Thursday, 29 June 2017

ai adds trillions - yet is the simplest most uncomplex development in the history of man - see harvards self assembling robots

shop is not AI, ifttt.com is AI, and is free currently. https://semantria.com/demo is only available to people that have their own website:

essentially Google has moved forward to create value in the market and other market forces have worked to not allow the growth of the real tech sector, it is a sad? and weird? environment that such a basic website such as SHOP has any real value, yet the startup market is moving along and needs to consider global and or logistics, how to simply or for $10 per month make life that much simpler for a denizen of the world, providing major value in time and effort savings for a fraction of a coffee, these technologies are available, yet the people involved in markets are not as sharp as they make themselves out to be.

For example SB is one of the most fluid members mentally of the Jewish community and must love Toronto or Windsor, as in Toronto there are Starbucks, Sushi and Yoga almost every square mile, the staples of the @Google/Brin diet.

The really high end stuff we are working on, it's value has more to do with getting idea's into fruitiion and good healthcare as the backup for ensuring the dwindling tech people, keep healthy and strong, as the science and math students are a dying breed, the people who have plumbing work are in good standing, and we are in a time where the governments, especially the Canadian-Israeli-Amsterdam? connection needs to make a smart move:

whereas Israel realizes the same intelligence and farming export as the Canadians, finds a wealth trove as the Canadians, and organizes exports? economic stability? and excellent resource management, so that outside forces are unable to move the military state.

Also investors like veverything packaged nicely, and setup well, and run by a certain type of team, instead of neccesarily by the people who will be succesful, take cisco founder for example, did not finish college, made huge startup, and so that there is something peculiar that does not allow me to find some sort of simple investment?

I would love to find some way of meshing the lifestyle that I need to stay healthy (money, psychologist, investment) and good food etc. etc.

Something about Rasta.

Love,
Kfir.


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-----Original Message-----
From: Bloomberg Markets <noreply@mail.bloombergbusiness.com>
To: rightbuy18 <rightbuy18@aol.com>
Sent: Thu, Jun 29, 2017 1:27 pm
Subject: 5 things to start your day

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Forward Guidance
 
The euro and pound are rallying, developed bonds sell off as investors digest central banks' hawkish statements, and a travel ban may be introduced in the U.S. this evening.

Policy hawks

The last two weeks of comments from the world's most important central bankers have prompted investors to reassess the outlook for the second half of 2017. The euro was trading at $1.1420 at 5:20 a.m. Eastern Time, continuing a climb which was briefly interrupted yesterday by a suggestion from the European Central Bank that markets have been over-interpreting Mario Draghi's speech. The pound briefly traded above $1.30 this morning as it also got a lift from Bank of England policy makers' increasingly hawkish comments. This marks the seventh day of gains for the currency; its longest winning streak since April 2015. 

Travel ban

The U.S. will institute new restrictions on travel from six Muslim-majority countries at 8 p.m. this evening, according to a person familiar with the matter. For travelers to the U.S. from other countries, the laptop ban won't be applied, but there will be a broad range of heightened security measures, including more thorough vetting of passengers and enhanced screening of electronic devices. In Washington, GOP holdouts blocking the health-care bill can't agree what they want changed for it to proceed. 

Bond slump

The message from central bankers that borrowing costs are going to go up has been received by the bond market. The yield on U.S. Treasuries has risen 10 basis points since Tuesday, with German bund yields rising 15 basis points to 0.40 percent over the same time. U.K. gilts are also getting hit, with the yield on the two-year note hitting the highest level since Brexit referendum. 

Markets mixed

Overnight, the MSCI Asia Pacific Index climbed 0.6 percent, with Japan's Topix index also gaining 0.6 percent as banks in the region rallied. In Europe, the Stoxx 600 Index was 0.3 percent lower at 5:50 a.m. as neither a rally in banks or a decade-high for euro-area consumer confidence managed to lift the wider index. S&P 500 futures were 0.1 percent higher, with markets due to give their assessment of the surprisingly large payouts from U.S. banks after the stress test results.

Coming up...

At 6:30 a.m. Bank of England Governor Mark Carney is interviewed by Bloomberg TV. At 8:30 a.m. weekly initial jobless claims data for the U.S. are released with expectations for a broadly unchanged reading from last week's 241,000. The third reading of Q1 GDP is due at the same time. Investors can breath a sigh of relief as the packed week of Fedspeak ends at 1:00 p.m. today when St. Louis Fed chief James Bullard speaks in London.

Here's what you should read today

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And finally, here's what Joe's interested in this morning

It turns out that gold isn't that great an inflation hedge. Since 1992, according to this Bloomberg story by Susanne Barton, it's copper you want to own to protect against a general rise in prices. So what's gold really good for? Its behavior during the financial crisis suggests an answer. Contrary to what one might expect, the metal did terribly for much of 2008. While the entire stability of the U.S. financial system was being called into question, gold plunged by nearly 30 percent from peak to trough. It only recovered after the TARP vote, which saved the financial system, before getting another boost as the Fed moved to expand its balance sheet. What does this show? It shows that gold isn't that great when people are in the throes of true, existential, financial-crisis fear. After all, bills are denominated in fiat currency. Where gold really has appeal is when things are bad, but policy makers are in rescue mode. Of course if the entire dollar system were to go down in flames, then it seems plausible that gold would be sought after -- although at least in the U.S., there are no recent examples of that to point to.
 
 
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