Embah mengambil segi positif dari negatifnya tulisan Mr Dent:

- Go for BOMBAY SENSEX, Invest di India kalo mau untung lebih
  gede dibanding Jakarta.
- Invest disector property India.

Memang embah juga denger udah ada perusahaan Indonesia yg
bikin bisnis property di India, termasuk suatu Mall di 
Bandung yg jatoh dan bikin property di India. 

Coba liat comparison India dan China, China udah engga se Sexy
puser orang India.

http://finance.yahoo.com/q/bc?s=%5EJKSE&t=my&l=off&z=l&q=l&c=%5EBSESN,000001.SS


--- In obrolan-bandar@yahoogroups.com, "Gandhi Hadiwitanto" <ricky.waki...@...> 
wrote:
>
> There's worse to come for the economy
> 
> By Fleur Leyden
> 
> AUSTRALIA'S sharemarket will halve in value, house prices will slump as much 
> as 40 per cent and unemployment will climb to 10 per cent. 
> 
> That's the bold prediction from economic forecaster Harry Dent, who says a 
> bigger crash is ahead for the global economy within the next two years. 
> 
> And while Australia's strong financial system, links to China and young 
> working population have cushioned the nation from the economic turmoil so 
> far, Mr Dent says smart investors are cashing up in preparation for "the 
> Mother of all depressions", The Sunday Mail reports.
> 
> "When you have to deleverage a major bubble in stocks and housing and 
> commodities ... it doesn't just get over with in one year with a nice 
> stimulus program," he says. 
> 
> Mr Dent, who predicted Japan's 1990s recession and the present economic 
> crisis, yesterday began an Australian speaking tour in Brisbane. 
> 
> He says a "perfect storm" is brewing where a peak in spending by baby boomers 
> will collide with the global commodity bubble to "leave behind the next great 
> crash". 
> 
> 
> 
> Although Australia's All Ordinaries Index may peak at between 4500 and 5000 
> points by the end of this year, he says a crash in about 2011 will see it 
> slump to about 2000 points. 
> 
> He says our house prices are "among the most overvalued in the world" and 
> will backtrack by as much as 40 per cent while unemployment – now at 5.7 per 
> cent – will hit double digits. 
> 
> "I would say Australia is not paying close enough attention to the worldwide 
> housing bubble and banking crisis," he says. 
> 
> Mr Dent scoffs at a BIS Shrapnel report, issued this week, that said home 
> values would rise by as much as 20 per cent over the next three years. 
> 
> "Look at Japan to see what happens when a generational trend finally slows 
> your economy and a housing bubble bursts. Housing peaked in 1991 in Japan and 
> is still down over 60 per cent from the peak 18 years later." 
> 
> He believes the next boom will begin to unfold in 2023, when India will take 
> over from China as the world's growth powerhouse. 
> 
> "If I was Australian businesses and government I'd say, 'OK, China's our best 
> customer now but we need to be cultivating India'," Mr Dent says. 
> 
> "India is the one large country – that isn't dependent on just commodity 
> cycles for exports – that could grow dramatically and urbanise." 
> 
> He says India's economic strength will be underpinned by its youthful 
> population – something that will also help make Australia one of the most 
> resilient developed economies throughout the next two decades. 
> 
> Most of the affluent world is not having enough children to support their 
> ageing population, he says. 
> 
> Japan has the oldest population in the world, followed by Italy. 
> 
> However, Australia's immigration policy has ensured the local economy has 
> stayed refreshed by young, skilled workers from overseas, helping drive 
> innovation to "take the economy to new heights". 
> 
> "Your demographics do not turn down nearly as much as Europe and the United 
> States and Japan's did and your banking system didn't go nuts," Mr Dent says. 
> "You will fare better but you won't come out of this unscathed."
> Sent from my BlackBerry®
> powered by Sinyal Kuat INDOSAT
>


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