aedens wrote:Now we suffer in patience Higg. The central banks need to understand this. We are not the trip wire on affairs, they are.
Looking at the 10 year chart
of the gold silver ratio would lead me to think this is about May 2008 before the crash started.
There's another reason to think that. Today's leaked Wal-Mart e-mails are typically what has been seen at the tops
of other "Bernanke Bubbles" that also did not conform to economic reality. In this case, he had made a late attempt to reflate the 2007 bubble by slamming interest rates down, which sent oil prices skyrocketing to a peak
of $147 per barrel in 2008, killing the economy.
The S&P 500 index and Dow Jones industrials eked out gains on Monday as record oil prices boosted energy shares, but the Nasdaq slipped after a chipmaker's warning about consumer spending hurt technology shares.
But oil prices had a negative impact on the Nasdaq. After a sharp rise earlier in the session, semiconductor shares fell after the chief executive of Sandisk (SNDK.O), a supplier of memory chips, said higher energy costs would hurt consumer spending.
"Anytime you hear anything about consumer spending being soft that's going to affect the broader market," said Edward Bretschger, director of equity sales and trading at Calyon Securities in New York.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2008/05/ ... 5220080519
While the periphery breaks down rather slowly at first, the capital cities of the hegemon should collapse suddenly and violently.