Thursday, March 29, 2012

STOCK RESULTS MAR 29,2012

DOCTOR DOCTORIAN FROM ANGEL OF GOD
then the angel said, Financial crisis will come to Asia. I will shake the world.

JAMES 5:1-3
1 Go to now, ye rich men, weep and howl for your miseries that shall come upon you.
2 Your riches are corrupted, and your garments are motheaten.
3 Your gold and silver is cankered; and the rust of them shall be a witness against you, and shall eat your flesh as it were fire. Ye have heaped treasure together for the last days.

REVELATION 18:10,17,19
10 Standing afar off for the fear of her torment, saying, Alas, alas that great city Babylon, that mighty city! for in one hour is thy judgment come.
17 For in one hour so great riches is come to nought. And every shipmaster, and all the company in ships, and sailors, and as many as trade by sea, stood afar off,
19 And they cast dust on their heads, and cried, weeping and wailing, saying, Alas, alas that great city, wherein were made rich all that had ships in the sea by reason of her costliness! for in one hour is she made desolate.

EZEKIEL 7:19
19 They shall cast their silver in the streets, and their gold shall be removed: their silver and their gold shall not be able to deliver them in the day of the wrath of the LORD: they shall not satisfy their souls, neither fill their bowels: because it is the stumblingblock of their iniquity.

REVELATION 13:16-18
16 And he(FALSE POPE) causeth all,(WORLD SOCIALISM) both small and great, rich and poor, free and bond, to receive a mark in their right hand, or in their foreheads:(CHIP IMPLANT)
17 And that no man might buy or sell, save he that had the mark, or the name of the beast, or the number of his name.
18 Here is wisdom. Let him that hath understanding count the number of the beast: for it is the number of a man; and his number is Six hundred threescore and six.(6-6-6) A NUMBER SYSTEM

WORLD MARKET RESULTS
http://money.cnn.com/data/world_markets/
CNBC VIDEOS
http://www.cnbc.com/id/15839263/?tabid=15839796&tabheader=false

HALF HOUR DOW RESULTS THU MARCH 29,2012

09:30 AM -2.43
10:00 AM -42.15
10:30 AM -73.71
11:00 AM -74.92
11:30 AM -63.15
12:00 PM -84.20
12:30 PM -74.34
01:00 PM -52.75
01:30 PM -59.73
02:00 PM -58.34
02:30 PM -32.80
03:00 PM -41.16
03:30 PM -3.07
04:00 PM +19.61 13,145.82

S&P 500 1403.28 -2.26

NASDAQ 3095.36 -9.60

GOLD 1,659.80 +1.90

OIL 103.17 -2.24

TSE 300 12,339.36 -74.50

CDNX 1549.76 -0.49

S&P/TSX/60 704.92 -4.75

MORNING,NEWS,STATS

YEAR TO DATE PERFORMANCE
Dow -64 points at 4 minutes of trading today.
Dow -84 points at low today.
Dow -1 points at high today so far.
GOLD opens at $1,658.30.OIL opens at $105.21 today.

AFTERNOON,NEWS,STATS
Dow -94 points at low today so far.
Dow +19 points at high today so far.

WRAPUP,NEWS,STATS
Dow -94 points at low today.
Dow +19 points at high today.

GOLD ALLTIME HIGH $1,902.60 (NOT AT CLOSE)

NATURAL GAS-THU +57 BCF

DANIEL 7:23-24
23 Thus he said, The fourth beast(THE EU,REVIVED ROME) shall be the fourth kingdom upon earth,(7TH WORLD EMPIRE) which shall be diverse from all kingdoms, and shall devour the whole earth, and shall tread it down, and break it in pieces.(TRADE BLOCKS)
24 And the ten horns out of this kingdom are ten kings that shall arise:(10 NATIONS-10 WORLD REGIONS) and another shall rise after them;(#11 SPAIN) and he shall be diverse from the first, and he shall subdue three kings.(BE HEAD OF 3 KINGS OR NATIONS).

Schulz: 1 million EU signatures could spur finance tax 28.03.12 @ 18:38 By Honor Mahony

BRUSSELS - The citizens' initiative - a participative democracy tool coming into effect at the end of this week - could be used to pressure EU politicians into accepting a financial transactions tax (FTT), the European Parliament President has said.I don't know if the next citizens' initiative would make the crisis disappear, I hope so. But a citizen's initiative to introduce the financial transactions tax could even increase the pressure on those who are still reluctant, Martin Schulz said at a press conference on Wednesday (28 March).His words come just as Germany - until now among the most ardent supporters of such a tax - appeared to concede that it is a no-go in the EU.We just can't get it done, German finance minister Wolfgang Schauble said Monday. Berlin had been trying to push for an FTT at the EU-level but London, in particular, has been strongly opposed.The second idea of pushing for the tax only among the 17 eurozone countries is scarcely less problematic. Countries such as Ireland and Luxembourg, with significant financial sectors, do not want to introduce a tax that London - with its huge financial sector - does not have.

Opposition among member state politicians is in stark contrast to opinion polls. Surveys show that the so-called Robin Hood tax is popular among EU citizens. The European Parliament also strongly favours it.The idea is supposed to be discussed by EU finance ministers at an informal meeting in Copenhagen this weekend. Commenting on the meeting, one EU diplomat spoke of the two strangely disassociated debates on the FTT.On the one hand the European Commission is pushing to introduce the tax so part of the revenues can go to EU coffers. But when ministers discuss the issue, it is on the presumption that all revenues will go to national budgets.In Germany, meanwhile, it may yet become a big political issue if the opposition Social Democrats push ahead with their pledge to only vote in favour of the Berlin-made fiscal discipline treaty if a financial transactions tax is introduced.Speaking generally about the European Citizens Initiative - according to which the European Commission must consider legislating in an area on the back of one million signatures from seven member states - the commissioner in charge, Maros Sefcovic, said it will likely lead to initiatives that the commission would like to have suggested itself but for which it had little support.Sometimes the best ideas that come from the commission cannot be put into implementation or on the table because they do not always have the necessary political support,said Sefcovic.And if you see that a particular proposal is backed by millions of people, there is no way the decision-makers in the commission or in the member states can overlook it. They would need to have a serious debate, which has not always been the case until now.

New rules may hit eastern Europe, banker warns
28.03.12 @ 18:34


BRUSSELS - New EU rules currently being worked on to make banks take less risks and hold more capital may have unintended consequences on the eastern European economies where companies are more reliant on bank loans than in the West.I'm only advocating for central and eastern Europe because it is the most dynamic region of the EU, Gernot Mittendorfer, chief risk officer at Erste Group Bank - an Austrian bank active in countries like Hungary, Romania, Serbia.We have to be careful what impact all these regulations will have in the region, because I think Europe will be better off having this area well-funded, he told this website on Tuesday (27 March).The Austrian banker explained that because financial markets are relatively new to the region, bank loans remain the main source of funding for small and medium enterprises in the area.But once the so-called Basel III standards agreed with the US on capital requirements and risk management are transposed into EU legislation, many such companies in eastern Europe will be deemed too risky for banks to give them credit.In eastern Europe capital markets are not so developed, so all the access for corporate and small and medium enterprises for capital market funding is less developed than here in western Europe. 85 percent of businesses are relying on bank financing in comparison to 70 percent in western Europe. It's important here as well, but it's much less important in the US, where only 25 percent is done through the banking system,Mittendorfer said.He said that nobody in the banking sector was disputing the need for these lending institutions to hold more capital, but the question was how quickly these new standards had to be implemented.If you do it too fast, there may be an incentive for banks to reduce or even stop lending in certain areas. I see special difficulties in countries where the governments as such are facing problems in borrowing, he added.The EU's eight former Communist members are varied in their economic performance. They range from powerhouse Poland - the only EU country not to have been hit by recession and projected to grow by 3 percent this year - to troubled Hungary whose government wants to secure an international stand-by loan.

Not much better

Apart from the impact on eastern economies, the Basel III rules have also come under fire for lacking a clear concept on how the banking sector should be reformed and funded.Martin Hellwig, a German economy professor at Bonn university told an audience at a conference organised by the Brussels-based think-tank Finance Watch that just like the previous Basel II rules, the updated standards are heavily influenced by lobbyists telling lawmakers their financial operations are much too sophisticated for them to understand.The Basel III provisions - broken down in several pieces of legislation such as capital requirements - have still to be approved by the European Parliament and transposed into national law.But Hellwig warns that some negotiators don't want to reform anything, they see banks as a source of funding, irrespective of the risks. And bankers have no incentives for better models since the current ones allow them to hide the risks.What I said ten years ago is valid now too: Of course Basel 2 is better than Basel 1, just as Brezhnev's 5-year plan for the Soviet Union was better than Stalin's,he quipped.

Three EU agencies fail MEPs' ethics test
28.03.12 @ 09:29 By Valentina Pop


BRUSSELS - MEPs in the budgetary control committee looking at the accounts of EU institutions on Tuesday (27 March) suspended the procedure for three agencies whose staff is said to be too close to the industry they deal with.The food safety, medicines and environment agencies were given three months' time to publish all the CVs of their staff and experts in order to expose any potential conflicts of interest.I am very happy conflicts of interest are being taken seriously by this parliament, because they can be a cause for fraud and corruption, said Romanian centre-right MEP Monica Macovei, a former justice minister and anti-corruption campaigner in Romania, who drafted the parliament's position on the agencies.She singled out food industry lobbyists being hired by the food safety agency in Italy, the head of the environment agency in Copenhagen paying out some €33,000 to an NGO for staff training in the Caribbean while she was a member of the NGO's advisory board, as well as the former head of the medicine agency switching to one of the pharma companies it had been issuing standards for.Macovei said the argument used by many agencies - that expertise is hard to find outside the industry - is insufficient. If you hire someone from Boeing, you can't let them run aviation safety tests on Boeing planes,she said.I went to the food safety authority and they said: We do check, trust us, we just don't make it public.No, that is not the point, it should be public,Macovei said, noting that data privacy should not apply to publicly-funded officials or experts disclosing where they used to work.

If the European Parliament in its entirety confirms the vote in May, the three agencies will not be able to close off their accounts for 2010.The people in question should resign, Macovei said.MEPs also unanimously decided to postpone signing off the accounts of the Council of ministers - a routine exercise repeated almost every year.The symbolic move aims at persuading the council to scrap a gentleman's' agreement dating back to 1970 that the two institutions will not meddle in one other's accounts.

EU to set up anti-cyber-crime centre
28.03.12 @ 23:12 By Nikolaj Nielsen


BRUSSELS - The European Commission proposed on Wednesday (28 March) a new European cybercrime centre that will help crack down major online criminal activities.Last year, worldwide profits generated from cybercrime outstripped the global trade in marijuana, cocaine and heroin - combined.More than 1 million everyday become victims of cybercrime and you are probably one them, EU home affairs commissioner Cecilia Malmstrom told reporters in Brussels.The massive profit margins are enticing more criminal activities to move their illicit businesses online. People are routinely falling victim to scams, identify theft, and credit card and banking fraud. Other criminals disrupt IT systems.A study for the UK Home Office in 2011 found cybercrime was costing the country some €30 billion a year. In Germany, police recorded over 5,000 cases of phishing scams in 2010, up from 2,000 in 2008.

A lucrative market

Europol, the EU’s law enforcement agency based in The Hague, will house the new cybercrime centre when it becomes operational on 1 January 2013.Malmstrom called the new facility a hub for co-operation in defending an internet that is free, open and safe.Around 30 full-time experts will be staffed at the centre but this should increase to 55 when it becomes fully operational by the end of the 2013.With an estimated initial annual budget of €3.6 million, the centre will be tasked to help stem a global threat that reportedly costs its victims up to €290 billion a year.As the threat level increases, the Commission fears people’s confidence to go online will wane. Currently, only 4 percent of all sales in Europe are generated online.
Nearly three quarters of European households had internet access last year. In 2010, over a third of EU citizens were banking online. These figures are also on the rise.
But with credit card details selling for as little as €1, Europeans may think twice before punching in numbers from the comfort of their own homes to make an online purchase. Counterfeited physical credit cards go for €140 while bank credentials can sell for only €60.

Borderless crimes more difficult to stop

The borderless nature of cybercrime also makes cracking down on criminals an excessively difficult task for national authorities.Malmstrom pointed out that jurisdictional boundaries and a lack of information sharing present huge obstacles to the swift detection, investigation and prosecution of cyber criminals.Online child pornography, for instance, often involves hundreds of victims with perpetrators spread across numerous countries. Authorities tackling such crimes are faced with multiple jurisdictions and data that are not always shared in a timely manner.Similar conclusions were made at a seminar on internet child pornography, hosted by the Danish EU presidency in February.And while Europol already has a team dedicated to cybercrime, it is unable to efficiently gather information from various sources. It is also unable to respond to queries from law enforcement authorities, the judiciary and the private sector.The new cybercrime centre aims to fill this gap and provide a more collaborative response by pooling the knowledge of numerous crime-stopping agencies. This includes the UK-based police training agency (CEPOL), the European agency responsible for information security (ENSIA), and the European Cybercrime Task Force.The centre will consult the expertise of industry and civil society, but its full-time staff will come from member states, the European Commission, and Europol itself.Despite being under Europol auspices, the centre will have a separate management board, says Malmstrom though the Commission still needs to seek the endorsement by the Europol management board.Rob Wainwright, the director of Europol on Wednesday said he is delighted that the Commission has proposed its establishment at Europol, calling it a landmark development in the EU’s fight against cybercrime.

POISONED WATERS

REVELATION 8:8-11
8 And the second angel sounded, and as it were a great mountain burning with fire was cast into the sea: and the third part of the sea became blood;
9 And the third part of the creatures which were in the sea, and had life, died; and the third part of the ships were destroyed.
10 And the third angel sounded, and there fell a great star from heaven, burning as it were a lamp, and it fell upon the third part of the rivers, and upon the fountains of waters;
11 And the name of the star is called Wormwood:(bitter,Poisoned) and the third part of the waters became wormwood; and many men died of the waters, because they were made bitter.(poisoned)

REVELATION 16:3-7
3 And the second angel poured out his vial upon the sea; and it became as the blood of a dead man: and every living soul died in the sea.(enviromentalists won't like this result)
4 And the third angel poured out his vial upon the rivers and fountains of waters; and they became blood.
5 And I heard the angel of the waters say, Thou art righteous, O Lord, which art, and wast, and shalt be, because thou hast judged thus.
6 For they(False World Church and Dictator) have shed the blood of saints and prophets, and thou hast given them blood to drink; for they are worthy.

North Sea gas leak from hell enters third day
28.03.12 @ 10:07 By Nikolaj Nielsen


BRUSSELS - A North Sea platform, owned by French oil giant Total, has been leaking gas off the coast of Scotland for the past three days.All 238 personnel have been evacuated from the Elgin platform, which is located 240 km off Aberdeen, fearing an explosion from a sheen of gas condensate - a light hydrocarbon liquid-from-gas - floating on the water's surface.Power on the platform has been switched off and extraction has been stopped on the nearby Franklin and West Franklin gas fields. Non-essential workers on a nearby platform owned by rival company Shell have also been evacuated.There is disagreement on how big the Elgin sheen actually is.Britain's energy minister Charles Hendry on Tuesday (27 March) told Reuters that the size of the sheen is one-sixteenth of the size of an Olympic swimming pool.But the BBC reports it could weigh up to 23 tonnes, while the UK has imposed a 4.8-km air and a 2-nautical-mile sea exclusion zone around the platform.Gas in the water affects the buoyancy of ships as seawater pressure begins to change, so that rescue vessels attempting to approach the rig would sink, according to a representative of RMT-OILC, an offshore workers union.

People who have observed the scene at first hand said the sea water looks as if it is boiling - an indication that gas is still coming up from beneath the rig, the union delegate added.For its part, Total says it cannot confirm if the sheen is growing or shrinking.Total chief, David Hainsworth, said the leak might be coming from an outer casing of a well drilled into mud on the sea floor.The firm added it could take up to six months to drill a relief well to solve the problem. A second, more risky, option would be to send engineers to kill the leak. A third, even less likely scenario, would be that the leak dies down of its own accord.For his part, Frederic Hauge, the head of the Bellona Foundation, a Norwegian-based environmental NGO, said: If no plugging is achieved, this leak is likely to continue for 10-12 years. This is truly the well from hell.Elgin and Franklin are two high pressure/high temperature gas and condensate fields in the Central Graben Area of the North Sea. Aside from gas, Elgin also produced 60,000 barrels per day (bpd) of light crude oil.Documents obtained by the Guardian newspaper last year showed that more than 100 potentially lethal oil and gas spills took place on North Sea rigs owned by Shell and Total between 2009 and 2010.The Elgin gas leak is a reminder of BP's massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010, which at the time led to calls for tighter EU regulation of offshore drilling safety standards.

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