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that is the easy part, i can tell you exactly when, after they kneel and yield to their money masters. the real question now is does the offer still stand.

LOL...I mean when as in date--day?, week?, or month?.

I'm sure there will always be an offer (just as you can always get a car loan--regardless of credit); the question now is: what will the terms/cost/amount-of-required-flesh-in-pounds be?
 
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LOL...I mean when as in date--day?, week?, or month?.

I'm sure there will always be an offer (just as you can always get a car loan--regardless of credit); the question now is: what will the terms/cost/amount-of-required-flesh-in-pounds be?

I maybe 100% wrong but I venture to guess no deal by Wednesday. More pain is needed before Greece agrees, and that realization may come too late...I bet Grexitt! With that in mind, I am looking to exit S and C...Monday if markets not down too much.
 
I maybe 100% wrong but I venture to guess no deal by Wednesday. More pain is needed before Greece agrees, and that realization may come too late...I bet Grexitt! With that in mind, I am looking to exit S and C...Monday if markets not down too much.

I agree with your thinking. Monday can go either way, imo. We'll know soon enough.
 
Someone pointed out to me that the entire Greek debt that is being discussed ($ 320 billion U.S. dollars) , is less than 1/5th of the cost of the F-35 contract that Washington continues to fund. (Estimated now at a $1.4 TRILLION dollars by the time production is finished.)

Heck, we could take on and pay off all of Greece's debt with the price of a few fighter-jets.


Everything is relative.
 
Intel posted second-quarter earnings of 55 cents per share on revenue of $13.2 billion. Wall Street had expected Intel to deliver quarterly earnings per share of 50 cents on $13.04 billion in revenue, according to consensus estimates from Thomson Reuters. Shares of Intel surged as high as 8 percent in extended hours.
 
Private job growth edged lower in October, with companies adding 182,000 new jobs as economic growth cooled, according to a report from ADP and Moody's Analytics.
The growth actually was a shade better than the 180,000 expected, according to FactSet, but was in keeping with a reduced pace of employment growth across the U.S. economy. The total declined from the 190,000 in September, a number that in itself was revised lower from the originally reported 200,000.
 
I'm surprised AAPL isn't tanking after this news: [h=1]Apple beats on earnings, misses revenue and iPhone units; Q2 sales guidance below consensus[/h]
 
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