Showqi
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Everything posted by Showqi
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Shirib waa Xigmad iyo Xamaasad wada socota. I really don't understand how this guys could concentrate and remembar all that text, while the crowd around them is screeming and dancing. Anigu mar hore ayaan khalkhali lahaa oo textku iga lumi lahaa! raga computer ayaa saaran. My favorite line: Minay fatuuro fiiq tiraa, ninkii fadhaaya maa fayoow?.......... (Oba do they still use this line?)
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Haa Avataryaashi oo dhan LSK aa qashinka ku daray. Qof kasta waxaa la siiyey Avatar cusub. Adiga waaba laguu naxariistay, koofiyad Baraawe aa lagu siiyey. Aniga waxaa la i siiyey Taaladii Daljirka dahsoon ee Toronto (CN-Tower). Dad badan aa la waayey. Adiga waaba soo gashay hada, lakiin Saxiibka Haatu ilaa iyo hada lama haayo.
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N.O.R.F;694196 wrote: ^ Xaaji Casiir ha ku xiiqin ...................Norf, waad la heshay Heeeeeello, meeshu waa cidla mayaa lagu kala tagay maanta.
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Some action in NGONGE'S Neighborhood......................................Waa Jerry Springer Styl:D
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Egypt's Central Bank launches its second T-bill auction as government looks to boost cash CAIRO - Egypt's Central Bank on Thursday launched an auction for 3.5 billion Egyptian pounds in Treasury bills, its second such offering in days as the government scrambles to raise money and offset the economic losses of more than two weeks of anti-government protests. The roughly $595 million offering of six months bills is the second of three planned auctions to be held in under a week. The sales come as the government looks to raise money after promising a 15 per cent pay and pension increase to its civil service employees and retirees, while also trying to mitigate what many economists and analysts expect to be a sharp blow to the economy because of the protests. "The auction is going to draw in local banks," predicted Mohsen Adel, chief executive of the Cairo-based Pioneer Funds. "I don't think international investors will make an appearance at present." A 13 billion pound T-bill auction on Monday was heavily oversubscribed and saw higher yields of about 11 per cent for three-month bills. Six and nine-month bills averaged 11.48 and 11.65 per cent, respectively. But that auction also drew in only local banks as international investors warily eyed the unrest that has plunged a nation once viewed as a pillar of stability in the region plunge into political turmoil and lawlessness largely unseen during President Hosni Mubarak's nearly 30 years in power. The protests and ensuing violence have prompted an exodus of tourists, offering a window into the potential beating the vital tourism sector will take in the months to come. Businesses were shuttered for at least a week, as were banks before they reopened on Sunday. "There will be an impact on the broader economy, no doubt about that," said Wael Ziada, head of Egypt research at the Cairo-based investment bank EFG-Hermes. While declining to provide a specific estimate of the economic losses the country could face, Ziada said that "what's very obvious is that if we don't have a stable country by June, the impact will be serious." The latest Treasury auction was to be followed by a Feb. 13 offering of 3 billion pounds in bills, and analysts and brokers predicted that the yields may climb by about a quarter to one-half of a percentage point as the central bank tries to control financing costs considering the government's obligations going forward and the expected dearth in foreign investment because of the unrest. The expected hit to the economy and the growing political uncertainty had helped bring the Egyptian pound to its lowest level against the dollar in about six year, prompting the Central Bank to step in on Tuesday and stabilize the currency. But the pound nudged lower on Thursday, trading at 5.8840 to the U.S. dollar after closing a day earlier at 5.8775 to the dollar. Central Bank officials have said they are ready to step in again, as needed, to support the currency — even as some analysts predicted a 20 to 25 per cent devaluation of the pound in the short-run. The demonstrations that encompassed broad swaths of Egyptians population have now expanded to include workers as thousands strike across the nation demanding better pay. Their introduction into the protest mix offers a reintroduction of the same grievances about pay and the cost of living that served as the rallying cry for smaller scale protests last summer. Against that backdrop, the Egyptian Exchange is slated to reopen on Sunday after a more than two-week closure. Its relaunch is widely expected to result in a broad sell-off, particularly in sectors either linked to the state, the currency or where foreign investment has been particularly active. "The market is going to decline," said Ziada, adding that the "delay in its opening has helped." Exchange officials have enacted some measures aimed at halting the anticipated decline. A 5 per cent change in the broader EGX100 index, for example, result in trading being halted for 30 minutes while a 10 per cent shift would halt trade for a period to be determined by the bourse's head. Existing caps on fluctuations in company shares also remain in place. Even so, "there is no doubt that there is some pressure, and it's been building up ever since the market has been closed," said Ziada. Ziada and other analysts downplayed the likelihood of a crash in the market, but noted that general unease will likely translate into heavy selling at the start that could carry over into the second half of the week. "For local investors, who are perhaps more sanguine about the political developments, it becomes a buying opportunity" after the sell-off, said David Cowan, Africa economist with Citigroup in London.
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Nin-Yaaban, Lacagta joodariga hoostiisa in la galiyo waaye miyaa! mise god dheer aa guriga gadaashiisa laga qodaa?
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Salaam my brother Maaddeey, welcom back..............Albaabka ma adigana lagaa furi waayey!
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Great story, thanks brother Nur..............................Waa sheeko lagu cibro qaato.
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Mareeg Girl, Welcome to Sol
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Officials, who are still bracing for more potential fallout from the crisis, have kept the country's stock exchange closed. The Egyptian Exchange's benchmark index shed 17 percent in two days of trading the week before last before it closed on Jan. 27. Trading may resume on Wednesday, with officials weighing placing limits either in terms of the hours or a cap on loss.
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Egyptian pound hits near 6 year low, government offers 15 billion pounds in T-bills CAIRO - The Egyptian pound hit its lowest level against the U.S. dollar in roughly six years on Monday, while the government looked to raise cash with a $2.5 billion Treasury bill auction as investors assessed the impact on the economy of nearly two weeks of protests calling for the president's ouster. The dollar was trading at about 5.953 Egyptian pounds by midday — its lowest level since January 2005. Analysts said the testing point would likely be at the range of 6 or 6.1 pounds. The government, meanwhile, was to auction 15 billion pounds ($2.5 billion) in Treasury bills on Monday, a step that economists expected would draw in mostly domestic banks after the protests of the past couple of weeks appeared likely to cast an at least short-term pall on the investment climate in the country. "For confidence purposes, (the bills) will be subscribed, and the local banks will provide most of the buying, if not all of the buying," said John Sfakianakis, chief economist at the Riyadh-based Banque Saudi Fransi. Yield will also be attractive for the those who subscribe at 11-12 percent, he said. "International banks will take a wait-and-see approach," said Sfakianakis. For the government, the auction was a necessary confidence-building measure amid worries about capital outflows and a sharp drop in foreign investment. The government offered 8 billion pounds of 91-day bills, 5 billion pounds in 182-day bills and 2 billion in 273-day bills. Local banks have "enough capacity to take up the issue, and I don't think the Central Bank would take up an issue of this size if they weren't confident it would be successful," said Ahmad Alanani, director of Mideast fixed income sales at Exotix Ltd. in Dubai. "A successful auction of this size taken up by local banks would send all the right signals that the Egyptian debt markets are back in business," he said. The protests, which saw tens of thousands of people massing in downtown Cairo for demonstrations that at times turned violent, have raised questions about the impact on the economy. More than 160,000 foreign tourists fled the country in a matter of days last week, in an exodus sure to hammer the vital tourism sector. Meanwhile, banks reopened on Sunday after a weeklong closure and the government pumped 5 billion into the institutions to ensure liquidity. Millions had been unable to withdraw money for much of the duration of the protests, while businesses had been unable to pay their employees. The depreciation in the Egyptian pound offered an ominous indication of the challenges ahead. Analysts have predicted it could drop as much as 25 percent in the short-term, a level which would put it at weaker than 7 pounds to the dollar. It had traded much of last week, while banks were closed, at about 5.84 pounds to the dollar. "The testing ground is 6 or 6.1 pounds (to the dollar)," said Sfakianakis. "That's where it could go further down, depending on the level of intervention by the Central Bank." Central Bank officials could not be reached for comment. International ratings agency Moody's Investors Service said it expects pressure on the Egyptian pound's exchange rate because of the conversion of local currency deposits to foreign currency deposits as the banks reopen. "The flow will mainly come from foreign investors and high net-worth local depositors, and is likely to diminish the (Central Bank's) foreign currency reserves its capacity to support the banking system's overall foreign currency obligations," Moody's said in a report released Monday. "Sustained demand to either withdraw or convert deposits into foreign currency is a key heightened risk for Egyptian banks' liquidity positions," Moody's said. The Central Bank had $36 billion in foreign currency reserves as of the end of December. Officials, who are still bracing for more potential fallout from the crisis, have kept the country's stock exchange closed. The Egyptian Exchange's benchmark index shed 17 percent in two days of trading the week before last before it closed on Jan. 27. Trading may resume on Wednesday, with officials weighing placing limits either in terms of the hours or a cap on loss. http://www.startribune.com/business/115466964.html
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Nuune, good stuff thanks for the link. Caruurta yar yar ee aan adeerka u ahay hada ayey Af Soomaaliga si fiican u baranayaan
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BoB, illaahay ha idiin sakhiro. Meesha wax baa ka socda. Insha-allah way hagaagi....................
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Nuune, banooniga cinque ma ka ciyaartaa mise due. Saa wax u raaceysid aaba ka yaabay. Lol cunuga hooskisii aa ku noqotay!
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Waayahay ee bal ameelka 2bo wasladood oo duqus lagudaryna bal soo raaci sxb.........
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AUN dhamaantood. Yaa rabi goormay Soomaaliya dhibaatada iyo saxariirta ka baxaysaa?
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Juxa, magaalo Soomaaliya ku taal manigaa wax xun ka sheegi kara! Intaan funaanadan gashanahay,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
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Jacaylbaro;692826 wrote: I just bought Anti-women pants ........... just in case u know , , And you also need insurance,,,,,,just in case something happen while taking shower:D
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Juxa;692758 wrote: eeh got consolidation session then off to cold library, i shall take blanket insha allah! Juxa, you can buy a portable heater from Qardho. Waa dhagax aad u kulul dhabta ayaad saraysaa markasaa jidhkaaga oo dhami kululanayaa:D.................... Aan meesha ka cararo intaanu Sayid soo galin. Hello People,,,,,,,,,,,,,,see la yaha?
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gooni;692776 wrote: sheekooyin cajiiba;) jiirada kowaad markuu soo galay buu dhinac u dhacay,asagoo dhulka jiifa ayaa saaxiibkiis weydiiyay ar calasow xaa dhacay? asagoo hadalku dhib ku yahay ayuu yiri habartiin''''''''''' mahaan iyo caliyaalo ay noo laalaabeen . Hahaha, hahahahaha. 2dii wareeg ee ugu horeyey ayuu xoog u orday, markasaa gaaskii ka dhamaaday sow ma'aha:D
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Cawaale, plan your escape route well in advance........You never know things can get better or worst.
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wyre;692030 wrote: soo dhowaaaw ugaas, caano barax, suusac, garoor ama qandhis intaba waa haynaa Waiter kabawayne, qandhiska iga daa.............Shaah ma haysaa? Xaraarad baan kax la'ahay, Shaah ila soo gaar niyow!
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Innaa Lillaahi Wa Inna Ileyhi Raajicuun. OZ, samir iyo iimaan illaahay ha idinka siiyo walaal.
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Waan kugu raacsanahay, jinkii lacagta jeclaa baa ku jira gabadha
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Wyre, waxaan arkay qaar Greek ah oo 20, 25 sano tickit iibsanayey walina aan wax aan $20 ka badnayn helin. Iga daa niyow
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