nestel schreef op 24 november 2015 15:56:
"Een scenario dat verzekeraar Nationale-Nederlanden (NN) zijn branchegenoot Delta Lloyd koopt tegen een attractieve prijs
is mogelijk. Dat stelde
analist Cor Kluis van Rabobank dinsdag."
Dus als 1 iemand het roeptoetert , dan is het waar???
En als er een, STEL, emissie komt van 1 mrd, dan passen we de koersdoelen ACHTERAF gewoon weer zuidwaarts bij...
Dit zaakje stinkt... Rabo moet, imho, zeker nog even een aantal DL stukjes lozen tegen een hogere prijs...
INSINUEREN en MANIPULEREN noemt men dat gewoon imho...
idd " kom er maar in particulieren"...
( Er wordt echter niet bijverteld:)
...Maar houd u wel bijkoopkapitaal paraat om een evt. verwatering te kunnen opvangen...
www.youtube.com/watch?v=yaRJv8LXSVASilver Manipulation Song (21.739)
pay me, pay me my silver nowwww....
Update 15:50 uur: Olie
We moeten nog even zoeken waarom, maar de prijs van olie gaat er als een haas vandoor.
Da's olie op het vuur gooien... Vandaar de plotselinge stijging van de olieprijs.... (spierballentaal daar houden beleggers niet van)
of zou het dit kunnen zijn:
www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1805...Oil prices rise after Saudi blasts
Oil prices rocketed 2% today as concerns about further tensions in the Middle East and their impact on supplies emerged from the wreckage of the bomb blasts in Saudi Arabia.
The London benchmark price of Brent crude oil rose 50 cents to 25.39 US dollars a barrel as the terrorist attacks in which killed ten Americans overnight dampened market confidence.
Saudi Arabia is the world's biggest oil producer and analysts have warned that any attack on the sector would have serious consequences for prices.
Tension has surrounded Middle East oil supplies in recent months with the US-led Iraq war responsible for most of the worries.
Oil prices were extremely volatile in the run-up to the start of hostilities.
Before the war, oil prices reached 40 dollars a barrel but have fallen back in the world market place since the conflict ended earlier this month.
The latest attacks come at a crucial time when confidence was returning to the sector.
Fears that the war would spark turmoil in the Middle East, which supplies two-fifths of globally-traded crude, have appeared to be exaggerated but could yet resurface.
Higher crude oil prices have a knock-on effect on the wider economy, pushing up prices for petrol, heating oil and other fuels which in turn raise the cost of energy and transport for households, industry and motorists.
Iraq was pumping close to 2.5 million barrels of oil a day before the war. It is gradually edging towards one million a day now, well short of earlier predictions, having seen production slow to a trickle in recent weeks.
As the world's seventh-largest oil supplier, the interruption to Iraqi supply could itself be responsible for some of the latest price rises.