O demônio é chamado de "A Firma"
Grécia 2009...
http://www.liberation.fr/economie/0101620473-grece-goldman-prise-la-main-dans-le-sachs
A Dilma bem que tenta nos vender ao demônio...ahhh tenta direitinho....
há um dia atrás havia uma matéria "movement will actually improve its long-term investment environment." Challenge,challenge!
Sistema Financeiro
Goldman Sachs revê planos e volta a reduzir estrutura no Brasil*.
O banco, que já ensaiou pelo menos quatro outras vezes, nos últimos dez anos, aumentar sua presença no Brasil e depois voltou atrás, trocando grande parte de sua equipe, fechou a área de gestão de recursos no fim do ano passado e, pouco depois, em abril, anunciou que estava dobrando o capital da subsidiária local para R$ 800 milhões.
O Goldman Sachs escondeu o grande déficit da Grécia,
e fodeu o país e agora vejam bem! Tadam!
O Banco Central faz a mesma coisa,
e eu vislumbro uma puta bolha!
Para Goldman Sachs o Banco Central Deixa De Citar Riscos Com Inflação
http://oestadodoparana.pron.com.br/economia/noticias/83547/?noticia=para-goldman-sachs-bc-deixa-de-citar-risco-com-inflacao
Brazil’s Protest Movement Might Bring Long-Term Benefits for Private Equity Players
The article bellow talks about Brazil’s protest movements might bring long-term benefits for private equity investors.
http://privateequity.com/tag/goldman-sachs-group/
The steady drumbeat of civil unrest that continues in Brazil may actually be good for the country’s economic and political fortunes, say some investors in the region.
International private equity firms that focus on the country said Brazil’s protest movement will actually improve its long-term investment environment.
“These protests, although they may scare some international investors in the short term, are good for the country and good for private equity,” said Gonzalo Fernandez Castro, head of Latin America private equity at Partners GroupPGHN.EB +1.09%. “It’s the middle class people asking the government to do its job – it’s not the Arab Spring.”
Confidence in the Brazilian economy has fallen after years of growth during the economic downturn which inhibited developed markets.
According to one international investor active in Brazil, his firm remains interested in the country despite rising inflation and only 2% annual projected gross domestic product growth. Though relatively anemic, that number is higher than the 0.9% annual growth the country experienced in 2012, the investor added.
“As long as you stick to the sectors that are fast growing, there are opportunities in Brazil, but the overall macro opportunity is a challenge,” the investor said."