Bản tin VTV1.........gấp... gấp

Discussion in 'Thị trường chứng khoán' started by chuyenchemgio, Oct 5, 2010.

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6895 người đang online, trong đó có 262 thành viên. 09:14 (UTC+07:00) Bangkok, Hanoi, Jakarta
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  1. HaiLuaCK

    HaiLuaCK Thành viên này đang bị tạm khóa Đang bị khóa

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    Nếu đưa F319 cổ phần E sẽ làm giá đưa con này về giá ít nhất là 1xxx
  2. GBlock

    GBlock Super Moderator Staff Member

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    Chủ đề đã bị khóa với lý do: Done
  3. luckiemnam

    luckiemnam Thành viên gắn bó với f319.com

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    nếu tây mà đánh 03 phiên nữa như hôm nay thì

    mấy ông việt gian khoai lang có đủ hàng để đạp tt xuống nữa ko

    còn các ông bán khống thì tay nhặt lá chân đá ống bơ
  4. khachsan6868

    khachsan6868 Thành viên gắn bó với f319.com

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    Các bác chú ý, tiền đang chảy vào thị trường đang nổi nhiều vô kể, đang gây tâm lý hoang mang hoảng sợ ở các nươc ấy gồm:

    Brazil, Nam Hàn, Indo, Thailan, Thổ

    chính phủ các nước ây đang ra các biện pháp kiểm soát dòng tiền vào vì sợ nội tệ lên giá.

    Theo tôi nghĩ, bọn TÂY kì này nó chỉ cần quẳng thêm 1 TỈ obama LÀ MÌNH LÊN THẲNG CÁNH
  5. khachsan6868

    khachsan6868 Thành viên gắn bó với f319.com

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    Không hiểu bọn nó nghỉ gì, bán miệt mài thể nhỉ?^:)^^:)^^:)^
  6. cuchuoi2008

    cuchuoi2008 Thành viên gắn bó với f319.com

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    8g25 sáng nay có thằng nhắn tin khuyên mua vào vì một số mã cp rẻ hơn hồi Vni=420. Trên đời này làm gì có thằng lo cho túi tiền người khác nhỉ?
  7. khachsan6868

    khachsan6868 Thành viên gắn bó với f319.com

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    Currency Controls Rising Amid Korea Bank Audit, Brazil Taxes

    By David Yong - document.write(dateFormat(new Date(1286260413000),"mmm d, yyyy h:MM TT Z"));Oct 5, 2010 1:33 PM GMT+0700
    [​IMG]
    Policy makers are trying to limit inflows after the Korean won climbed 8 percent in the past three months to the strongest since May. Photographer: Tomohiro Ohsumi/Bloomberg



    Governments from South Korea to Brazil are stepping up attempts to control their currencies as investors pour a record amount of money into emerging markets.
    Regulators in Seoul will start an audit of lenders handling foreign-currency derivatives on Oct. 19 to curb volatility caused by capital flows, the finance ministry said today. Brazil doubled a tax it charges foreigners on investments in fixed- income securities to 4 percent yesterday. The yen fell the most in three weeks after the Bank of Japan cut benchmark interest rates and pledged 5 trillion yen ($60 billion) to buy bonds and other assets, having sold $25 billion worth of its own currency last month in the first intervention since 2004.
    Policy makers are trying to limit inflows after the Korean won climbed 8 percent in the past three months to the strongest since May and Brazil’s real gained 4.7 percent to a two-year high. Investors have plowed a record $49.4 billion into emerging-market stock funds this year and $39.5 billion into bond funds, EPFR Global data show. Pacific Investment Management Co., which manages more than $1 trillion, raised its holdings in developing-nation bonds to the most since 2008 in April.
    “The question remains to what extent can countries with floating exchange rates and open capital accounts prevent real appreciation in a world of massive capital flows,” said Kevin Gallagher, a professor at Boston University who has written reports on the issue for the United Nations. “The evidence shows that it can be done, at least in the short term.”
    World Bank President Robert Zoellick said yesterday he sees tensions arising from currency devaluations as nations seek to buoy their economies.
    Protect the Won
    The won plunged 0.7 percent to 1,130.58 per dollar, after yesterday reaching 1122.30 per dollar, the strongest level since May 5. The Bank of Korea and the Financial Supervisory Service audit will ensure banks are following controls on derivatives imposed in June.
    “Gains in the won were a bit fast,” Doh Boe Un, an official at the financial regulator who is involved in the audit, said in an interview in Seoul today. “We want to see the market stabilize and the measures are expected to curb volatility.”
    Brazil’s real fell 0.5 percent to 1.6979 per dollar yesterday, after touching a two-year high of 1.6735 on Oct. 1. Finance Minister Guido Mantega warned Sept. 27 of a “currency war,” saying the government will buy “excess dollars” in the market to limit the real’s appreciation. The government will double to 4 percent the tax it charges on foreigners to invest in the nation’s bonds, first introduced in October 2009. Foreigners held a record $9.2 billion of local debt in August.
    Japan Decision
    Brazil offers real interest rates of 8 percent to 9 percent, said Bill Gross, who manages the world’s biggest bond fund at Newport Beach, California-based Pimco. The won is representative of “strong emerging-market currencies to stand in contrast to the U.S. dollar,” he said in an interview today on Bloomberg Television’s “Surveillance Midday” with Tom Keene.
    The Bank of Japan today cut its benchmark rate to a range of zero to 0.1 percent, a move Governor Masaaki Shirakawa described as “comprehensive monetary easing.” It last cut the target rate to 0.1 percent from 0.3 percent in December 2008.
    “This shows a commitment by the Japanese authorities to do whatever they can at their disposal to not allow the yen to appreciate anymore and provide liquidity,” said Nader Naeimi, a Sydney-based strategist at AMP Capital Investors Ltd., which manages $85 billion.
    Weaker Yen
    The yen fell 0.4 percent to 83.72 to the dollar today, having recovered 2.5 percent from its weakest level after the nation intervened on Sept. 15. Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda told reporters in Tokyo today he is prepared to explain to Group of Seven counterparts Japan’s reasons for intervening.
    Japan sold 2.12 trillion yen ($25 billion) in the month through Sept. 28, after the yen strengthened to a 15-year high against the dollar, threatening the nation’s export-led recovery. The central bank may sell yen again at anytime, said Joseph Capurso, a foreign-exchange strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia in Sydney.
    The Taiwan dollar strengthened yesterday beyond NT$31 for the first time since August 2008, before erasing most of its gains in late trading because of suspected intervention. The central bank may have sold NT$20 billion ($642 million) or more to curb the currency’s rise, the Economic Daily News reported today, without saying where it got the information.
    The Bank of Thailand is still studying measures to help manage the appreciation of the baht, which reached a 13-year high of 30.08 per dollar yesterday, Director Wongwatoo Potirat told reporters in Bangkok today.

    Các bác dịch đi , tiền nhiều vô biên ấy!
  8. luckiemnam

    luckiemnam Thành viên gắn bó với f319.com

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    bọn chúng đang say xưa với chiến thắng và tự hào rằng ta là người hùng

    cầm lái cả thị trường ck vn ,thực chất đó là tính xấu của người vn

    luôn tự hào kiểu anh hùng rơm,lúc tỉnh ngộ ra thì người ta đã đi quá xa mình rồi[r2)]
  9. luckiemnam

    luckiemnam Thành viên gắn bó với f319.com

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    bác lại tiếng tung kủa em chịu[r2)]
  10. khachsan6868

    khachsan6868 Thành viên gắn bó với f319.com

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    đại khái là tiền đang chảy vào các thị trường đang nổi như điên, và Việtnam có thể là điểm đến lý tưởng của dòng tiền này, các chim lợn hãy cẩn trọng=))=))=))
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