tv Headline News RT June 7, 2013 2:00am-2:45am EDT
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washington defensive three piece of aliens of millions of internet users over seventy years are saying it only spied on foreigners outside the country. american china ready for an informal meeting in california amid the finger pointing over cyber attacks and flaring tensions over washington's military build up in china's backyard. and president putin is said to be calm officially single to me and his wife announced their marriage is over what they called an amicable split after thirty years of being together.
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live on for most school headquarters you watching r t with me tell them once it's good to have you company with us this morning u.s. intelligence confirms is collecting the private messages of internet users spy defending the moves are claiming the message of valence was targeting only none the u.s. persons outside the country earlier british and american papers reported that the u.s. was a tapping directly into the service of leading american internet companies getting access to personal e-mails photos and documents leaked court order has become the first hard evidence of washington's a sweeping data collection program artie's unless the see a trick in the has more. after eye popping news that america's national security agency has been collecting information on millions of customers of one of the country's biggest telecommunications providers of arisan further information of the extensive surveillance conducted by u.s.
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officials has leaked out nine major internet companies they include google facebook yahoo microsoft skype you tube apple a.o.l. and pal talk have been used by the f.b.i. and the national security agency to monitor photos videos e-mails audio and all other sorts of information tracking a sweeping scope of individuals online activity as reported by the guardian and the washington post a highly classified program dubbed prison accounts for almost one in seven intelligence reports made by the n.s.a. to the u.s. president and congress this is of course the first time that this prism program has been publicly brought to light u.s. officials in particular members of congress aware of this program have been keeping quiet about the sweeping activity of violating the privacy of american citizens and of course so all of this comes after secret court order was obtained by the guardian and uploaded online this document revealed that u.s. telecom giant of arise and has been giving the n.s.a.
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information on absolutely all of the phone calls being made within the united states as well as between the u.s. and foreign countries according to the secret court order which was issued as we know in april and expires july nineteenth phone calls of millions of americans are being traced through horizon absolutely regardless of whether or not there is reason to suspect that subscribers are involved in any criminal activity and it's also been disclosed that this operation has actually been ongoing since two thousand and six and renewed every three months. eugene perri an activist for the civil rights organization on some coalition says this caper all the surveillance might not only have domestic but also global implications they can make apparently a very very massive database and millions of citizens of almost all of their activities what they're doing and there's quite a bit you can construct from knowing every single place you go every day who you talk to and how you talk to them i can tell you quite a bit about and this is being collected on millions and millions of citizens
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completely indiscriminately which means there's a giant database of american citizens activities on a daily basis that the government has under its control and is keeping under secret lock and key and we have no idea how they can use it can be used in many harmful when there's a wide range of people around the world who could be affected by this i mean imagine something as simple as so your college and roommate was from russia and you stay in contact and you continually talk to each other that could be something that the government could decide. create some sort of pattern about you given what happened in the boston bombing and then they can use that as a pretext to search your entire house and so i think certainly that not only national international concerns rates. turkey's a prime minister seems i'm shaken by the protests against israel that have swept the country. tayyiba added one brand of the demonstrations unlawful an i.q. of turning into vandalism calling for an immediate end to the unrest new was cheered by thousands of supporters upon returning home from
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a trip abroad those who gathered at the airport chanting that they are ready to die for anyone meanwhile tens of thousands of anti-government demonstrators packed cities across the country again calling for his resignation what began as a peaceful sit in from condemnation in istanbul's taksim square has turned into the west i'm dressed in decades consistently filled by accusations off of the police the heavy handed dispersal of protesters i think three people went killed and thousand injured in the week of classes some already voicing she is it might not be long before the military is called in to quell the unrest. many generals and even former chief of staff of turkey are in prison now i mean this is a very special situation when they are waiting for the developments because their army will take. control over if there will be more serious disturbances their way they may be the prime minister and the president
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will start negotiating with the demonstrators maybe it will be some peace in process i mean they're still waiting for something good to happen but if instead of negotiating with his own people the prime minister will keep conveying to them he's tough message even storing them up more then the you will see next week a week after some saying from the army and turkey as you know has a culture all kind of fiction military regime democracy democracy military regime these things happen to them in the past and nobody will be surprised that it will happen again now. one of the main things the protesters accuse the government of is forcing conservative islamic values on turkey that has been staunchly circular for nearly a century the altitude control center in taksim square also said to be demolished as part of the redevelopment plans has become
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a symbol of the current struggle art is a radical louche go reports. it's been a week since the violent dispersal of protests here in taksim square and goes the park and let's take a look at one of the most important fixtures or other structures that have been here for quite some time and it's right behind me the ataturk cultural center now it's decorated with posters and slogans but that's not how it was a week ago in fact it was desolated for demolition so why is it important for people in taksim what kind of significance does it carry for turkish people not just in istanbul but all over the country well let's go inside and take a look and find out the a cam used to house ballet and opera and was essentially a source of pride for the church people for them it was a representation of the cultural and political heritage left over by kemal ataturk but everyone said ballet is not an arch worthy of the turkish people not something that turkey should be looking and inspiring to and decided to demolish this art house you can see in order to make way for a new perhaps a lot of people are seeing this demolition as an attempt by anyone to go backwards
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instead of going forwards to do away with the with the ideas that were brought here by the church and to bring in one's own ideas into reality basically you can say that at this point a key am is sort of a citizen for the protesters they you can say took this fortress by force on saturday evening or the protesters in istanbul this really was the it's a moment this was the moment when they felt that they are at least with that particular moment to remove the bottle it's a symbol of resistance it's a symbol of protest it's a symbol really of the turkish people coming together and saying we will not let go of our heritage we will hold on to it even if it is dilapidated and is slated for demolition doesn't matter what the prime minister wants in the symbol. ryan we're closely following the situation in turkey as we have been from the very beginning the timeline of the unrest and live updates available twenty four seven
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on our website our team dot com. today. these are the images the world has been seeing from the streets of canada. showing corporations throughout the day. smiles and warm handshakes i expected in california later in the day where the u.s. and chinese leaders meet for there for a summit behind the diplomacy has a range of prickly subjects between the g. with washington accusing beijing of launching a cyber war against it and as. i reported the u.s. is countermeasures go well beyond to be purely defensive. after months of muscle flexing comes the handshaking u.s.
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president barack obama and chinese president xi jinping will likely play nice for the cameras but behind the closed california mansion doors of this first bilateral summits a tense talk over a cyber espionage hacking and rules of virtual engagement think of it as well as the jumble of biological weapons convention so one can a feel sort of weapons that most countries agree not to do so or to use the. same thing is true of cyber everyone's got missions or knowledge of what we can agree perhaps not to attack the children's interests or at least not to start doing however the us has repeatedly accused the rising asian giant of widespread computer hacking just last week a report by the defense science board said nearly forty pentagon weapons programs and almost thirty other defense technologies were compromised by hackers some directly tied to the chinese military and government u.s.
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manufacturers have also accused china of stealing patents and designs of high technology we're also clear eyed about the challenges in cyber. united states has expressed concern about the growing threat of cyber intrusion some of which appear to be tied to the chinese government and military china's defense ministry has consistently denied claims that its military is engaged in hacking and in turn pointed the finger at washington the country's top internet security official recently claimed to have mountains of data pointing to extensive u.s. hacking aims at china later this month the country will be holding unprecedented military drills with special units and even nato is debating whether it needs a manual on cyber wars while washington casts china as the world's most dangerous virtual threat the u.s. has been cementing plans to take down the enemy billions have reportedly been spent to create forty teams of cyber agents that will allegedly serve to thwart hackers
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while simultaneously launching offensive attacks against adversaries a cyber battlefield that many believe the u.s. can't affectively control you have a government with many secure security holes in it you have a corporate sector can't keep its information secure you have defense contractors taking contracts from the federal government to provide cyber security and they can't even provide cyber security for themselves i am seeing this as a war in which the united states is not winning no matter the allowed resources it is putting in or the tough talk and even experts at home say now is the time for the us to be working together with leading nations like china to establish norms for cyber space activity and i think i'd open the conversation rather than bomb. we know what you've been doing and knock it off and if you don't here's the things
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we're going to do i mean you can have a conversation if you want to but i think you've got to think through about whether that is really the best way you're going to achieve what it is we want to accomplish we want a global resilient open and secure internet if the u.s. and china fail to reach consensus on how to cooperate in cyberspace the consequence many believe could lead to a virtual cold war between the world's two largest economies and charted territory that could inevitably turn the internet into a dangerous platform where friends become foes reporting from new york marine upper nile r.t. . i think twice before becoming a modern day robin hood in the u.k. this is an. end up in jail for decades for sharing movies and songs for free that's. balancing the scales of justice as
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a self the defense lol for israeli settlers in the west bank there's violence in the region amid the ongoing territorial dispute that and much more just ahead. the u.s. government versus private first class bradley manning what is this trial all about protecting state military secrets for a show trial scapegoating one individual says this trial sent a chilling warning to would be whistleblowers and journalists and what does aiding the enemy need in the age of the internet. seals are born or right on the ice fields of the white sea. throughout the twentieth century the poles were hunted for their snow white furs. russia imposed a ban on this trade and hunters have since been replaced by tourists but will these
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pups stay safe forever. saving seals on r.t.e. . mission free cretaceous free in-store charges free. range month free. three stooges free. download free blown test quality video for your media projects a free video dog r t dot com. welcome back you're watching our president of letting me. putin has announced that his marriage is over and in months of speculation about his private life the announcement came in a joint interview with his wife on russian state television the way they called it an amicable split my colleague bill dodd discussed the high profile divorce but i
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think. generally via idea of a president getting a divorce isn't something so out of the warden especially in the west where the likes of for unequal us out was the silvio berlusconi but for a president of a country like russia this is a major event since the majority of the population or at least a large part of the russian citizens are still very conservative and we heard from the couple's themselves on t.v. it could easily have been a press release from the kremlin couldn't it well exactly what they would put in his personal life has always been out of the spotlight out of the public eye but i think it just shows their decision to come out and announce this on a state t.v. for everyone to see is just to show that he wants to be open and public in this very personal matter because the last time we saw the couple together was
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a year ago during his inauguration and just to cancel out all the possible speculation they just came out and well. as source no personal event. which is my job and all my activities mean i'm an absolutely public figure some people enjoy this and some don't some people simply be incompatible with such a lifestyle so my wife has done a nine year shift by my side basically the decision was mutual. cygnus like saddam i said it was in stocks mutual decision a marriage is over because we barely see each other his job keeps him completely busy our children have grown up they need their own lives now we all do i really don't like being in the spotlight all the constant traveling is difficult for me we simply don't see each other. it was a long marriage that was
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a very long marriage thirty years this couple has been together they have two daughters they both said that they a lot of them very much they're still going to be really close people to each other for the rest of their lives but i think it could really. raise a lot of respect even for the president for again this conservative society to do something like that openly editor in chief of g.q. russia michelle and all of us says putin's announcement of a private matter is a commendable step putin is the kind of person who has of course made his reluctance to disclose his private life. so public that it has you know become a matter of i think general public interest and so going you know going so public with something as i would imagine personally uncomfortable if not painful as divorce is definitely
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a step towards openness to pretty positive step i think for all parties concerned it's a relief you know for us it's probably really for him and certainly relief or for that militant. as more on that story on our web site here's what else you can find out our t. dot com russian it called discover a stole wade's death body and the lending plighted was apparently there for days and made several journeys find out when. and if blues gurus be useful spanish lawmakers rather the public outrage puts a stop to discounted strong drinks in parliament cafeterias the politicians all have to content themselves with wine and coffee saying they don't want to show a frivolous image. i don't want to make a living sharing movies and music be prepared to pay a hefty price in the u.k.
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owners of moneymaking torrent websites are facing up to ten years behind bars for cutting copyright holders out of a profit artists are for has the details. well there is one single favorite t.v. . listening to music or maybe airing that music with a file sharing is growing ever more popular and as its popularity so you too does the file sharing site the torrent sites that. link it as a great unpopularity we've seen the u.k. authorities alone with record company labels. on precedent and torrent site campaign and the first sign of this clamp down by the u.k. authorities came in the form of a letter from the national intelligence and then it was that they found guilty of certain offenses to face ten imprisonment all see if you can see the founder of one
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of the torrent sites that received and publish the last a sense of them by the tail and now he's asked to remain anonymous but let's take a listen to what he said i think it will i mean maybe also. part of the strategy that they're trying to make it is difficult for people to end the strengthening as possible for people to start the site but on the whole i don't think it's going to stop. here to talk torrents with us on to invite this it's all policy blog. thank you for joining us i think of you first of all let's clear up because you can see here you know people on earth. on their computers listening to music watching videos when it comes to torrents and sharing fights what's the legality what's legal what's not well that's one of the problems it's a completely gray area. if you take a copy of somebody else's picture or music and stick it on your website that's copyright infringement if you provide a link to somebody else's storage of that same content then providing that link on
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the u.k. law is technically not illegal however if you create a website with thousands of such things and sizing around to make money. from that website under british law under your care law there has been a prosecution for fraud is a red herring or provide referee exactly nothing more than that because nothing is strange in the law since these words is being issued so anybody running a tour of websites are prosecuted under similar legislation could expect to receive a sentence which is four years in prison ok what we're setting out to be keeping our very closely all what happens with a investigations will be bringing you the latest when we. have international news now the number of hunger strike is a guantanamo bay detention camp who are being force fed has risen to forty one
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nearly a quarter of all the inmates now according to the military the total number of the protesters is now at one hundred and three that's despite president obama's pledge last month to shut down the camp and move of the detainees that have been cleared for transfer the process of force feeding has been condemned by the un and many times described as in if you made by the international medical community. hundreds of left wing activists have staged a protest in paris following the death of a teenager allegedly beaten to death by members of a far right group the men to marry a nineteen year old student belong to the anti fascist action movement the french interior ministry announced that four suspects have already been arrested at. the united nations human rights agency is reportedly working on a plan to compensate palestinians a home to the israeli settlers in the west bank as well as increased violence
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recently you with attacks resulting in injuries and damage to property a new un plan could help offset the apparent bias of israeli law concerning settlers and palestinians honestly it has more on this. in the wild west bank gunslinging israelis and palestinians do not stand equal before the law they never did but even less so now a settler and a palestinian living side by side who commit the same crime a put their entirely different legal systems the settlers have when they fight to have the so-called gloomy law apply in the west bank shai dromi was an israeli farmer who in an act of self-defense shot and killed a trespasser and wounded thirteen others he was eventually acquitted of manslaughter and the nor that was later named after him supports the notion that any action taken against an intruder is considered self-defense but until now it wasn't clear if it applied in the settlements it's an issue that's now back on the table the limits of when acetic can and cannot use
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a gun to protect himself or his property jacob taylor lives in the disputed hebron hills he moved here from south africa two decades ago with seventy four members of his family jacob claims more than six hundred of his pedigree she had been stolen by palestinians from his farm but i feel that the army supplied me but they don't even go out and go with that i feel like shit. like when they stole my ship i took their rights i went out i mean for self-protection but the palestinians have a different version. of are you going to go and so i was in the mountains feeding my sheep in our land and the settlers attacked me and hit me on my back they did not just attack me they attack everybody every day they attack people in treason animals they are trying to take our lands but we will not let them. the law says jacob's case gets heard in an israeli civil court hunted in a military one the palestinian could be barred from seeing
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a lawyer for up to thirty days. the palestinian could be held and interrogated for eight days before being brought to a judge after which the detention could be extended and extended and extended by comparison the settler would immediately be allowed to consult with his lawyer he would have to be brought before a judge in order to continue interrogating him within twenty four hours and he would have all the sense of due process that we don't see in the military court almost a day doesn't go past without at least one violent act between citizen palestinians been reported many fear a third intifada might be on the cards all the more possible now that cities have been given the green light to shoot and also questions later. in the way spend. coming up it's time to crunch the numbers a financial say prime interest is the break.
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the school board in batavia illinois has decided to punish one teacher for his bad behavior by putting him on a strict probation play or what did he do to be deserve be part of this probation planted he do select punch a student in the face or to go in some sort of horribly racist or sexist ranted for the class no he just reminded the students that as americans they have the right to not incriminate themselves to put it more simply he told the students that they didn't have to answer a question will survey about drug and alcohol use and their emotional state since the data from this questionnaire would be sent back to the private company that created it this raises even more privacy issues than just the school knowing about the students personal lives i would like to commend this teacher john dryden for actually going above and beyond and telling the children something they need to
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know you know if you're going to live in a society based on individual rights it would help to actually teach children what those rights are but that's just my opinion. you know sometimes you see a story and it seems. you think you understand it and then you glimpse something else you hear or see some other part of it and realize that everything you. are is a big picture. good afternoon and welcome the prime minister and i'm harry and boring i'm in washington . let's get to our headlines. now druggy it disappoint the markets that is always a bit of a long shot of the european central bank she put further ease rates after rising at
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the last meeting that risk market sold off on the new some are close to entering the bear market territory our poll twenty percent decline off last month we talked today with head hedge fund manager kyle herring to end all of this and more. and you've probably heard of or high frequency trading but there's another meanest sounding corner of the market called dark pools in the private exchanges where traders can make big transactions and start without tipping off the markets that the rest of us trade on the wall street journal reports that the regulator is probing into the shadowy corners and now command about thirteen percent of all equity trading some of the largest are jewels are operated by barclays goldman and chris weitz and finra is attempting to determine if the perms priority trading is using the firm's own dark pools to manipulate the market. finally more bad news for our fair headed once favorite banker jamie diamond it looks like j.p.
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morgan is set to lose one point six billion dollars on some allegedly shady deals with jefferson county alabama according to bloomberg that's because it's the lead in arranging risky security deals that pushed the county into the largest us municipal bankruptcy good luck at the next shareholder meeting. let's get to what's in your prime interest. during the financial crisis the term too big to fail came to prominence as the
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federal reserve and treasury arranged for bailouts for some of the largest financial institutions dodd frank attempted to remedy this by creating the financial stability oversight council or we call f. stock is composed of representatives by most of us regulators in the chair it by the treasury secretary jack lew is mission is to basically get rid of too big to fail by first identifying potential large firm threats and then monitoring them along with the markets on an ongoing basis it has already designated certain banks as a similarly important financial institutions or cities and f. stock had them submit so-called living wills these are plans to wind down the financial firm should it become insolvent but it's not only banks that can be designated as cities insurance companies clearing houses and others could potentially cause systemic risk as well and only recently three companies two insurers and one lender and now if they had been sent notice by of soc they would be on this list too we're joined by kyle harrington of harrington capital
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management to discuss this and what's been going on recently in the markets thanks for joining all thank you for having me it's a pleasure and we recently saw that stock headed by the treasury department tentatively designated ai g. prudential financial and g.e. capital as systemically important or cities what's the significance of this expression when it comes to new regulation of these entities. well you know i'm not a supporter of too big to fail i know that currently throughout wall street throughout the financial communities both insurance and big broker dealers we are going through a process of how to regulate better regulate these institutions and i i support regulation what i don't support is over regulation and it seems as if they're going to designate some of these bigger players like a i.g.
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like credential and put them in an area where the federal they're regulated on a federal level so that we don't have what we had in two thousand and eight where taxpayers bailed out these major institutions like we've never seen before so if it's going to better regulate them so that we can prevent that i support it but what i don't want to have happen is that tend to loom swing so far to the regulation side that these businesses are not allowed to operate in a free market economy. are there any other non-bank financial companies that are thank you needed to be designated as a safety. well you know i'm hearing some of these others you know some other big insurance names like all state and maybe some other bigger financial institutions that are more on the brokerage side of the business as well i don't want to speculate necessarily but i am hearing that the umbrella may widen in terms of these moving from state regulated entities to federal regulated entities ok well
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both a.i.g. and g.e. capital they were bailed out during the financial crisis. to the tune of one hundred thirty billion dollars g.e. was given one hundred forty billion dollars is this if he doesn't nation really mean that the next time if there is one that they won't be bailed out i think that's you know that seems to be the insinuation here and i you know in that way if you if you listen to the g. c.e.o. he actually he wasn't necessarily disagreeable with respect to the new designation for a g. so. i think that that's kind of what they're hinting to is that you know there's not going to be any more bailouts and you're not going to be too big to fail any longer so what we're going to do now is regulate you at a federal level maybe more stringently so in that way i think it would make sense let's just see how these how the regulations fall into place because you don't want to stifle the free markets and the economy with respect to these banks in the
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nation is not final because there has to be in a process. that is going to go through the final ruling will be made by treasury secretary jack lew when he makes this sign off because of this absolute itself did not reveal the company's names he left that up to the companies to voluntarily and now it's back to the markets. why do you think that they these companies that go ahead and do that. well i think you know it seems as if in today's world full disclosure and timely disclosure the market at least has the ability to digest in a lot of these c.e.o.'s now given some of the other issues with say lehman brothers for example or bear stearns you know disclosing something early on i think allows shareholders to feel some level of comfort. in the stock price and the future and so the chairman coming out disclosing that and then saying that hey actually i
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think this might be a good thing for the company prevents less volatility in the stock price so that would be my reasoning for why they would come forward and disclose this but like you said there still needs to be a process and i think a two thirds majority vote in order for them to be designated as such now standards and poor and nouns that a.g. would be joining the s. and p. one hundred index just minutes before an idea and now that it was as unpaid at fifty could there have been any relation between these two events and. again i don't know i don't necessarily want to speculate but it does it does seem coincidental that these two things happen at once and oftentimes a lot of these bigger institutions if they're going to make announcements that are significant in nature maybe making them all at the same time you know makes a lot of sense so it does seem coincidental but you know i'm actually i'm for the disclosure and for these companies coming forward and if there's something that's
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immaterial of events like this i think it's helpful for these bigger companies to do that and why have you here i want to talk about the markets in general and last month the fed made noises that it might be might begin tapering or slowly reversing the quantitative easing program perhaps as early as the end of this year and we've seen significant market correction since then what's your view on the markets now can we be entering a bear market any time soon yeah you know it's interesting i've. actually not off not that often but in this time i've been i think spot on with this market you know i thought that all along it's gotten ahead of itself i want to address the fact that we are on our way to seventeen trillion in national debt we have a sluggish g.d.p. our employment marketplace still seems to be over seven and a half percent nationally and so i expected there to be a sell off now with the fed talking through the notion of not buying back.
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and getting involved in the treasury market as much as it has over the last year i kind of sense that people might be a little bit hesitant to put capital at work especially after a dow jones and an s. and p. that's run up significantly in the year of two thousand and thirteen so we remain very patient and i think we're going to continue to do that we're going to investigate names that we think may be and have continued to be out of favor and are reasonably valued and start taking position in those names but we're not going to rush to put any cash on the sidelines into this market at a at a fast pace well what have the recent market news been doing to trading firms that engage in trend following strategy. well you know i think that you know if you look at the overseas markets in japan for example i think that that's an in over inflated marketplace and so the short term traders have gotten
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a lot more active in watching trends that are taking place and looking at the monthly numbers that come out like the jobless claims number or like consumer sentiment consumer confidence and so for the short term traders they're paying a lot more attention to trends and getting in and out of positions. as they see trends start to you know unfold and right now we're seeing a trend although the market closed up i think the dow eighty points today but it was it had sold off for most of the day so that was a sign of a little bit of confidence that maybe at this fifteen thousand level for the dow jones there is a there is a floor and the japanese markets have been extremely volatile both on the and stocks the nikkei was first up sixty five percent this year and then it was down one thousand percent from its high you do you think that the massive stimulus program over there has been a failure. i think that it is hyper inflated over inflated
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whatever word you'd like the market significantly i think we suisse we have that here as well we have historic low interest rates people are not really interested in the bond markets because there's no real rate of return in fact you know that when you look at a ten year treasury it doesn't even touch the rate of inflation if you look at say a three percent inflation rate i think the same as happened in japan i think what needs to happen in order for a healthy marketplace in this free economy to take place in both japan and in the united states is a real deep examination of the expense side of the income statement that the united states government has and that means looking at entitlements that leo that means looking at expenses that we can trim in order to really get this deficit in a better place or at least paint a picture going forward that we have a grip on our expenses as a country and then also the the employment marketplace needs to pick up and i think
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the way you do that in is to really get a hold on what taxes are going to be loosening some regulations at the entrepreneurial level in these banks starting to lend again and i think everybody's cautious so i doubt that's why i believe the market has got it gotten ahead of itself in both japan and the united states and you know i would say be cautious get with someone that you trust as an advisor and and really build a plan that you think is is it takes advantage of what's going on in the market right now and now you work for a number of large banks and brokers before you start your own firm or with merrill lynch bank and goldman sachs what is the difference in the corporate culture is after those firms does of there's you know people realize there is a big difference in a lot of those firms and and some of them are good some of them not good some of them good for me not good for me i started my own firm quite frankly to build my
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own corporate culture and. you know at a goldman sachs it's i think i can just specify that it's a lot more about teamwork and at some of the other places it's more about more the individual so. they're very different in nature they're all successful in what they're successful at and the negatives you know they you know there's a lot more regular regulatory scrutiny now and i think some of those cultures are more conservative in nature and some of the more not so conservative right now i think in order to succeed with regulatory environment being what it is you have to be. a lot more cautious very well thank you so much for joining us this is kyle harrington of harrington capital management thank you so much. and stay tuned because up next we dig into the final print of money market reform what's in
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store for this two point think billion dollar industry that nearly imploded in the last financial crisis then a prime interest producer bob inglis and i and those docs were the over the five a college major that are best or worst suited for the financial industry. the u.s. government versus private first class bradley manning which gives his trial all about protecting state military secrets horse show trial scapegoating one individual says this trial send a chilling warning to would be whistleblowers and to journalists and what does aiding the enemy mean in the age of the internet.
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i would grab as to why should the people in positions of power instead of speak on their behalf and that's why you can find by go larry king now right here on r.t. question more. to least be to language the. program says documentaries in arabic it's all here on all t.v. reporting from the world talks about six of the c.r.p. interviews intriguing stories for you to. see then try a little t. arabic.
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