Weiss jemand schon was Alan G. heute gesagt hat? - 500 Beiträge pro Seite
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Weiss jemand schon was Alan G. heute gesagt hat?
...am besten garnichts. Der haut sonst nur wieder die Technologiewerte in den Keller...
Nö, anscheinend nix Negatives, denn die NASDAQ liegt mal grade so ein halbes Prozent im Minus und der DJ sogar leicht im Plus.
Karl
Nö, anscheinend nix Negatives, denn die NASDAQ liegt mal grade so ein halbes Prozent im Minus und der DJ sogar leicht im Plus.
Karl
Psssst, er spricht doch gerade. Jetzt Fragerunde.
Kurz: Technologische Revolution muss solange wie möglich weitergehen, scheisse dass er ja bald gehen muss, danke an bill clinton, zu hohe Zinsen sind nicht genug für die Wirtschaft(!!!)
MfG MRR
Kurz: Technologische Revolution muss solange wie möglich weitergehen, scheisse dass er ja bald gehen muss, danke an bill clinton, zu hohe Zinsen sind nicht genug für die Wirtschaft(!!!)
MfG MRR
Soviel ich gehört habe, ist die Rede wegen eines Schneechaos in den USA vertagt worden...
RALO
RALO
sollte heissen sind nicht gut statt genug
Vertagt ja, aber soweit ich weiss von gestern auf heute.
Greenspan Says Fed`s Chief Goal Is to Curb Inflation for Continued Growth
By Michael McKee
U.S. Economy: Greenspan Says Fed`s Chief Goal Is Low Inflation
Washington, Jan. 26 (Bloomberg) -- Federal Reserve officials
have learned from past mistakes that maintaining price stability
is the main contribution a central bank can make to economic
prosperity, Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan said.
While members of the Fed`s Board of Governors and its policy-
setting Open Market Committee often disagree in analyzing the
economy, there is no dispute over ``goals and objectives,``
Greenspan told members of the Senate Banking Committee.
``Our challenge in monetary policy is to foster, as best we
can, the financial conditions that will allow this economic
expansion and technological revolution to continue as long, and as
vigorously as possible,`` Greenspan said in the text of opening
remarks at his confirmation hearing for a fourth term as Fed
chairman.
With the current U.S. economic expansion in its ninth year
and on track to become the longest on record in February, most
members of Congress see today`s hearing as little more than an
opportunity to urge Greenspan`s early confirmation.
In his text, Greenspan did not discuss the current U.S.
economy or the specifics of monetary policy, sticking to a general
defense of the Fed`s anti-inflation philosophy.
``Experience has demonstrated that an essential ingredient in
this prosperity, and an ingredient for which the central bank has
ultimate responsibility over the long run, is low and stable
inflation,`` he said.
Certainly Greenspan`s Fed has accomplished that. Over the
past three years annual consumer price inflation has been below 3
percent, the first time that`s happened since the early 1960s.
Fed officials have learned that the economic philosophy that
held sway over the past few decades -- that a little inflation was
useful in helping boost growth -- was wrong, he said. Once the
inflation genie is out of the bottle it`s hard to control.
`Learned From Mistakes`
The nation`s central bankers ``have learned from our past
mistakes,`` Greenspan said. ``And I hope that we will recognize
the new misjudgments we will inevitably make quickly enough to
prevent them from becoming too serious and disruptive.``
So far, so good. The Greenspan Fed has enjoyed good fortune
during his 12 years at the helm, he said. ``Dealing with the
challenges of a pickup in innovation and productivity is decidedly
more enjoyable than the task faced by our predecessors in the
1970s,`` when rising unemployment and rising inflation --
stagflation -- held sway, Greenspan said.
``The marked pickup in technological innovation has
accelerated productivity and raised standards of living for many
-- though regrettably, not all -- Americans,`` he said.
One important lesson the Fed has learned is the need to
explain to the public what the Fed is doing, and why, he said.
During his term Fed officials have begun announcing changes in
monetary policy as soon as they are made, along with explanations
for the changes.
Public Statements
The most recent change has been public announcement of the
FOMC`s so-called bias, the members feelings about the most likely
future course of economic policy. Fed officials were forced to
modify that policy recently when too many investors took the bias
as a promise of Fed action, rather than guidance on potential
future action.
Opening up the Fed ``has not always been a straightforward
process, in which the consequences of each step could be readily
predicted, but it is one that must continue,`` Greenspan said.
Just yesterday, Majority Leader Trent Lott called for
Greenspan`s quick confirmation by the Senate. Previously, Lott has
said he sees no roadblocks to a fourth four-year stint for
Greenspan, whose current term expires June 20. This is the second
time Clinton, a Democrat, has nominated Greenspan, a Republican,
to head the nation`s central bank.
The 73-year-old Fed chairman has guided the central bank
``with a rare combination of technical expertise, sophisticated
analysis and old-fashioned common sense,`` President Bill Clinton
said in nominating Greenspan to another term.
Greenspan praised his colleagues and members of the Fed`s
staff, looking to dispel the idea that he alone guides U.S.
monetary policy. ``A broad consensus`` drives Fed decisions,
Greenspan said. ``But forming that consensus involves considerable
give and take, with many people influencing the outcome.``
Appointed by Reagan
First appointed by President Ronald Reagan, Greenspan took
office on Aug. 11, 1987, two months before the Dow Jones
Industrial Average posted its largest percentage decline ever.
He steered the economy through that crisis and has presided
over an unprecedented period of growth and low inflation. He kept
markets calm and the economy rolling through the savings and loan
debacle of the late-1980s and the Mexican peso collapse in 1994-
95.
In his third term, however, Greenspan faced the greatest
crisis of his tenure at the Fed, the global economic slowdown
triggered by the 1997 Asian currency crisis. Rejecting forecasts
of imminent recession for the U.S., the Greenspan Fed held
interest rates steady as the economy instead picked up speed.
After Russia defaulted in August, 1998, however, financial
markets in the U.S., and around the world, all but froze as
investors shunned risk. Greenspan and his colleagues moved quickly
to cut interest rates three times. The overnight bank lending rate
-- the economy`s benchmark rate -- was reduced a total of 75 basis
points, to 4.75 percent, including the first inter-meeting change
in interest rates in four years.
`Stellar Performance`
``It was a stellar performance. He seemed to understand very
quickly the significance of the problems in the financial
markets,`` said Steve Slifer, chief economist at Lehman Brothers
in New York. ``Their quick action averted what could have been a
disaster.``
Greenspan was born on March 6, 1926, in New York City. He
graduated summa cum laude with a B.S. in economics from New York
University in 1948, going to earn a masters in economics in 1950,
and a Ph.D. in economics in 1977.
Before coming to the Fed, Greenspan was chairman and
president of economic consulting firm Townsend-Greenspan & Co.
Inc. He also served as chairman of President Ford`s Council of
Economic Advisers from 1974 to 1977, before chairing the National
Commission on Social Security Reform from 1981 to 1983.
Prior to his government service Greenspan served as a
corporate director for Aluminum Company of America (Alcoa);
Automatic Data Processing, Inc.; Capital Cities/ABC, Inc.; General
Foods, Inc.; J.P. Morgan & Co., Inc.; Morgan Guaranty Trust
Company of New York; Mobil Corporation; and The Pittston Company.
Greenspan is a devoted tennis player and a fixture on
Washington`s social scene. He`s a disciple of free-market novelist
Ayn Rand, and for several years in his youth, a professional jazz
musician.
``I played tenor saxophone, clarinet and bass clarinet. If I
were a lot better I would probably be still doing that at the
moment,`` Greenspan told the House Banking Committee on Feb. 11,
1999.
Greenspan is married to NBC News correspondent Andrea
Mitchell.
By Michael McKee
U.S. Economy: Greenspan Says Fed`s Chief Goal Is Low Inflation
Washington, Jan. 26 (Bloomberg) -- Federal Reserve officials
have learned from past mistakes that maintaining price stability
is the main contribution a central bank can make to economic
prosperity, Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan said.
While members of the Fed`s Board of Governors and its policy-
setting Open Market Committee often disagree in analyzing the
economy, there is no dispute over ``goals and objectives,``
Greenspan told members of the Senate Banking Committee.
``Our challenge in monetary policy is to foster, as best we
can, the financial conditions that will allow this economic
expansion and technological revolution to continue as long, and as
vigorously as possible,`` Greenspan said in the text of opening
remarks at his confirmation hearing for a fourth term as Fed
chairman.
With the current U.S. economic expansion in its ninth year
and on track to become the longest on record in February, most
members of Congress see today`s hearing as little more than an
opportunity to urge Greenspan`s early confirmation.
In his text, Greenspan did not discuss the current U.S.
economy or the specifics of monetary policy, sticking to a general
defense of the Fed`s anti-inflation philosophy.
``Experience has demonstrated that an essential ingredient in
this prosperity, and an ingredient for which the central bank has
ultimate responsibility over the long run, is low and stable
inflation,`` he said.
Certainly Greenspan`s Fed has accomplished that. Over the
past three years annual consumer price inflation has been below 3
percent, the first time that`s happened since the early 1960s.
Fed officials have learned that the economic philosophy that
held sway over the past few decades -- that a little inflation was
useful in helping boost growth -- was wrong, he said. Once the
inflation genie is out of the bottle it`s hard to control.
`Learned From Mistakes`
The nation`s central bankers ``have learned from our past
mistakes,`` Greenspan said. ``And I hope that we will recognize
the new misjudgments we will inevitably make quickly enough to
prevent them from becoming too serious and disruptive.``
So far, so good. The Greenspan Fed has enjoyed good fortune
during his 12 years at the helm, he said. ``Dealing with the
challenges of a pickup in innovation and productivity is decidedly
more enjoyable than the task faced by our predecessors in the
1970s,`` when rising unemployment and rising inflation --
stagflation -- held sway, Greenspan said.
``The marked pickup in technological innovation has
accelerated productivity and raised standards of living for many
-- though regrettably, not all -- Americans,`` he said.
One important lesson the Fed has learned is the need to
explain to the public what the Fed is doing, and why, he said.
During his term Fed officials have begun announcing changes in
monetary policy as soon as they are made, along with explanations
for the changes.
Public Statements
The most recent change has been public announcement of the
FOMC`s so-called bias, the members feelings about the most likely
future course of economic policy. Fed officials were forced to
modify that policy recently when too many investors took the bias
as a promise of Fed action, rather than guidance on potential
future action.
Opening up the Fed ``has not always been a straightforward
process, in which the consequences of each step could be readily
predicted, but it is one that must continue,`` Greenspan said.
Just yesterday, Majority Leader Trent Lott called for
Greenspan`s quick confirmation by the Senate. Previously, Lott has
said he sees no roadblocks to a fourth four-year stint for
Greenspan, whose current term expires June 20. This is the second
time Clinton, a Democrat, has nominated Greenspan, a Republican,
to head the nation`s central bank.
The 73-year-old Fed chairman has guided the central bank
``with a rare combination of technical expertise, sophisticated
analysis and old-fashioned common sense,`` President Bill Clinton
said in nominating Greenspan to another term.
Greenspan praised his colleagues and members of the Fed`s
staff, looking to dispel the idea that he alone guides U.S.
monetary policy. ``A broad consensus`` drives Fed decisions,
Greenspan said. ``But forming that consensus involves considerable
give and take, with many people influencing the outcome.``
Appointed by Reagan
First appointed by President Ronald Reagan, Greenspan took
office on Aug. 11, 1987, two months before the Dow Jones
Industrial Average posted its largest percentage decline ever.
He steered the economy through that crisis and has presided
over an unprecedented period of growth and low inflation. He kept
markets calm and the economy rolling through the savings and loan
debacle of the late-1980s and the Mexican peso collapse in 1994-
95.
In his third term, however, Greenspan faced the greatest
crisis of his tenure at the Fed, the global economic slowdown
triggered by the 1997 Asian currency crisis. Rejecting forecasts
of imminent recession for the U.S., the Greenspan Fed held
interest rates steady as the economy instead picked up speed.
After Russia defaulted in August, 1998, however, financial
markets in the U.S., and around the world, all but froze as
investors shunned risk. Greenspan and his colleagues moved quickly
to cut interest rates three times. The overnight bank lending rate
-- the economy`s benchmark rate -- was reduced a total of 75 basis
points, to 4.75 percent, including the first inter-meeting change
in interest rates in four years.
`Stellar Performance`
``It was a stellar performance. He seemed to understand very
quickly the significance of the problems in the financial
markets,`` said Steve Slifer, chief economist at Lehman Brothers
in New York. ``Their quick action averted what could have been a
disaster.``
Greenspan was born on March 6, 1926, in New York City. He
graduated summa cum laude with a B.S. in economics from New York
University in 1948, going to earn a masters in economics in 1950,
and a Ph.D. in economics in 1977.
Before coming to the Fed, Greenspan was chairman and
president of economic consulting firm Townsend-Greenspan & Co.
Inc. He also served as chairman of President Ford`s Council of
Economic Advisers from 1974 to 1977, before chairing the National
Commission on Social Security Reform from 1981 to 1983.
Prior to his government service Greenspan served as a
corporate director for Aluminum Company of America (Alcoa);
Automatic Data Processing, Inc.; Capital Cities/ABC, Inc.; General
Foods, Inc.; J.P. Morgan & Co., Inc.; Morgan Guaranty Trust
Company of New York; Mobil Corporation; and The Pittston Company.
Greenspan is a devoted tennis player and a fixture on
Washington`s social scene. He`s a disciple of free-market novelist
Ayn Rand, and for several years in his youth, a professional jazz
musician.
``I played tenor saxophone, clarinet and bass clarinet. If I
were a lot better I would probably be still doing that at the
moment,`` Greenspan told the House Banking Committee on Feb. 11,
1999.
Greenspan is married to NBC News correspondent Andrea
Mitchell.
Live auf CNBC für Interessierte.
MfG MRR
MfG MRR
Hört sich nach gemässigter Zinserhöhung an, die ja in den
Kursen bereits enthalten sein soll.....
Vielen Dank für die schriftliche Form des Textes, mein
Englisch ist nicht schlecht, aber manchmal sprechen die mir
einfach zu schnell und zu nuschelig.
Kursen bereits enthalten sein soll.....
Vielen Dank für die schriftliche Form des Textes, mein
Englisch ist nicht schlecht, aber manchmal sprechen die mir
einfach zu schnell und zu nuschelig.
Was meint ihr sollte man jetzt vielleicht ein Put auf den Nasdaq kaufen?
Neueste Meldung von dpa-AFX
Mittwoch, 26.01.2000, 21:41
Greenspan plädiert für langfristig niedrige Inflationsrate
WASHINGTON (dpa-AFX) - Eine niedrige Inflationsrate ist nach Auffassung des Chefs der US-Notenbank, Alan Greenspan, Voraussetzung für weiteren wirtschaftlichen Aufschwung. Das sagte Greenspan am Mittwoch während einer Anhörung des Bankenausschusses des Senates in Washington. Das Gremium berät über die Entscheidung von US-Präsident Bill Clinton, den obersten Währungshüter der Vereinigten Staaten für eine vierte Amtszeit zu nominieren.
Es gehe darum, eine Geldpolitik zu verfolgen, die die finanziellen Rahmenbedingungen für eine weitere wirtschaftliche Expansion und eine voranschreitende technische Entwicklung am besten Gewähr leiste. "Die Erfahrung zeigt, dass ein Hauptbestandteil einer solchen Politik - und für diesen Bestandteil obliegt einer Notenbank eine besondere längerfristige Verantwortung - eine niedrige und stabile Inflationsrate ist," sagte Greenspan.
Der gestiegene Haushaltsüberschuss in den Vereinigten Staaten sollte vorrangig dafür eingesetzt werden, die Staatsverschuldung von etwa 3,6 Bio. USD abzubauen, beantwortete der Fed-Chef eine entsprechned Frage. Für den Fall, dass dies unmöglich sei, plädierte er für Steuersenkungen. Keineswegs dürfe der Überschuss zur Finanzierung kostenintensiver Programme verwandt werde./ub/sh
info@dpa-AFX.de
Servus
Sepp Lederhose
Mittwoch, 26.01.2000, 21:41
Greenspan plädiert für langfristig niedrige Inflationsrate
WASHINGTON (dpa-AFX) - Eine niedrige Inflationsrate ist nach Auffassung des Chefs der US-Notenbank, Alan Greenspan, Voraussetzung für weiteren wirtschaftlichen Aufschwung. Das sagte Greenspan am Mittwoch während einer Anhörung des Bankenausschusses des Senates in Washington. Das Gremium berät über die Entscheidung von US-Präsident Bill Clinton, den obersten Währungshüter der Vereinigten Staaten für eine vierte Amtszeit zu nominieren.
Es gehe darum, eine Geldpolitik zu verfolgen, die die finanziellen Rahmenbedingungen für eine weitere wirtschaftliche Expansion und eine voranschreitende technische Entwicklung am besten Gewähr leiste. "Die Erfahrung zeigt, dass ein Hauptbestandteil einer solchen Politik - und für diesen Bestandteil obliegt einer Notenbank eine besondere längerfristige Verantwortung - eine niedrige und stabile Inflationsrate ist," sagte Greenspan.
Der gestiegene Haushaltsüberschuss in den Vereinigten Staaten sollte vorrangig dafür eingesetzt werden, die Staatsverschuldung von etwa 3,6 Bio. USD abzubauen, beantwortete der Fed-Chef eine entsprechned Frage. Für den Fall, dass dies unmöglich sei, plädierte er für Steuersenkungen. Keineswegs dürfe der Überschuss zur Finanzierung kostenintensiver Programme verwandt werde./ub/sh
info@dpa-AFX.de
Servus
Sepp Lederhose
Um wieviele Bassispunkte wird nun angehoben?
Um 20.15 Uhr werden wir`s erfahren (Ich hoffe auf 50 )
quaaaaaak,
der breitmaulfrosch
quaaaaaak,
der breitmaulfrosch
Wo kann ich das Live im Fernsehen sehen?
steht sicher im ntv-text
wwwerner
wwwerner
Ich hoffe auf 100
25 Basispunkte!
Shit. Wieder kein Crash
abwarten ... ... guck mal auf dow und nasdaq
Doch
oh oh. Inflation?
25 basispunkte lt. N-TV-Ticker
cu
cu
Das wird noch interessant die nächsten Tage.
02/20:17 ***FOMC zeigt sich besorgt, dass Nachfrage Angebot übertrifft
02/20:15 ***FOMC begründet Anhebung mit erhöhtem Inflationsrisiko
02/20:15 ***FOMC hebt Diskontsatz auf 5,25 (5,00) Prozent an
02/20:14 ***FOMC erhöht Fed-Funds-Zielrate auf 5,75 (5,50) Prozent
02/19:57 ***Vodafone/Gent in Düsseldorf zu Mannesmann-Treffen angereist
02/19:26 Verhandlungen um Zukunft von AOL Europe ins Stocken geraten
02/19:22 "Handelsblatt": Industrieverbände warnen vor EZB-Zinserhöhung
02/19:19 EUREX/Renten-Futures (Schluss)/Seitwärts vor Zinsentscheidungen
02/18:30 Aktien Wall Street (Mittag)/Gut behauptet vor Zinsentscheid
02/20:17 ***FOMC zeigt sich besorgt, dass Nachfrage Angebot übertrifft
02/20:15 ***FOMC begründet Anhebung mit erhöhtem Inflationsrisiko
02/20:15 ***FOMC hebt Diskontsatz auf 5,25 (5,00) Prozent an
02/20:14 ***FOMC erhöht Fed-Funds-Zielrate auf 5,75 (5,50) Prozent
02/19:57 ***Vodafone/Gent in Düsseldorf zu Mannesmann-Treffen angereist
02/19:26 Verhandlungen um Zukunft von AOL Europe ins Stocken geraten
02/19:22 "Handelsblatt": Industrieverbände warnen vor EZB-Zinserhöhung
02/19:19 EUREX/Renten-Futures (Schluss)/Seitwärts vor Zinsentscheidungen
02/18:30 Aktien Wall Street (Mittag)/Gut behauptet vor Zinsentscheid
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