
TVPP TVPA TVPY Cupones Vinculados al PBI
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- Mensajes: 922
- Registrado: Jue Ene 14, 2010 11:36 am
Re: TVPP TVPA TVPY Cupones Vinculados al PBI
Ojo que el Dow cae de nuevo
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- Mensajes: 15802
- Registrado: Mié Feb 01, 2006 6:27 pm
Re: TVPP TVPA TVPY Cupones Vinculados al PBI
Yo voy a esperar por ams que estoy muy ansioso por pagar....el DOW 1%
again..si el paquete existe por el mto no se enteraron.
Apolo...gracias por darnos tus importantes datos a nosotros un abrazo.

Apolo...gracias por darnos tus importantes datos a nosotros un abrazo.

Re: TVPP TVPA TVPY Cupones Vinculados al PBI
Ciruzzo, mirá mi caso: vendí todo mi TVPP ayer a 5,75
porque justo entré a la compu cuando bajaba 14%.
Ahora me acabo de subir con una gran multa a $6,12 pero no me parece quedarme afuera.
Tanto que me hacía el canchero y ayer tuve la cuarta P la de pánico! :113:
De todos modos con una parte había entrado al PR13 y al TVPY en 27 pesos...
Me queda un 15% de liquidez.
Saludos!!
Fili

Ahora me acabo de subir con una gran multa a $6,12 pero no me parece quedarme afuera.
Tanto que me hacía el canchero y ayer tuve la cuarta P la de pánico! :113:
De todos modos con una parte había entrado al PR13 y al TVPY en 27 pesos...
Me queda un 15% de liquidez.
Saludos!!
Fili
Re: TVPP TVPA TVPY Cupones Vinculados al PBI
Pamperito escribió:Hoy es día de compras. Para qué? Con qué objetivo? No lo tengo definido. Pero es día de compras...
9 : 56 A.M.
Ya definí. Salgo.
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- Mensajes: 15802
- Registrado: Mié Feb 01, 2006 6:27 pm
Re: TVPP TVPA TVPY Cupones Vinculados al PBI
Apolo recompraste pero sion caución? estas 100% dentro pero en plata tuya? yo sigo líquido...pero estoy a las puetadas...eran los riesgos..peor parece joda...juro que nunca falla..vendo y sube.
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- Mensajes: 3475
- Registrado: Jue Mar 13, 2008 6:15 pm
Re: TVPP TVPA TVPY Cupones Vinculados al PBI
Retome lo que vendi ayer pero sin tomar ni un centavo de caución.......el que se quema con leche ve una vaca y llora.
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- Mensajes: 10565
- Registrado: Lun Feb 16, 2009 4:49 pm
Re: TVPP TVPA TVPY Cupones Vinculados al PBI
Me sigue sin andar la bostar.... lo que pasa es que tengo el abono de 35 mangos... menos que una grande de muzza...
QUeee !!! mi plata no vale !!!! 35 mangos es poco... pero para que no ande es mucho...
Quiero que suba todo... me recague en estos dias... vamos a ver si se termina la pesadillla....
QUeee !!! mi plata no vale !!!! 35 mangos es poco... pero para que no ande es mucho...
Quiero que suba todo... me recague en estos dias... vamos a ver si se termina la pesadillla....
Re: TVPP TVPA TVPY Cupones Vinculados al PBI
quise decir que explica por qué es un dato positivo.
Re: TVPP TVPA TVPY Cupones Vinculados al PBI
MAGICBOX escribió:Además, Obama dijo que las autoridades estadounidenses están investigando la "inusual" actividad registrada en los últimos días en los mercados bursátiles -que provocó una caída en el valor de las acciones- y prometió proteger a los inversores.
Justo cuando se está debatiendo regulaciones a los mercados.
Que casualidad.
Re: TVPP TVPA TVPY Cupones Vinculados al PBI
Del USTODAY explica porque el aumentop de la desocupación en USA es en realidad un dato.
It sounds dreadful. After drifting down consistently since last fall, the unemployment rate has suddenly shot up again, from 9.7 percent in March to 9.9 percent in April. But don't despair: A rising unemployment rate is actually one of the best signs yet that the economy is bouncing back.
[See 7 new rules for getting ahead.]
The unemployment rate rose for the right reason. Instead of shedding jobs, employers added 290,000 jobs in April, the strongest showing since 2007. The reason the unemployment rate went up is that a lot more people are suddenly looking for work. The government said that the labor force swelled by 805,000 people in April. That's more than three times the number of new jobs, so the proportion of people looking for a job but unable to find one went up. Still, that big increase in the labor force marks an important shift in sentiment among people on the fringes of the economy.
One of the most worrisome trends throughout the recession and early stages of the recovery has been the declining size of the U.S. labor force itself. By late last year, so many unemployed people had given up looking for a job that the labor force participation rate--the percent of adults who either have a job or are looking for one--had fallen to a 25-year low. Others who might have entered the labor force--recent graduates, stay-at-home spouses--decided not to. The government considers the labor force to include everybody who either has a job or is looking for one. So if you get laid off and spend your days hunting for a new job, you count as part of the labor force, even if you're not earning a paycheck. But if you get discouraged and give up, you don't count.
[See what's going right and wrong with the economy.]
Until recently, the ranks of "discouraged workers" who had given up looking for jobs had been swelling at alarming rates. Now, a long-term decline in the labor force participation rate finally seems to be reversing, as more people decide that it might be worth looking for a job after all. The participation rate bottomed out last December, when just 64.6 percent of working-age adults belonged to the labor force. It ticked upward for the first three months of 2010, and now it has risen to 65.2 percent. Before the recession, it hovered above 66 percent, so there's still a way to go. But the mere fact that long-unemployed people are looking for work again is encouraging.
One reason economists worry about a "jobless recovery" is that people who have been out of work for a long time find it extremely difficult to rejoin the working world, even as the economy recovers. They tend to lose touch with workplace trends, miss out on new skills, and simply become unmotivated. It might be tempting to write off the long-term unemployed as dropouts, except that not long ago they were productive workers who earned money and contributed to economic growth. Consigning them to the sidelines depresses the economy--and adds more weight to a social safety net that's already frayed.
[See how to plan for a slow-motion recovery.]
About 195,000 formerly discouraged workers have now reentered the labor force, presumably because they think the chances of finding a job are getting better. That's a tiny fraction of the 6.7 million Americans who count as the long-term unemployed, but it's still a break in the gloom. Another 610,000 people entered the labor force without being technically unemployed, a sign that first-time workers and other job seekers have decided to get off the couch and start hustling. There are a lot more where they came from, which means the unemployment rate might still rise in future months, before it turns around and starts declining for good. For once, it will be something to cheer.
It sounds dreadful. After drifting down consistently since last fall, the unemployment rate has suddenly shot up again, from 9.7 percent in March to 9.9 percent in April. But don't despair: A rising unemployment rate is actually one of the best signs yet that the economy is bouncing back.
[See 7 new rules for getting ahead.]
The unemployment rate rose for the right reason. Instead of shedding jobs, employers added 290,000 jobs in April, the strongest showing since 2007. The reason the unemployment rate went up is that a lot more people are suddenly looking for work. The government said that the labor force swelled by 805,000 people in April. That's more than three times the number of new jobs, so the proportion of people looking for a job but unable to find one went up. Still, that big increase in the labor force marks an important shift in sentiment among people on the fringes of the economy.
One of the most worrisome trends throughout the recession and early stages of the recovery has been the declining size of the U.S. labor force itself. By late last year, so many unemployed people had given up looking for a job that the labor force participation rate--the percent of adults who either have a job or are looking for one--had fallen to a 25-year low. Others who might have entered the labor force--recent graduates, stay-at-home spouses--decided not to. The government considers the labor force to include everybody who either has a job or is looking for one. So if you get laid off and spend your days hunting for a new job, you count as part of the labor force, even if you're not earning a paycheck. But if you get discouraged and give up, you don't count.
[See what's going right and wrong with the economy.]
Until recently, the ranks of "discouraged workers" who had given up looking for jobs had been swelling at alarming rates. Now, a long-term decline in the labor force participation rate finally seems to be reversing, as more people decide that it might be worth looking for a job after all. The participation rate bottomed out last December, when just 64.6 percent of working-age adults belonged to the labor force. It ticked upward for the first three months of 2010, and now it has risen to 65.2 percent. Before the recession, it hovered above 66 percent, so there's still a way to go. But the mere fact that long-unemployed people are looking for work again is encouraging.
One reason economists worry about a "jobless recovery" is that people who have been out of work for a long time find it extremely difficult to rejoin the working world, even as the economy recovers. They tend to lose touch with workplace trends, miss out on new skills, and simply become unmotivated. It might be tempting to write off the long-term unemployed as dropouts, except that not long ago they were productive workers who earned money and contributed to economic growth. Consigning them to the sidelines depresses the economy--and adds more weight to a social safety net that's already frayed.
[See how to plan for a slow-motion recovery.]
About 195,000 formerly discouraged workers have now reentered the labor force, presumably because they think the chances of finding a job are getting better. That's a tiny fraction of the 6.7 million Americans who count as the long-term unemployed, but it's still a break in the gloom. Another 610,000 people entered the labor force without being technically unemployed, a sign that first-time workers and other job seekers have decided to get off the couch and start hustling. There are a lot more where they came from, which means the unemployment rate might still rise in future months, before it turns around and starts declining for good. For once, it will be something to cheer.
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