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Wall Street plummets ,trillions lost


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Posted
1 minute ago, Lacessit said:

For people with cash, Trump's foolishness is a buying opportunity.

 

I have plenty of cash.

If the market dips low enough, then....

 

BUY, BABY....BUY......

 

Is this what you mean?

 

 

Posted
Just now, GammaGlobulin said:

 

I have plenty of cash.

If the market dips low enough, then....

 

BUY, BABY....BUY......

 

Is this what you mean?

 

 

So do I. Australia has several undervalued shares which are even more undervalued now, due to the last day or so.

 

I am filling my boots tomorrow.

Posted
3 minutes ago, Lacessit said:

So do I. Australia has several undervalued shares which are even more undervalued now, due to the last day or so.

 

I am filling my boots tomorrow.

 

But, you know.....

 

I do not really care about money....because.....

 

HERE IS WHY:

 

And, as we know....

So many girls are going off their heads...these days....

 

Therefore.....

 

Is money that important when we know we are looking down the barrel of the end of our lives.....?

 

 

Posted
1 minute ago, Lacessit said:

So do I. Australia has several undervalued shares which are even more undervalued now, due to the last day or so.

 

I am filling my boots tomorrow.

That's life down under. 

Posted
44 minutes ago, Cameroni said:

'

He B R O K E  chicken McNuggets too??????

 

Oh Noooo!!!!

Not made from beef

Australia’s largest trading partner is China, but the United States has been Australia’s largest market for exported beef for most of the last 25 years. Beef was one of the Australian exports targeted by China in 2020. Rather than applying tariffs, four Australian red meat abattoirs were banned from selling meat in China due to labelling and health certificate requirements.

When the Chinese tariffs and bans on Australian wine, barley, beef, timber, coal, cotton and lobsters took hold, Australia diversified its export markets. USSC modelling shows that Saudi Arabia overtook China to become Australia’s largest importer of barley, Vietnam imported the most cotton and the United Kingdom and the United States imported the most wine.

In 2024, the United States accounted for 30.7% of Australia’s beef exports (up from 17% in 2022). Agricultural issues have been a sticking point in the US-Australia trade relationship for decades. While US tariffs or restrictions may limit imports of Australian beef, Australia’s beef exports globally may increase as they diversify their markets, like they did following China’s restrictions in 2020.

Posted
1 minute ago, still kicking said:

Not made from beef

Australia’s largest trading partner is China, but the United States has been Australia’s largest market for exported beef for most of the last 25 years. Beef was one of the Australian exports targeted by China in 2020. Rather than applying tariffs, four Australian red meat abattoirs were banned from selling meat in China due to labelling and health certificate requirements.

When the Chinese tariffs and bans on Australian wine, barley, beef, timber, coal, cotton and lobsters took hold, Australia diversified its export markets. USSC modelling shows that Saudi Arabia overtook China to become Australia’s largest importer of barley, Vietnam imported the most cotton and the United Kingdom and the United States imported the most wine.

In 2024, the United States accounted for 30.7% of Australia’s beef exports (up from 17% in 2022). Agricultural issues have been a sticking point in the US-Australia trade relationship for decades. While US tariffs or restrictions may limit imports of Australian beef, Australia’s beef exports globally may increase as they diversify their markets, like they did following China’s restrictions in 2020.

 

Damn shame. Because Ozzie beef is pretty good.

 

But oh well, Argentine it is then.

  • Confused 1
Posted
6 minutes ago, still kicking said:

Not made from beef

Australia’s largest trading partner is China, but the United States has been Australia’s largest market for exported beef for most of the last 25 years. Beef was one of the Australian exports targeted by China in 2020. Rather than applying tariffs, four Australian red meat abattoirs were banned from selling meat in China due to labelling and health certificate requirements.

When the Chinese tariffs and bans on Australian wine, barley, beef, timber, coal, cotton and lobsters took hold, Australia diversified its export markets. USSC modelling shows that Saudi Arabia overtook China to become Australia’s largest importer of barley, Vietnam imported the most cotton and the United Kingdom and the United States imported the most wine.

In 2024, the United States accounted for 30.7% of Australia’s beef exports (up from 17% in 2022). Agricultural issues have been a sticking point in the US-Australia trade relationship for decades. While US tariffs or restrictions may limit imports of Australian beef, Australia’s beef exports globally may increase as they diversify their markets, like they did following China’s restrictions in 2020.

 

Australia has far bigger issues to contend with. US can get beef from many places you're not special.

 

Posted

A complete and utter total abomination. Everything that sweaty old turd touches turns to absolute sh*t. Single-handedly destroying the American economy like a wrecking ball with stage 4 dementia. I’ve never seen anything like it. You’d have to go back to the Great Depression to find anything even remotely on the same level. Even his own constituency turned on him in the Senate yesterday during the vote on Canadian tariffs. Unhinged and as reckless as a bull in a china shop. He just shaved off another 6% of the Nazi carmaker’s wealth today. Nobody minds that, of course, but I wonder if that jittery little spastic jumping goblin has finally done the math and realized that hanging out with the Cheeto-chump convict has done nothing but cost him over $100 billion. At least karma is still alive and well in DC. God save murika. 

  • Confused 1
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Posted
Just now, short-Timer said:

A complete and utter total abomination. Everything that sweaty old turd touches turns to absolute sh*t. Single-handedly destroying the American economy like a wrecking ball with stage 4 dementia. I’ve never seen anything like it. You’d have to go back to the Great Depression to find anything even remotely on the same level. Even his own constituency turned on him in the Senate yesterday during the vote on Canadian tariffs. Unhinged and as reckless as a bull in a china shop. He just shaved off another 6% of the Nazi carmaker’s wealth today. Nobody minds that, of course, but I wonder if that jittery little spastic jumping goblin has finally done the math and realized that hanging out with the Cheeto-chump convict has done nothing but cost him over $100 billion. At least karma is still alive and well in DC. God save murika. 

Utter rubbish.

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Posted

Why invest in anything when you have a Trump that will move all the exchange rates for you it's genius - us Brits love you Orange Face x

  • Like 1
Posted
1 hour ago, still kicking said:

Not made from beef

Australia’s largest trading partner is China, but the United States has been Australia’s largest market for exported beef for most of the last 25 years. Beef was one of the Australian exports targeted by China in 2020. Rather than applying tariffs, four Australian red meat abattoirs were banned from selling meat in China due to labelling and health certificate requirements.

When the Chinese tariffs and bans on Australian wine, barley, beef, timber, coal, cotton and lobsters took hold, Australia diversified its export markets. USSC modelling shows that Saudi Arabia overtook China to become Australia’s largest importer of barley, Vietnam imported the most cotton and the United Kingdom and the United States imported the most wine.

In 2024, the United States accounted for 30.7% of Australia’s beef exports (up from 17% in 2022). Agricultural issues have been a sticking point in the US-Australia trade relationship for decades. While US tariffs or restrictions may limit imports of Australian beef, Australia’s beef exports globally may increase as they diversify their markets, like they did following China’s restrictions in 2020.

LOL

 

The US imports approximately 10-12% of its beef.  It exports the same amount.

 

Only 12% of the imported beef comes from Australia.

 

So…Australia supplies 1.2%-1.44% of the beef consumed in America.  
 

A big nothingburger.

 

 

IMG_2447.jpeg

Posted

Is @still kicking still going on about beef, I don't know what his beef is with beef!
Back to topic anyways Trump has caused the UK exchange rate to go like a reverse Brexit, perhaps that Boris dude was right all along!
#FreeTommy #ReElectBoris #GBPRules

:coffee1:

  • Confused 1
Posted
6 minutes ago, PomPolo said:

Is @still kicking still going on about beef, I don't know what his beef is with beef!
Back to topic anyways Trump has caused the UK exchange rate to go like a reverse Brexit, perhaps that Boris dude was right all along!
#FreeTommy #ReElectBoris #GBPRules

:coffee1:

I am not in the UK

  • Thanks 1
Posted
2 minutes ago, still kicking said:

I am not in the UK

Phew might be going back for a holiday soon, we have some good beef there though you should pay a visit

Posted
Just now, still kicking said:

Search good beef 

I have no interest in gay porn 🤣

Just joking around it's part of forum life🤣

Posted
49 minutes ago, short-Timer said:

A complete and utter total abomination. Everything that sweaty old turd touches turns to absolute sh*t. Single-handedly destroying the American economy like a wrecking ball with stage 4 dementia. I’ve never seen anything like it. You’d have to go back to the Great Depression to find anything even remotely on the same level. Even his own constituency turned on him in the Senate yesterday during the vote on Canadian tariffs. Unhinged and as reckless as a bull in a china shop. He just shaved off another 6% of the Nazi carmaker’s wealth today. Nobody minds that, of course, but I wonder if that jittery little spastic jumping goblin has finally done the math and realized that hanging out with the Cheeto-chump convict has done nothing but cost him over $100 billion. At least karma is still alive and well in DC. God save murika. 

Look on the bright side, it has totally cured the left's Ukraine & more war obsession. Kudos Donald, it was time.

  • Confused 2
Posted
55 minutes ago, short-Timer said:

A complete and utter total abomination. Everything that sweaty old turd touches turns to absolute sh*t. Single-handedly destroying the American economy like a wrecking ball with stage 4 dementia. I’ve never seen anything like it. You’d have to go back to the Great Depression to find anything even remotely on the same level. Even his own constituency turned on him in the Senate yesterday during the vote on Canadian tariffs. Unhinged and as reckless as a bull in a china shop. He just shaved off another 6% of the Nazi carmaker’s wealth today. Nobody minds that, of course, but I wonder if that jittery little spastic jumping goblin has finally done the math and realized that hanging out with the Cheeto-chump convict has done nothing but cost him over $100 billion. At least karma is still alive and well in DC. God save murika. 

B+ for histrionics.   Needs some work to get it up to JT level.

Posted

Just had this written by AI (because it's more informed than I am 😅), and it really puts things into perspective:

  • Stock Market Volatility: Recent market downturns show how trade tensions and protectionist policies can shake investor confidence—just like they did during the early stages of the Great Depression.

  • Global Retaliation: Trump's tariffs triggered countermeasures from other nations, disrupting supply chains and raising costs—mirroring the global fallout from the 1930 Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act.

  • Isolationist Risk: The “America First” approach may lead to long-term economic isolation, much like the inward turn during the Depression that slowed international recovery.

  • Short-Term Gains vs. Long-Term Pain: While some industries saw short-term protection, the broader economy faces inflation, reduced exports, and weakened international ties—just like in the 1930s.

  • Long-Term Drag: Continued protectionism risks stalling innovation, reducing global competitiveness, and diminishing the U.S.'s leadership in world trade.

Thought it was a pretty sharp comparison—curious what others here think?

  • Thumbs Up 1
Posted
6 minutes ago, SunnyinBangrak said:

Look on the bright side, it has totally cured the left's Ukraine & more war obsession. Kudos Donald, it was time.

They always need to be bitching about something

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