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-   -   لا صحة لتدخل الصناديق الحكومية في سوق الأسهم .. ومقومات الاقتصاد الوطني متينة (https://www.tdwl.net/vb/showthread.php?t=178566)

الساهرنت 14-03-2006 09:30 PM

لا صحة لتدخل الصناديق الحكومية في سوق الأسهم .. ومقومات الاقتصاد الوطني متينة
 
"الاقتصادية" من الرياض - - 14/02/1427هـ
وضع الدكتور إبراهيم العساف وزير المالية البارحة حدا للتكهنات والشائعات التي تدور في أوساط المتعاملين في سوق الأسهم السعودية والتي تعتقد إمكانية تدخل الحكومة من خلال الصناديق لإعادة السوق إلى الاتجاه الصعودي. وأكد الوزير العساف أنه لا صحة لما أشيع عن تدخل الصناديق الحكومية في سوق الأسهم وأنه لا نية لمثل هذه الخطوة. وتابع أنه في حالة النية لاتخاذ مثل هذه الخطوة فسيتم الإعلان عنها قبل تنفيذها بوقت كاف. واعتبر وزير المالية التراجع بهذه الصورة في سوق الأسهم, نتيجة للصعود الكبير في السوق خلال الفترة القصيرة الماضية.
وأشار الدكتور العساف إلى أن مقومات الاقتصاد السعودي متينة, وهذه المتانة لا بد أن تنعكس على سوق المال وتجعله في مأمن من أي مأزق

اكتروني 14-03-2006 09:36 PM

سلم عليه وقله ..صح النوم

shagrawi2020 14-03-2006 09:54 PM

اقتباس:

bandarsq
محلل فني


تاريخ التسجيل: May 2005
المدينة: الظهران
مشاركة: 1,559 من قال أن الحكومات لا تتدخل؟؟...الحكومة الامريكية دعمت سوقها في أحدى انهيارات السوق .

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موضوع رائع .. لانهيار السوق الامريكي عام 1929 ..

يتطرق فيه الكاتب الى اسباب الانهيار وتاثيره على اقتصاد الدولة ..

ودور الدولة في حل المشكلة ..

[size="5"]وكيف تم استعادة روح السوق بعد دور الدولة في حل المشكلة بايقاف البنوك في جميع الولايات المتحدة الامريكية لمدة ثلاثة ايام متتالية (الامر كان من رئيس الدولة روزوفلت) .. [/SIZE
]
ساقوم بتلخيصه وترجمته باذن الله ..


What made the stock market crash? Here's a brief summary.

Capital is the tools needed to produce things of value out of raw materials. Buildings and machines are common examples of capital. A factory is a building with machines for making valued goods. Throughout the twentieth century, most of the capital in the United States was represented by stocks. A corporation owned capital. Ownership of the corporation in turn took the form of shares of stock. Each share of stock represented a proportionate share of the corporation. The stocks were bought and sold on stock exchanges, of which the most important was the New York Stock Exchange located on Wall Street in Manhattan.

Throughout the 1920s a long boom took stock prices to peaks never before seen. From 1920 to 1929 stocks more than quadrupled in value. Many investors became convinced that stocks were a sure thing and borrowed heavily to invest more money in the market.

But in 1929, the bubble burst and stocks started down an even more precipitous cliff. In 1932 and 1933, they hit bottom, down about 80% from their highs in the late 1920s. This had sharp effects on the economy. Demand for goods declined because people felt poor because of their losses in the stock market. New investment could not be financed through the sale of stock, because no one would buy the new stock.

But perhaps the most important effect was chaos in the banking system as banks tried to collect on loans made to stockmarket investors whose holdings were now worth little or nothing at all. Worse, many banks had themselves invested depositors' money in the stockmarket. When word spread that banks' assets contained huge uncollectable loans and almost worthless stock certificates, depositors rushed to withdraw their savings. Unable to raise fresh funds from the Federal Reserve System, banks began failing by the hundreds in 1932 and 1933.

By the inauguration of Franklin D. Roosevelt as president in March 1933, the banking system of the United States had largely ceased to function. Depositors had seen $140 billion disappear when their banks failed. Businesses could not get credit for inventory. Checks could not be used for payments because no one knew which checks were worthless and which were sound.

Roosevelt closed all the banks in the United States for three days - a "bank holiday." Some banks were then cautiously re-opened with strict limits on withdrawals. Eventually, confidence returned to the system and banks were able to perform their economic function again. To prevent similar disasters, the federal government set up the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, which eliminated the rationale for bank "runs" - to get one's money before the bank "runs out." Backed by the FDIC, the bank could fail and go out of business, but then the government would reimburse depositors. Another crucial mechanism insulated commercial banks from stock market panics by banning banks from investing depositors' money in stocks.
هكذاااااااااااااااااااااااااااااااااااااااااا فعل الرجااااااااااااااااااااااااااااااااااال
ياليت قومي يعلمون

البتار الصارم 14-03-2006 10:34 PM

http://www.***********.com/forums/sh...d.php?t=109181


الساعة الآن 01:35 AM. حسب توقيت مدينه الرياض

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