kalo yg nge-short ritel sih ga terlalu matter ya pak eka.. tp kalo 
institusi asing yg nge short Billion Dollar mana pake leverage lagi 
wah rada ruwet tuh... mo dibikin defisit diatas 3% kali kita., biar 
ga ngelanggar UU mau ga mau biarpun mo pemilu jg pasti BBM dinaekkin.

mudah2an aja BI diberi kekuatan dan ketabahan (Aminn) buat ngejaga 
rupiah gak sampe jebol., dan pemerintah bisa mempertahankan laju 
pertumbuhan ekonomi mati2an.. yooshh., bekerja yg giat, hemat2 energi 
dan belajar yg rajin biar ekonomi kita ga "dikerjain" spekulan biadab 
melulu... keterlaluan juga lama2 tuh bule2 gila, orang ampe susah 
makan ini mo dibikin lebih merana lagi. mo anarchist kek mo free 
market kek mo liberal vcapitalist kek kalo konsekuensi dr 
praktek "cari-return" mereka adalah jutaan orang jadi susah dan 
kelaparan mah saya juga bingung do they really "human" or not...  

kita2 di OB yg agak berada sih masih bisalah nahan2nya kalo emang 
kejadian, masih bisa bertahan hidup, tp kalo rakyat kecil??. wah 
sedih en miris dah ngebayanginnya...

semoga Indonesia tercinta bisa bertahan dan berkembang melewati semua 
ini.

--- In obrolan-bandar@yahoogroups.com, Eka Suwandana <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
>
> Tapi sekarang ini kang Ocoy butuh duit lebih gede utk maen rupiah, 
nggak semua sekuritas valas jualan rupiah/USD. Dulu jaman krismon aja 
karena rupiah soft currency minimal buka acct utk valas di Singapore 
main rupiah USD25rb sekarang sepuluh lipatnya. 
> 
> 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, "goodmast3r" <goodmast3r@> 
> 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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