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المتابعون


 

الجمعة، 18 ديسمبر 2009

رض خاص خذ 2.5 $ في التسجيل في شركة و سنتات متعددة يوميا من دون حد ادنى وفي مسابقة يومية ادخل وشوف

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اليوم معي شركة من افضل الشركات

الاستثمارية




للتسجيل في الشركة


















والله العظيم لن اغير الرابط
وساسجل تحتك






والله العظيم لن اغير الرابط
وساسجل تحتك







الشرح بالتفصيل





والله العظيم لن اغير الرابط
وساسجل تحتك


ل Compound Interests لو عملتها NO يبقى هتنضاف الارباح اليومية بتاعتك على الفلوس الفابلة للسحب الي هيا Available Cash Balance

و لو عملتها Yes هتنضاف الارباح على رأس المال المستثمر الي هوة Investment
Balance و الرصيد ده طبعا غير قابل للسحب بس بتتحسب منو الارباح


1) تفاصيل الحساب بتاعك و هنشرحها بالتفصيل في الصورة الي جاية
2) العمليات الي حصلت في الحساب بتاعك
3) عمل إيداع جديد
4) عمل سحب جديد
5) التزبيط بتاع الحساب
6)نسبة الربح لأخر 5 أيام


والله العظيم لن اغير الرابط
وساسجل تحتك


1)الرصيد المستثمر
2) الرصيد القابل للسحب
3)الرصيد اللذي تم طلب سحبو و العملية في قيد التنفيذ
4) إجمالي المبلغ الذي تم سحبو من الشركة
5) اللينك الخاص بك لدعوة الاصدقاء
6) عدد الريفير المسجلين عن طريقك

شرح مصور للايداع




والله العظيم لن اغير الرابط
وساسجل تحتك







والله العظيم لن اغير الرابط
وساسجل تحتك





والله العظيم لن اغير الرابط
وساسجل تحتك


اثبات دفع


للتسجيل







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الأحد، 29 نوفمبر 2009

موقع عربي يعطيك زوار و50 زائر هدية تسجيل وتستطيع جمع اكثر

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السلام عليكم

هذا موقع تسجل فية وتبدا تصفح المواقع وكل 20 ثانية يغيرون لك الموقع وتكسب نقطه

النقطة هاذي = زيارة لمنتداك




للتسجيل








http://traffic.jamiaa.net/?ref=200



طبعا التسجيل تحتي لايضررك شي

واي سوال انا حاضر
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السبت، 28 نوفمبر 2009

█◄ استلامى الثانى من المنتدى الربحى ►◄ EasyCashForum ►◄ فورى 5$ ►█

0 التعليقات
تم بحمد الله الاستلام الثانى من المنتدى المميز



( EasyCashForum [ للتسجيل ] )

والجميل انو في منتدى عربي
الحد الادنى الان 5 دولار

الموضوع ب0.03$
الرد ب0.02$
الريفبر ب0.10$


اثبات الدفع الثانى



اثبات الدفع الاول




تم النقل من مدونة الربح السريع والمضمون
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الاثنين، 23 نوفمبر 2009

موقع يعطيك 1000 زيارة في اليوم + انت وشطارتك

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الطريقة هى نشر الرابط عن طريق مواقع traffic exchange وهى مواقع مفيدة فى جلب الزوار الى موقعك او اى صفحة تريد لها زوار .

لجلب الزوار لموقعك يجب عليك تصفح صفحات الآخرين (surfing ) فى هذا الموقع وكلما تتصفح اكثر تكسب زيارات اكثر لموقعك و كلما تصفح المشتركين عن طريقك فى هذا الموقع تكسب زيارات اكثر لموقعك .

وهذا افضل موقع traffic exchange :

http://www.easyhits4u.com/?ref=d8d

Popular 1:1 Traffic Exchange


الشرح






http://www.easyhits4u.com/?ref=d8d

Popular 1:1 Traffic Exchange







http://www.easyhits4u.com/?ref=d8d

Popular 1:1 Traffic Exchange

~~~Read more~~~

الأربعاء، 18 نوفمبر 2009

Interview with Edward Hugh: The Dollar’s Demise is Vastly Overstated

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Today, we bring you an interview with Edward Hugh, a macro economist, who specializes in growth and productivity theory, demographic processes and their impact on macro performance, and the underlying dynamics of migration flows. Edward is based in Barcelona, and is currently engaged in research into the impact of aging, longevity, fertility and migration on economic growth. He is a regular contributor to a number of economics blogs, including India Economy Blog, A Fistful of Euros, Global Economy Matters and Demography Matters. [The interview will be presented in two parts, with the first part printed below].

I’d like to begin by asking if there is any significance to the title of your blog (”Fistful of Euros”), or rather, is it only intended to be playful?

Obviously the title is a reference to the Segio Leone film, but you could read other connotations into it if you want. I would say the idea was basically playful with a serious intent. Personally I agree with Ben Bernanke that the Euro is a “great experiment”, and you could see the blog, and the debates which surround it as one tiny part of that experiment. As they say in Spanish, the future’s not ours to see, que sera, sera. Certainly that “fistful of euros” has now been put firmly on the table, and as we are about to discuss, the consequences are far from clear.

You wrote a recent post outlining the US Dollar carry trade, and how you believe that the Dollar’s decline is cyclical/temporary rather than structural/permanent. Can you elaborate on this idea? Do you think it’s possible that the fervor with which investors have sold off the Dollar suggests that it could be a little of both?

Well, first of all, there is more than one thing happening here, so I would definitely agree from the outset, there are both cyclical and structural elements in play. Structurally, the architecture of Bretton Woods II is creaking round the edges, and in the longer run we are looking at a relative decline in the dollar, but as Keynes reminded us, in the long run we are all dead, while as I noted in the Afoe post, news of the early demise of the dollar is surely vastly overstated.

Put another way, while Bretton Woods II has surely seen its best days, till we have some idea what can replace it it is hard to see a major structural adjustment in the dollar. Europe’s economies are not strong enough for the Euro to simply step into the hole left by the dollar, the Chinese, as we know, are reluctant to see the dollar slide too far due to the losses they would take on dollar denominated instruments, while the Russians seem to constantly talk the USD down, while at the same time borrowing in that very same currency – so read this as you will. Personally, I cannot envisage a long term and durable alternative to the current set-up that doesn’t involve the Rupee and the Real, but these currencies are surely not ready for this kind of role at this point.

So we will stagger on.

On the cyclical side, what I am arguing is that for the time being the US has stepped in where Japan used to be, as one side of your carry pair of choice, since base money has been pumped up massively while there is little demand from consumers for further indebtedness, so the broader monetary aggregates haven’t risen in tandem, leaving large pools of liquidity which can simply leak out of the back door. That is, it may well be one of the perverse consequences of the Fed monetary easing policy that it finances consumption elsewhere – in Norway, or Australia, or South Africa, or Brazil, or India – but not directly inside the US.

This is something we saw happening during the last Japanese experiment in quantitative easing (from 2002 - 2006) and that it has the consequence, as it did for the Yen from 2005 to 2007, that the USD will have a trading parity which it would be hard to understand if this were not the case. I am also suggesting that this situation will unwind as and when the Federal Reserve start to seriously talk about withdrawing the emergency measures (both in terms of interest rates and the various forms of quantitative easing), but that this unwinding is unlikely to be extraordinarily violent, since the Japanese Yen can simply step in to plug the gap, as I am sure the Bank of Japan will not be able to raise interest rates anytime soon given the depth of the deflation problem they have. Indeed, investors will once more be able to borrow in Yen to invest in USD instruments, to the benefit of Japanese exports and the detriment of the US current account deficit, which is why I think we are in a finely balanced situation, with clear limits to movements in one direction or another.

In the same post, you suggested that the Fed will be the first to raise interest rates. Why do you believe this is the case? How will this affect the Dollar carry trade?

Well, I would want to qualify this a little, becuase things are not that simple. In fact, as Claus Vistesen argues in this post, the ECB has rather “locked itself in” communicationally, and by talking up the eurozone economies they now have markets expecting clear exit road maps and even pricing in interest rate rises from the third quarter of next year. But if we look at the underlying weaknesses in some of the Eurozone economies – evidently Spain, but Italy is hardly likely to have a strong robust recovery, and the German economy needs exports and hence customers to really return to growth – it is hard to see monetary tightening being applied with any kind of vigour at the ECB, so they may move up somewhat – say to 2% – and then stop for some time.

I was also suggesting that in the short run they may do this to assist in the process of unwinding the global imbalances, since allowing the Fed to lead the world out of the monetary easing cycle would almost certainly provoke a rebound in USD, and problems for correcting the US current account deficit.

Really none of the developed economies (not even Norway) seem to be looking at the sort of really strong “V” shaped rebound some investors were anticipating, and it is more a question of who is weaker among of the weak. But if we look a little further ahead, at potential growth and inflation dynamics, then it is clear that the deflationary headwinds are stronger in Europe, while headline GDP growth may well turn out to be stronger in the US, and both these factors suggest that the Fed will at sometime be tightening faster than the ECB, in a repetition of what we saw from 2002 to 2005.

You have pointed out that fiscal problems are not unique to the US. While the UK and Japan are certainly in the same fiscal boat, there seem to be plenty of examples of economies that aren’t, or at least not to the same extent, such as the EU. Do you think, then, that the long-term prospects for the Euro (especially as a global reserve currency) are necessarily brighter than for the Dollar?

Well, actually I wouldn’t say the UK and Japan are in the same fiscal boat. Let me explain. The UK evidently has severe short term problems (as does the US) with its sovereign debt, due to the high cost of resolving the lossses produced by the current crisis. But Japan has still not resolved debt problems which were produced in the crisis of the late 1990s, and indeed both gross and net debt to GDP simply continue to rise there. So I would say – as long as they can weather the present storm – the outlook for US, UK and French sovereign debt is rather more positive than it is for Japan. Indeed in the longer term it is hard to see how Japan can resolve its problems without some kind of sovereign default. This is the problem with deflation, as nominal GDP goes down, debt to GDP simply rises and rises.

But the principal reason I am rather more positive on UK, US and French sovereign debt in the mid term is simply the underlying demographic dynamic. These countries have a lot more young people (proportionately) than the Germany’s, Japan’s and Italy’s of this world, and hence their elderly dependency ratios (which are the important thing when we come to talk about structural deficits into the future) will rise more slowly.

It is also important to realise that the EU – at this point at least – is not a single country in the way the US is, and indeed there is strong resistence among European citizens to the idea that it should be. So it is impossible to talk about the EU as if it were one country. That being said, the lastest forecast from the EU Commission suggests that average sovereign debt to GDP will breach the 100% threshold across the entire EU by 2014, so I would hardly call the situation promising. Basically some cases are much worse than others. In the East there are countries like Latvia and Hungary which are currently implementing IMF-lead structural transformation programmes, ut it is far from clear that these programmes will work, and sovereign debt to GDP has been rising sharply in both cases. In the South a similar problem exists, with Greek gross sovereign debt to GDP now expected by the Commission to hit 135% by 2011, and Italian debt set to increase significantly over the 110% mark. At the same time the future of government debt in Spain and Portugal is becoming increasingly uncertain. I would also point to the strong gamble Angela Merkel is making in Germany, and indeed ECB President Jean Claude Trichet singled the German case out during the last post rate-decision-meeting press conference for special mention in this regard. The future of German sovereign debt is far from clear, and markets certainly have not taken in this underlying reality.

So basically, and I think I have already explained my thinking on this in earlier questions, we have a structural difficulty, since I am sure the way out of Bretton Woods II will not be found by simply substituting the Euro for the USD. Europe is aging far more rapidly than the US, and the dependency ratio problems are consequently significantly greater.

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السبت، 7 نوفمبر 2009

2 Legitimate Online Companies You can Work with to Make Money at Home

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I have read about Hirepoint.com and Customloyal.com in a forum. They are 2 legitimate online companies that provides home-based opportunities to people who want to make money online or at home. I'm not affiliated with any of these companies, just want to introduce them to you and hopefully they can help you make money.

Hirepoint.com
Althought the site address is Hirepoint.com but the company name actually is TeleTech Holding. It is a global company providing business process outsource services and work at home opportunities. The work at home job opportunities of TeleTech are available to people in US, UK and Australia. To work with Teletech, you first need to apply to become their accociate and then go through several selection processes before you're hired. There is no fee to apply. To learn more please go to http://www.hirepoint.com/index.html.

Custom Loyal Concepts
There has been many people working with Custom Loyal Concepts (CLC) as a call employee. CLC services newspaper subsribers in many different areas. As a call employee, you'll be making outbound call to CLC existing newspaper subscribers. It is not a cold calling. The pay starts at $7.00 per hour. All the positions are for US resident in 26 states only. There are minimum requirements to become a call employee of CLC. If you are interested, please click here for more details and find out the steps you need to take to apply for a post.
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Seven Powerful Tips for Affiliate Marketers

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Guest Post by Dante Valentino

Affiliate marketing is a very interesting topic. Many people perceive it to be very easy but the fact is that it takes time and effort just like any other kind of business. It really gets lost in translation because of the many successful affiliates who are already making tons of money and showing you their Clickbank screenshots saying how easy it is. When in reality most of them had to pay their dues to become successful and that is what it's all about.

The truth about affiliate marketing is that as easy as it is compared to other kinds of businesses it really does require hard work. So follow these seven tips to ease it up a little.

1) Pick a plan and stick with it. Actually writing down a solid action plan can get you more focused rather than just going at it blindly. There are so many different affiliate strategies that you can easily get lost, so having a plan will keep your thoughts organized and be more effective in the long run.

2) Lose the "Go big or don't go at all" ego. I had this problem when I was starting out. When I built my first website I targeted a popular keyword term that I thought I could get high rankings for on the search engines but it was nearly impossible trying to beat the competition. So the point is to start off small with less competitive keywords. Remember that you need to learn how to make a hundred dollars before learning to make a thousand and so on.

3) Do thorough research. There is a lot of research involved with marketing alone. In this case there is keyword research, niche research, and even research on a topic you don't know much about. But doing a thorough job of researching is crucial because you will be basing your business on that research. So it is always a great idea to dig deep down in the keyword tools to find a profitable keyword with low competition or see how competitive the sites are that rank under a keyword you got in mind.

4) Don't sell, recommend. Preselling can be tricky because what people really like is recommendations. Not hard sells. The hard selling of a product is taken care of on the sales page. So your job as an affiliate is to "warm up" the customer by giving an honest recommendation and explaining why.

5) Don't put all your eggs in one basket. It is more efficient to spread out your business like a monopoly. That way if one of your campaigns fail then at least you will have other streams of income. Try setting up several sites in different niches. Or if PPC is more your thing then set up more ads and landing pages.

6) Training programs can really help. Success can be reached much faster by following the advice of someone who has went through the process of trial and error. Learning on your own is usually the hard way but following a proven system by an expert is much easier and less frustrating. Having actual support where you can ask questions is a very big plus in an affiliate training program.

7) Don't stop learning. This sort of relates to the last one because many affiliates have bought more than one training program. That is not a bad thing because each product was created by a different marketer and therefore has different strategies and content. But going on websites and learning everything you can about all sorts of topics like SEO is essential for your success. I am always reading different ebooks or blog posts to broaden my knowledge of affiliate marketing and making money online and it really gets my mind going.
Just remember that it takes practice to really master affiliate marketing. The more dedicated you are to your affiliate business the greater the outcome.

Author Bio
My name is Dante. I am an experienced affiliate marketer who has succeeded online. You can check out my blog full of affiliate strategies where I would be happy to help out and answer any questions. Cheers!
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