setuju Kang, ditambah lagi ulah para pejabat negara & legislatif yg
berlomba2 menjarah uang negara....
udah ngak ada lagi moral & hati nurani untuk bisa melihat penderitaan rakyat
kecil...

kok bisa yach seorang anggota DPR terhormat masih senyum & ketawa saat
digiring KPK ke kantor polisi karena kasus korupsi... weleh... weleh...
oiya, maaf yach Mbah jadi ngelantur nich ke politik...

salam,
AR


On 4/14/08, kang_ocoy_maen_saham <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>   nah bener2 bikin ngeri buat saya ya ini dy nih.., rupiah ke 9500
> ditambah minyak ke $125.,
> wah jadi tukang gorengan temennya tukang bubur dah sayah.. hehehe
> kalo itu kejadian bener2 bisa defisit anggaran ke deket 3%...
>
> tapi kalo emang bener rupiah di-short dan MENYEBABKAN ANGGARAN
> SUBSIDI RAKYAT NJEBOL... saya doain yg nge-short dapet BALASAN YG
> SETIMPAL DI HARI PEMBALASAN... Amienn.. (sungguh tega2nya ngeshort
> dan bikin anggaran negara orang jebol en orang miskin jadi makin
> kelaparan, biadab!!)
>
> --- In obrolan-bandar@yahoogroups.com <obrolan-bandar%40yahoogroups.com>,
> "goodmast3r" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
> >
> > Sumber: http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?
> > pid=20601087&sid=aiAcbzs1WthA&refer=home
> >
> > -------------------------------------------------
> > International investors cut their holdings of Indonesian government
> > bonds 3.2 percent in March to 80.7 trillion rupiah ($8.8 billion),
> > according to finance ministry data. Foreign funds sold a net $154
> > million of stocks in the Philippines this year, helping drive the
> > Philippine Stock Exchange Index down 19.4 percent.
> >
> > Deutsche Asset sold all its rupiah debt earlier this year and
> didn't
> > buy peso bonds because of inflation, Schlotthauer said. Fortis
> > Investments, a unit of Belgium's biggest financial group, expects
> the
> > rupiah will weaken 3.5 percent to 9,500 per dollar within three
> > months. The firm is ``short'' the rupiah, meaning it is betting the
> > currency will depreciate.
> >
> > ``I'm really bearish on Indonesia,'' said Didier Lambert, a London-
> > based money manager who helps oversee $4 billion in emerging-market
> > debt at Fortis. ``You will see investor outflows that should weaken
> > the currency.''
> >
> > Unsustainable Subsidies
> >
> > The last time Indonesia's rupiah depreciated due to rising
> commodity
> > costs was in August 2005, when a jump in global oil prices
> increased
> > the cost of a state fuel-subsidy program. The rupiah slumped to a
> > four-year low of 10,875.
> >
> > ``Subsidies can be very disruptive and expensive for a government
> to
> > maintain,'' billionaire investor George Soros said in a
> > teleconference from Washington on April 9. Rising food prices may
> > cause ``social and political disruptions,'' he said.
> >
> > Philippine President Gloria Arroyo said on April 1 she may abandon
> > plans to balance the budget. Two days later, Indonesia widened its
> > 2008 deficit target to 2.1 percent of gross domestic product from
> an
> > earlier 1.7 percent.
> >
> > Food accounts for 49 percent of the consumer price index in the
> > Philippines, the world's biggest importer of rice, and 38 percent
> in
> > Indonesia, according to Mirza Baig, an economist at Deutsche Bank
> AG
> > in Singapore. In the U.S., it's 14 percent.
> >
>
> 
>

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