents, but Obama talked about how important hope is so I guess he deserves a free pass.

http://www.counterpunch.org/2016/02...-has-increased-and-poverty-levels-are-higher/
 
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