Crimea : Phản ứng của các thị trường chứng khoán “Không có ǵ phải lo”
[QUOTE=pheng;205968]Họ đă thương lượng để Nga chiếm Crimea rồi
[/QUOTE]
Yes Sir !!!
Các thị trường chứng khoán bên Á Châu, Âu Châu cũng như bên Mỹ Châu đều lên cả sáng hôm nay thứ 2 sau kết quả cuộc bỏ phiếu.
Giới đầu tư, tài phiệt nghĩ là t́nh h́nh sẽ không xấu đi, các quốc gia tiếp tục đấu vơ mồm, những biện pháp nhằm trừng trị Nga không hiệu quả.
[INDENT][COLOR="#000080"][SIZE=5][B]Stock futures jump post-Crimea vote; data ahead[/B][/SIZE]
By Barbara Kollmeyer, MarketWatch
[B]MADRID[/B] (MarketWatch) — Stock futures jumped on Monday, with the market moving to a risk-on mode for now as investors saw no signs so far of any reaction from the West after Crimeans opted to rejoin Russia as expected in a controversial referendum.
Futures for the S&P 500 index +0.51% barreled ahead 11.6 points, or 0.6%, to 1,844.50, while those for the Dow industrials+0.65% jumped 95 points, or 0.6%, to 16,087. Futures for the Nasdaq-100 M4 +0.63% rose 26.25 points, or 0.7%, to 3,646.25. [/COLOR][/INDENT]
Crimea: Obama khẽ đánh lên tay Putin.
Dưới con mắt của giới đầu tư, những trừng phạt không thể nào nhẹ hơn được.
Đến cuối ngày thứ 2, chỉ số Dow Jones tăng 181 điểm ( +1.13%) .
[INDENT][/INDENT][INDENT][COLOR="#000080"][SIZE=5][B]Weak sanctions don’t put any pressure on Russia[/B][/SIZE]
[B]Opinion: U.S., EU send a political message, not an economic one[/B]
March 17, 2014, 1:34 p.m. EDT
[B]WASHINGTON[/B] (MarketWatch) — The United States and the European Union did the bare minimum Monday by imposing economic sanctions on a small group of Russian and Ukrainian politicians. The sanctions sent a political message that the West is most seriously displeased with Russia’s aggression in Crimea, but the economic impact of the sanctions is barely discernible.
[B]The sanctions amount to a slap on the wrist — and not a very hard slap, either[/B]. The West can seize assets owned by these people, and prevent Western banks from doing business with them. But the sanctions don’t touch the flow of trade and investment between Russia and the West.
Unlike past sanctions imposed against Iran, or Iraq, or South Africa, these sanctions aren’t designed to cripple the Russian economy in an effort to apply real pressure on Moscow to relent. Instead, they are designed to punish a few influential people personally, without much expectation that they will change Russia’s policies, which are formulated more on the basis of national pride and geopolitical security than on economic self-interest.[/COLOR][/INDENT]