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- Posted by ÀÏÍß on 04/30/2009. shangshi commented 3 times.
- Posted by ÂêÑÅ on 04/29/2009. shangshi commented once.
- [RE:] ¯½³£ºÃÀ¹úµÄ¯½³ÆÌ£¨Ò»£©Posted by CNDer on 04/27/2009. shangshi commented once.
- Posted by zt on 02/04/2009. shangshi commented once.
- Posted by gz on 01/05/2009. shangshi commented 3 times.I will try to give my 2c here. Mostly are just my observations. For ¹ÜÖÐ's question, it can be evaluated from these angles: (1) Risk can be transferred. This is where derivties come into play. (In fact, now you can hedge(buy insurance) for almost anything, for instace, raining on certain days.) (2) Risk is a variable, not a constant. Taking the alt-A morgage for example. The loan originator often has no intention what so ever to keep the load for maybe 2months. The chances of risking default for th
- Posted by lucy on 12/16/2008. shangshi commented once.
- Posted by ÂêÑÅ on 11/30/2008. shangshi commented once.
- [RE:] »ª¶û½ÖºÍÖ÷½ÖPosted by ·ÏÃû on 11/18/2008. shangshi commented once.(ZT) From London Financial Time Unadulterated version of China¡¯s growth By David Pilling Published: November 12 2008 19:31 | Last updated: November 12 2008 19:31 Chinese statistics and Chinese milk packaging have something in common. Do not believe what you read on the label. Just as state-owned companies allowed suppliers to boost the supposed protein content of infant milk powder with melamine, an industrial plastic, so state-controlled statisticians have sometimes doctored official figures to
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