Re: Encuesta Margrave: ¿Cuánto dinero necesitas para vivir sin trabajar, y ser feliz?
Jaja SI, tas al LORO de TO...
Saludos me has dejao KO, jaja
Jaja SI, tas al LORO de TO...
Saludos me has dejao KO, jaja
UNA GIGANTESCA NUBE DE MIERDA PODRÍA SOBREVOLAR LAS CABEZAS DE LA SELECTA CLIENTELA DEL BBVA.
Buuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuf. Y este es de los sanos.
Y si a alguno le ha pasado algo desapercibido repasemos la noticia. Atención a la frase:
"... dicha emisión, que podrá acometerse en euros o en otra divisa equivalente...".
¿Será que los euros disfrazados o MORTADELOS ya están aquí?
Jaja, bueno que quieres que te diga...un promblemin de inseguridad?..NO se yo que no,
cuanto me gusta tomarte el pelo que no tienes,,(ya se..por los lados si..)
Saludos adonis.!
BALÓN DE OXÍGENO DE ULTIMA HORA PARA EL MUERTO VIVIENTE - UN AÑO MAS PARA CUMPLIR CON EL DEFICIT EXIGIDO.
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BRUSSELS—Euro-zone finance ministers meeting here Monday were set to give Spain an extra year to bring its budget deficit back in line with the bloc's rules and agree on the terms of a big bailout for the country's banks.
The expected concession for Spain is designed to avoid provoking a further downward plunge of the already sickly Spanish economy. On Monday, annual yields on 10-year Spanish government bonds crept above the 7% mark, a level deemed unsustainable.
It also came as European officials wrangled over an agreement at last month's euro-zone summit that would allow the euro-zone bailout fund to directly boost the capital of struggling banks in the region. In dispute is whether governments of beneficiary banks would have to make good on any losses suffered by the fund on its investment in the banks.
A large majority of the 17 euro-zone countries was in favor of giving Madrid until 2014 instead of 2013 to cut its government deficit to below 3% of gross domestic product, people familiar with the matter said. These people added that they expected that resistance to be overcome by the time the ministers' meeting ends Tuesday.
"There are proposals on the table that I think are of a nature to get consensus," French Finance Minister Pierre Moscovici said as he arrived for the meeting.
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The tweaking of the budget targets would allow Spain to run a deficit of as much as 6.3% of gross domestic product this year, instead of 5.3%, without risking financial penalties, according to a draft statement obtained by The Wall Street Journal. Last year, Madrid clocked a spending overrun of 8.9%.
Many economists have feared that cutting public spending too quickly could push Spain even deeper into recession, just as it scrambles to deal with massive problems in its banking sector. But Madrid and some other euro countries worry that letting go of the ambitious budget targets could drive the country's funding costs even higher.
At their two-day meeting, finance ministers also planned to discuss the conditions Spain has to fulfill to get as much as €100 billion ($123 billion) from the euro zone to recapitalize local banks reeling from the real-estate meltdown in the country.
The currency union may require Spain to set up a "bad bank" that would hold toxic property assets for the entire sector, according to a person familiar with the discussions.
Spain's government has long resisted calls to set up a single bad bank—as opposed to smaller bad banks tied to each individual lender—claiming a sector-wide arrangement would reward the weakest banks. The person said that the bailout deal may also require even smaller banks to boost their capital to levels usually only expected from larger, or systemic, banks.
Spain has been under huge market pressure again in recent days, partly due to uncertainty over the way it will ultimately receive aid for its banks. At the moment, the euro zone's bailout funds can lend money only to governments, which means the support for banks will drive up Spain's debt levels, making its bonds a much riskier investment.
At a summit last month, euro-zone leaders said they would allow their new rescue fund to directly recapitalize struggling banks once a powerful banking supervisor has been set up. But several senior officials have since insisted that even then governments would remain liable for any losses incurred on these investments, once again driving up yields on Spanish bonds.
On Monday, a spokesman for the European Commission, the EU's executive arm, contradicted those officials, saying that euro-zone countries won't have to guarantee equity stakes in banks once the bailout fund, the European Stability Mechanism, has been given the power to directly recapitalize lenders.
"In terms of the issue of banking recapitalization…there would be no need for a sovereign guarantee for banks," said Simon O'Connor, the spokesman for the EU's commissioner for economic affairs, Olli Rehn.
The European Commission doesn't control the ESM, which was set up by euro-zone governments outside the regular EU framework. However, the Commission will in the coming months make legislative proposals for a euro-zone wide banking supervisor, which will need to have close ties to the ESM.
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MEJOR PARA MARIANICO, SI LOS RECORTES LOS METE PROGRESIVAMENTE SE AHORRARÁ CONFLICTIVIDAD SOCIAL Y CON UN POCO DE SUERTE LLEGARÁ A 2014....
No hay mejor universidad, la universidad de la vida.
Abrazo 8
“Los dos guerreros más poderosos son paciencia y tiempo.” (León Tolstoi)
Hombre es inteligente..entonces todo ganado a mis ojos, eso si..quitemosle 30 años,jaja
pero hay que tener lo primordial..y eso es dificil
saludos
Pues si sujeto, estan todos igual..y el San un poquitin peor, tienen mas ladrillo y otra politica, que han moficado para los impagos de hipoteca.
Creo que el mortadelo como dices tu, esta ya envasandose...QUELLE MERDE!
Hablando del mus, este jugador miente con descaro.......le hemos pillado y sin embargo utilizara la fuerza para ganar la partida, el tonto de el cree que gana porque es bueno jugando.
Juan Ramón Rallo
Montoro dice que Bruselas nos obliga a subir el IVA. Que escuche a Draghi: recorten el gasto y olvídense de subir impuestos.
“Los dos guerreros más poderosos son paciencia y tiempo.” (León Tolstoi)