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فسيلة - transplant
هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات

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Transcript
00:00And then there was nothing left to steal.
00:02Everyone is now transferring money via mobile phone.
00:04Is it too late for us or what?
00:06That, teacher, is what we were learning: a programming language.
00:08Our customers were electronic pirates
00:10You're a pig
00:11And I actually know how to speak Arabic.
00:12I found it, teacher, I found it!
00:14Future Plan
00:16Hurry up, man! We're going bankrupt!
00:17A villa belonging to a very strange man
00:19The office cat has a large safe.
00:21Does it contain cash, gold, and jewelry?
00:24No, it doesn't contain 10,000 pounds.
00:27That's great, we'll steal them and use the money to buy enough cigarettes to last us in prison.
00:31It contains five thousand shares of the most important stock exchange shares.
00:34In the next ten years
00:35Shares on the stock exchange
00:37We take them and sell them, that is.
00:38Don't worry, teacher
00:39We will take them and wait for the next fiscal year.
00:42Wait a year
00:44Very strong
00:46Hey, be patient with me.
00:47We will sell half of them after a year
00:50We open an investment account.
00:51We buy treasury bonds
00:54Our teacher, Mish Faya, needs it.
00:55I took the ten thousand pounds all by myself
00:57Wait a little while.
00:58And after we buy
01:00The thing you're talking about
01:01Let me stay with you until the end
01:03What will happen?
01:04No, if we remain in Aska
01:05And my high spirits tell us about the price of these stocks
01:06We bought shares at a higher price.
01:08And we invested correctly
01:13I'm a thief, I'll calm down
01:14Hada
01:15Generally speaking, I will buy shares in the Zakat fund that I am waiting for.
01:16Is anyone here to help me?
01:17So this is the plan you've been brainstorming for a week.
01:20And everything that spoke to you
01:21Boiling and cutting through, focus, teacher
01:23By God, this plan is absolutely foolproof!
01:25By the way, you're the one who doesn't understand the stock market.
01:26If you understand it, you'll get addicted to it.
01:27Where is the money, the gold, and all that stuff?
01:29Okay, okay
01:31If you want to look under your feet
01:32The same elephants I told you about
01:34There are ten kilos of gold on the lower floor.
01:37You are my son, any of you
01:38I'm paralyzed
01:40Oh teacher
01:41Oh teacher
01:42Oh God, protect us!
01:44Oh pilgrim, wake up, oh pilgrim
01:46He died
01:47I take his share, and why the shares?
01:48We will take ten thousand pounds
01:57People of Zay, viewers of the prayer and blessings
01:59Welcome to the new episode of Al-Daheeh program
02:01Dear beautiful viewer, for your viewing, neither history nor time
02:03I'll take you by the hand and we'll go to the stock exchange.
02:04Is it, my dear, before we go to the stock exchange, that we know what a stock exchange is?
02:06The stock exchange is simply a market
02:08Just tomatoes or other goods from the market
02:09Shop for the same money
02:10A place where people go to buy and sell
02:13But the item or merchandise inside is not available due to the presence of a direct link.
02:16For example, a share in a company or two bonds
02:18This right is for a shipment arriving in six months.
02:20If the shipment arrived and the company sold
02:22God willing, you will reap profits.
02:24If the stock is on my side, you'll spend it selling and profiting.
02:25But still, take that.
02:27The shipment might not arrive and the company could lose money
02:29Sometimes the stock can lose value and you can lose everything you own.
02:32Ahmed, my knowledge about the stock market is limited.
02:34All I knew about it was that businessmen were losing all their money.
02:36And they put their blood on their hearts
02:37So, my dear, we will take you by the hand.
02:39And we listen again to understand the story from the beginning, as usual.
02:42We'll go back, my dear, to the year 1800 BC
02:45any?
02:45We are now in Babylon, my dear.
02:47The oldest partnership and financing contracts in history were melted down in Babylon
02:50Afterwards, the merchants needed money to be able to finance their trips.
02:53And they were forced, my dear, to borrow from other merchants.
02:56The other merchants tell them
02:57No, we're not wasting our money.
02:58We want a percentage of the profits.
03:00And they were making a habit of saying this.
03:01They write it in cuneiform script.
03:03On a slab of stone or a slab of clay
03:05This board can be sold from one person to another.
03:07And preventing the board from taking a percentage of the profits
03:09By God, my dear, this was the first form of our surveyor in history.
03:12A little water on the clay tablet, you're with the shipment.
03:14We learned this from Hammurabi's Codex.
03:16The famous tablet that was discovered in 1901
03:19A tablet on which were written 282 laws
03:22Many of them organize debt and trade transactions.
03:25And also the partnership terms
03:26Time passes and the place changes
03:28And we reach the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries
03:30Let's go to Italy
03:31Specifically in Florence and Evans
03:33These countries, my dear, were home to the richest people in the world at that time.
03:35Merchants who lend money to governments and kings
03:37And they take papers from them to prove this debt.
03:39And you, my dear friend, the English literature expert
03:41I know very well what happens to those who don't pay their money.
03:44Especially if he trades in Venice
03:45Hamdan, I don't know who he is.
03:46Dear friend, read Shakespeare, read about your shekel.
03:49I feel like I'm facing a shallow situation.
03:51God willing, Hamad, let's see your skill in the Arabic interview.
03:54Tell me, what is this shallowness?
03:55Aih Tahoul Atlaha
03:57Oh, people are shallow.
03:59Okay, let Shakespeare help you.
04:01Go on, go to the United Kingdom
04:03Let them have their nationality then.
04:04Become a British citizen and benefit yourself.
04:07Go to the people who don't know these qualities
04:08Okay, my friend, maybe he won't return to the stock market now.
04:11Which you don't know anything about
04:12The important thing, my dear, is that whoever has the paper, whether it's the merchant or a segment of the merchant,
04:15He is the one who has the right to be a student of religion
04:16In what is known as debt trading
04:18This concept, my dear, spread in Italy and from there to Europe, and then to Bergamo.
04:22In the year 1250, merchants from all over Europe
04:24They were assembling a hotel in the city of Propp
04:26The hotel is owned by a wealthy family called Vander Beurce.
04:29This hotel is saturated with an unofficial economic headquarters.
04:31People exchange information there
04:33The deals work and buy
04:34And the promissory notes are sold
04:36They used to call the place "Bours" in French.
04:38Hence, and from the name of the hotel
04:40The word "bourse" came up
04:42And we cover it up, Abu Hamad, by naming it after the Turkish city.
04:44But, my dear, this wasn't an official place.
04:46That's why the first official place was opened in 1531
04:48Also in Belgium, but in the city of Antwerp
04:51A place dedicated solely to exchanging these papers
04:54Its price was determined by supply and demand.
04:56This made it the first real model to saturate the stock market.
04:58But there's still something, my dear, that's on my mind.
05:00Omar, I smelled the stock market without shares, and I knew it would bring poverty in trading.
05:02I'll log out and come back to tell you where the shares went.
05:05At the end of the sixteenth century, in the year 1581
05:08She says that the Netherlands gained its independence from Spain
05:11After a very long conflict known as the Eighty-Year War
05:14At that time, the Netherlands was a unified metropolis.
05:16They are still trying to get back on their feet
05:18They decided to look around them
05:20What are European countries doing?
05:21And they do the same
05:22Okay, my dear
05:23Europe back then wasn't the Europe we know today.
05:32It was very expensive and dangerous.
05:34The ship might sink or break apart during the voyage.
05:36Or they might send out a band of pirates to plunder your fir trees, and I won't be able to stop them.
05:38The matter was extremely expensive, and we are still only two ribs of the dam.
05:41The unified government cannot finance Aziz Ships
05:44Trade voyages back then were not limited to one or two ships.
05:46No, that was in Qastal and the trips were trips
05:49You travel from Amsterdam to get a job
05:51For the East Indies, which are now Indonesia
05:53The job could have taken eight jobs for a year and a half, but
05:56So you need to get black pepper and spices
05:58It might come back to you in two or three years
06:00If you let your son go, you'll come back and find him with a mustache.
06:02Of course, there's the amount of risk, as I told you, that you might face on the trip.
06:05For example, competitors' ships could potentially limit the Dutch.
06:08Portuguese, English, and Spanish
06:10If they saw a Dutch ship passing by, they might attack it.
06:12We're in the same business too.
06:13Also, the local islanders can limit it, which is also
06:16I counted all the countries where you might find your ship sailing alone at sea.
06:19There's no one alive there
06:20What happened, my love?
06:21No, this is a disease that spread on the ship
06:22A little scratch
06:23A little malaria
06:24Title for you, all the good
06:25What makes you even angrier?
06:27You can get through all of this
06:28But I'm not storing yours, right?
06:29The whiteness is a bosom
06:30Sadaq Hazeeb, I'm talking to you about a trip that will take two or three years.
06:32And in the time of the refrigerator
06:33What is this play and Hamid all this torment and hardship, all this with a few spices and a big mouth?
06:37Oh, you slaves of these trips, you have no idea how much you earn
06:39He was the one who was consulted, but he didn't deserve it; no one would have promoted him.
06:41When these trips are successful, the profits are phenomenal.
06:44A kilogram of black pepper in some regions of Europe
06:46Certain types of jewelry were more valuable than gold.
06:48A single trip can compress its cost fivefold.
06:51The subject was very tempting for traders.
06:53But when I told you it's difficult for someone to carry for a single trip
06:55And then one thought, "No, no, no, no."
06:56Why would anyone take a one-on-one trip?
06:58We are a few companies, these are small companies.
06:59Why don't we hold a meeting at the large trading company?
07:01Then we'll see the cost of the trips and add it up.
07:03People are reluctant
07:04Each one puts a small door for her
07:06If the trip is a rickety and a case of house
07:08The profits will be distributed among us and everyone will be compensated
07:10If the trip had happened to her
07:11So the loss will also be shared by everyone.
07:13Here, no one will carry the burden alone.
07:15Also, as the number of people increases, the number of trips will increase.
07:17And when the number of trips increased
07:19The probability of loss will decrease.
07:20For example, if we were to send out twenty ships
07:22Two other than strength
07:23Oh God, there's no problem
07:24In 1902, the Dutch East India Company was founded.
07:27Eusebius
07:28The company, my dear, is clear from its name.
07:38And then, in another dome-shaped way, he can remain a partner in the company.
07:40Each one takes a percentage of the profit or loss.
07:42It depends on what he's getting into.
07:44That means if you contribute ten percent, you will receive ten percent of the profit.
07:46The word "share" comes from the word "contributor".
07:49Be aware that you are a ten percent shareholder in the company.
07:52Not from the trip
07:52By buying the stock, you become a permanent part of the company.
07:55My dear, that was the most important thing in the matter.
07:57Contact our new company if you've already invested your money in the trip.
07:59You're betting on one ship.
08:00Say that you will return with the old ways
08:02Either the ship sinks and you sink behind it
08:03But the East India Company
08:05Then, my dear, we'll have a ship that sails every year.
08:07If one of them drowned, then may she be in deep trouble.
08:09Nineteen are working
08:10Hence, stocks are no longer just bets.
08:12The properties remained
08:13It was necessary to have a place where people could buy and sell.
08:16The shares
08:17So here, my dear, he's dealing with a gambling rig.
08:19The stock exchange was initially abbreviated
08:21On the basis that it sells VOC shares
08:23We trade in shares of an Indian company.
08:25But gradually the world will start to expand beyond us.
08:27It includes other companies
08:28And it begins to include other types of securities
08:31And we can say with confidence, my dear
08:32The Amsterdam Stock Exchange was the first real stock exchange
08:35After the spread of the topic of VOC and the new stock exchange
08:37People continued to gather every day at Amsterdam Clock Tower.
08:40They are talking about the share price
08:41If you bought the stock at 100 guilders
08:43Reports indicate that the ships are returning loaded.
08:45The stock is very low, its price is rising
08:47You can sell it for 150 or 20 guilders
08:49But if there's news that ships are sinking, surely Sahmeh Kanzeh
08:52At that time there was a man named
08:53Study, Marine
08:54One of the first and largest investors
08:56In the East India Company
08:57BOC
08:58Because he is one of the biggest investors
08:59He was present on the company's board of directors
09:01But this man saw the administration as corrupt.
09:03And the money is being wasted.
09:04He met with the board of directors
09:05He told them life was in their faces
09:06You are corrupt
09:07They were forced to contradict his claims.
09:09So they expelled him
09:09So Lou Marin decided to take revenge on them.
09:11And I'm working, my dear
09:12First short sale
09:14Short selling in history
09:16If Marin saw the arrow in the night
09:17It's very overpriced.
09:18I will work with people
09:19He will receive shares from them
09:20VOC
09:21We took his friends with the arrow in a high-pitched night
09:23Which is 150 gilders, for example
09:24And he went to sell it
09:25When people found him selling
09:26He is one of the largest shareholders
09:27The salespeople are also
09:28Here the arrow easily descended
09:30out of one hundred and fifty
09:30One hundred and twenty gilders
09:31When he sold one hundred and fifty
09:33But he went at 150 percent
09:34He bought it for 120
09:35He returned to the people he had borrowed from
09:36They are the arrow
09:37So, what's with him?
09:38One hundred and fifty
09:39One hundred and twenty companions
09:40thirty
09:40It's a thirty-day bag
09:41V&C Azizi Company
09:42Here's Musk Titch
09:43And she filed a complaint with the government
09:45The government issued the first law
09:47In history at that time
09:48Short sealing is prohibited
09:49When Re decides that it's him
09:50He unpacks it from V and C
09:51And the company breathes
09:52A company operating under the same stock system.
09:55But unfortunately
09:55Failure to compete with contempt
09:57The one who was doing it in W and C
09:58It is true that when Mary died in 1624
10:01But my dear
10:02I haven't killed his idea yet.
10:03Hacks, my dear
10:04People took it and developed it further.
10:12But it wasn't the last
10:14In 1719 we go to France
10:15We meet a shrewd gambler named John Lowe
10:18This man was supposed to
10:19He understands what's happening
10:20This man founded the Al-Musaibi Company
10:22The company that obtained the franchise
10:23Contempt for trade with America
10:25He also promised people that there
10:27Endless treasures in the Mississippi
10:28People, of course, rushed to buy stocks
10:30And prices started to increase insanely
10:32The share that was worth five hundred in 1719
10:35Next year, my dear, you know how much it will cost.
10:37After ten thousand
10:37People sold their gold and land and bought stocks
10:40The streets are getting blocked due to the crowds in front of the banks.
10:42Everyone wants their share of the Messibian treasures.
10:45And just as you, my dear, expected
10:46The treasures of Al-Masibi turned out to be a bubble.
10:48Love of the Mississippi bubble
10:50Like before, the tulip bubble
10:52It didn't pop
10:52And there you see the light
10:53People emerged from the bubble in debt and bankrupt
10:56France, my dear, at that time entered a state
10:58From economic chaos
10:59She was forced to do so in 1724
11:01It formally establishes what is known as the Bors Aldaris.
11:04The stock exchange that started to organize high-trading
11:07Under very strict control
11:08No company can sell shares
11:10Except with the official approval of the financial controller
11:12The stock exchange at that time was affiliated with the Ministry of Finance.
11:14directly
11:15And beside her, someone is looking around.
11:17And imitate her ideas
11:17It is the tar that the sun never sets on.
11:19Britain is rising up, my dear.
11:20It's not just about accelerating the stock market idea.
11:22This accelerates the bubble idea.
11:23So we can see the year 1729
11:25And in conjunction with the Messip bubble
11:27The British government operates a sea trading company.
11:30He said he meant he trades with South America
11:32People said, "Come on, buy stocks!"
11:34Because of the dream of quick prosperity
11:35He turns and comes out
11:36Right
11:37People, my dear, are afraid and buying
11:39Including Min
11:40Isaac Newton
11:41I am from here.
11:42They spend a little time
11:43Come look at your money
11:45You'll find something round and fragile in their place.
11:52We will launch a campaign to combat bubbles.
11:55The campaign was successful
11:56The door is open, my dear, far from clowning around.
11:58There was a strict law that prohibited any company
12:00From the fact that it issues shares or trades
12:02Except with government permission
12:03Not everyone who has a sea project
12:05In trade, he doesn't come and mess with us.
12:07From the one who asks for her money, he tells you
12:08Waiting for the container
12:09bubble
12:09It's not lacking
12:10Come on, my dear, from the history of the stock exchange
12:11Biosame is always accompanied by fear of these fluctuations.
12:13That's why there are so many economic entities
12:15By building a reputation that buys investor trust
12:19And also because of trust
12:20Laws were enacted and surveillance investigations were established.
12:23Hassan Jua for our episode
12:24Despite the issuance of laws regulating sales operations and this company
12:26Despite increased demand for company shares
12:29After the Industrial Revolution in 1060
12:30However, the government will not establish an official stock exchange.
12:33Except for the year 1801
12:35And before that, people were gathering
12:37And you write the stock prices
12:38Bond prices on the walls of Jonathan Scovie House coffee shop
12:42My dear, at this time there's no more coffee left, and people will tell me...
12:44Yes, God is great.
12:45These aren't the parents in their nineties.
12:46No, my dear, the hot sauce has arrived.
12:48My dear, I wish you had the real stock market coffee.
12:49At the same time, he was in the other part of the world
12:51There were 24 merchants from the Jama'in as well
12:53But from the group under the sycamore tree on Wall Street
12:56And now you know what they do
12:58They will create the strongest stock exchange in the world.
12:59They'll make Wall Street
13:03France and Britain established their stock exchanges to regulate trading activity.
13:07After being stung by two economic bubbles or two hashish joints
13:10When America didn't wait for a bubble to form before creating its stock market
13:13In 1792, there were 24 merchants under the sycamore tree, as I told you.
13:17They made the Tree Agreement
13:20This was the agreement that regulated trade between them.
13:22But there were no official laws governing the matter.
13:25The whole story is just a piece of paper between the merchants.
13:27I'm telling you, my dear, everything at that time was on paper.
13:30The prices are written on a piece of paper.
13:31And every broker has a daily price list with him
13:34There is no such thing as trading in the lihzi
13:35Sometimes you might have to wait days to find out the full new price.
13:38The topic was also very calm, a group of traders together
13:41To enter their circles, you really need a visa and a permit.
13:43People pay membership fees that can reach $25
13:46And members' hours will also not be available
13:48So you're waiting for someone to become your member so you can enter a place
13:51Did you notice, my dear, that Dave itself was a business?
13:53In organ trafficking, in the trade of memberships
13:55The New York Stock Exchange remained a closed club even after its official opening in 1817.
14:00The number of seats in it may have increased.
14:02But it was not yet open to the public.
14:04And her conditions, my dear, were extremely strict.
14:06You need a recommendation from two senior members and a clean financial record.
14:09There are no debts, no problems, and no bounced checks.
14:11Even if you meet all these conditions
14:13It's also possible the board of directors will reject you.
14:15Brothers, I have money and membership, and I'm ready to trade with you on the stock exchange.
14:19No, that won't work. They don't want us to be like this, comfortable as we are.
14:21This is in addition to the membership fees, which increased over time.
14:23What if you're an ordinary person and you want to buy and sell on the stock exchange?
14:25This required going to a broker with a membership card inside.
14:27He kept taking his share so he could sell it to you and buy it for you.
14:30This issue has remained unchanged for over a hundred years.
14:32But what didn't stay the same was the economy itself.
14:34My darling has been suffering with us ever since we first understood him.
14:36He suffered from general depression
14:37Come on, you bankrupt one, the economic situation has changed during this period.
14:41From approximately 1865
14:42America expanded its rail networks
14:45Huge natural resources were discovered
14:46Like iron, coal, and petroleum
14:49And giant companies like Standard Oil began to emerge
14:51General Electric and Carnegie Steel
14:53All these countries have gone public and people have started investing in them.
14:56The companies here have become terrifyingly large.
14:57Businessmen like John D. Rockefeller
15:00Andrew Carnegie
15:01J.P. Morgan
15:02These people, my dear, were helping with mistakes from their own perspective.
15:05The stock market is being manipulated for their bankrupt companies.
15:07This era became known as the era of the robber barons.
15:10But people, my dear, have started to get angry
15:12And here the government decided to intervene
15:13The so-called Sherman Entrest Act was issued
15:16Law issued in 199 to combat monopolies
15:18And after six years, my dear, you'll create the Dow Jones index.
15:21The one who does it for the first time to live
15:23Performance of a group of major companies on the stock exchange
15:25The one that originally had 12 companies
15:27It currently includes 30 companies
15:29It takes an average of their stock prices
15:31Every rising indicator in the market usually points to a positive market situation.
15:34If he's coming down, it's probably because they're going to a party.
15:36People consider this indicator to be a barometer of the American economy.
15:39Investors, politicians, and all those interested continued to watch it daily.
15:43Any major movement in it affects the entire market.
15:45But even now, my dear, the thermometer is still available.
15:47Nobody could stop the action we're about to experience.
15:49Hey Abu Ahmed, what's with this bubble? The world hasn't learned anything.
15:52Thant, my dear, 1907
15:54The original American had a strong outward appearance.
15:56New York Stock Exchange: Labor prices break records
15:58And the banks are operating like the era of the Imam in the famous port where money is distributed.
16:02Okay, so who are you giving it to and asking in the north?
16:04We are proceeding with good intentions, may God make it beneficial.
16:06Until two speculators try to take control of a large copper company
16:09They wanted to control the shares of this company.
16:11They started buying huge quantities and rapidly raising the share price.
16:14And you know, my dear, with their attempts to raise the stock
16:16On the day and night of the incident of Al-Sahmara
16:18And the bank that was financing them is involved with her.
16:20People lost faith in banks and rushed to withdraw their money from there.
16:23And then what is known as the bank ran began to happen
16:25The banks no longer have enough cash to withdraw money.
16:28And they began to forgive one after another.
16:30The stock market rose by more than 50% in a week.
16:32At that time, my dear, there was no central bank in its name.
16:34No one is bringing in liquidity, there is no protection, which is a deposit.
16:36Until the hero, Makhwar, appears, my dear
16:38J.P. Morgan, the man who gathered the super-rich like himself in his home
16:41He locked the door and said to them
16:43By God, we will not leave unless we find knowledge.
16:46He decided to put money from his own pocket into the banks to prevent their collapse.
16:49And he convinced other banks and companies that they should push along with the world
16:52Because after a few days the market will begin to recover gradually and partially
16:55But this year people realized that America needs a central authority.
16:58It controls these banks and prevents these crises from happening.
17:01This led them to establish the Federal Reserve Bank of the United States.
17:04The Federal Reserve, which was founded in 1913
17:07But do you think, my dear, that the crisis is resolved now?
17:09Knowing that we are missing the year 1913
17:12And there's a smell like that
17:13That's how someone can distort the meaning of a world war.
17:15Coming exactly one year later, 1914
17:18The war that reminds me of the first one
17:20What's happening, my dear ladies of 1914
17:21World War breaks out in Europe
17:23What's happening, my dear, is that America is entering it as a summer course.
17:25Late, carrying a world war
17:26He entered it in 1917
17:27Hey guys, we're fighting from 3 and 10
17:29First of all, my dear, when the war began, the New York Stock Exchange was deserted for four months.
17:32They were afraid that European capital would withdraw.
17:35The American who shortened it collapses
17:37What's happening now, my dear, is the strangest country you could imagine.
17:39During the war there was a tremendous demand for American weapons and equipment
17:43Industrial companies operated at maximum capacity.
17:45Money started flooding the market, contrary to expectations.
17:47The stock market has rebounded much stronger in America, unlike in Europe.
17:50The one whose stock market was collapsing and crying
17:53Even the countries that won the war were suffering.
17:55And this is for me, my dear, because Europe was the battlefield itself, Sanin
17:59Because the money they borrowed from America they spent on war and weapons
18:02Not on investment projects
18:03Welcome, my dear America, after the war.
18:05America emerged from the war in a different form than the one that entered it.
18:07I know Hamad Ramadan in the first episode of the thirty-episode series.
18:10This transformation
18:11America has become the richest country in the world.
18:13And she lived through ten years after the war, years that were the most beautiful, the most terrible, and the sweetest she could have ever known.
18:17Cars and entertainment options remain in every home there.
18:20The advertisements made people keep buying
18:22Personal loans have increased, the stock market has become fashionable, and the story of youth is a mystery.
18:26People, my dear, borrow money to buy stocks
18:28And the magic word remained
18:30buy on margin
18:31Pay a deposit and continue with the rest on your career.
18:33It means pay 10% and the rest is for you.
18:34And they themselves, my dear, turned out to be the ones you're warning about and paying for them, hoping for the original price.
18:38The rest is yours to keep
18:39But if everything were to be downloaded, it would be great.
18:41And we see, my dear, that the stocks are rising every day, one after another.
18:43The stock market has quadrupled in price in five years.
18:46Companies are announcing their exorbitant profits.
18:49And life was pink
18:51And you, of course, have heard, known, and seen the calm that precedes the storm.
18:56Of course, my dear, you've been with us on the program for a long time.
18:57And he understands the concept of economic jurisprudence
18:59We buy things based on the premise that we are investing our money in them.
19:01But these things are rated illogically and unrealistically.
19:04These things could be companies, and good companies at that.
19:07It makes important and useful products
19:08But we buy it through its largest organization
19:10That's the idea, my friend. The first thing you do when you play is find a tambourine.
19:13Or the scribes are shrinking, or the sign is ending.
19:15You discover it's a bubble and that it blew your money
19:18And this, my dear, is exactly what happened in America.
19:19The shares were much more than the companies' real value
19:22People were already borrowing money to buy [the goods/items].
19:24Besides, there are a huge number of people who have left the main job.
19:27And then you go to the stock exchange
19:28And what happened with the stock market was the same as what happens with any bubble.
19:30One guy decided his type wouldn't buy
19:32Someone decided that they would find this illogical.
19:34Love, prices have started to drop
19:35People started selling to pay off their debts.
19:38Prices are falling more and more and more
19:40And people are selling more and more and more
19:41We see October 24, 1929
19:44The market, my friend, is down 11%
19:54Is that what it means? I've learned, my dear, that unfortunately many people have committed suicide.
19:56They called what happened The Great Crash
19:59Therefore, my dear, a few months
20:00The market knows how much it was, my dear.
20:0290% of its value
20:049000 US banks closed
20:06More than 15 million Americans lost their jobs.
20:08This is in addition to the global impact, of course.
20:10Because America was funding Europe's economy
20:12Of course, after the period of the Great War
20:14After the collapse, America withdrew its loan.
20:16Especially from Germany, which has entered a deadly economic crisis.
20:18And then, my dear, he enters the world
20:20For the Great Depression
20:22We made an episode about him, please watch it.
20:23The recession that continued from 1929
20:26Up until approximately World War II
20:281933
20:30America is ruled by Franklin D. Roosevelt
20:33The guy who made the New Deal plan
20:34Let's start a new chapter together.
20:36A page titled "Trust"
20:38Large government projects and insurance
20:40Excellent social skills and a mother in need
20:41Regulatory laws on the stock exchange
20:43Farah, founder of SIC
20:44Securities and Exchange Commission
20:46Those who use crypto hate it
20:48The SEC is the one that prevented price manipulation.
20:51Rules for transparency and disclosure were established.
20:53And yet, in America, the stock exchange remained under official supervision.
20:56But still, my dear, this isn't the thing.
20:58Which will restore the American stock market to its former glory?
21:00We need a war like this
21:01People have demolished buildings
21:03And Izza Shali Falah
21:05Our economic outlook is like this: a funeral where we can feast on a ton
21:08Don't you see any history of war like that?
21:10It revived us like World War I
21:11Indeed, my dear, history is about season 2 of World War II.
21:14The scenario is repeating itself.
21:16He's back with America.
21:17Entering the war, our economy is in turmoil.
21:19We don't see any way out of the war.
21:21World economy
21:23The countries around us are collapsing and healing their wounds.
21:24We are talking and flashing
21:26My dear, you are entering the American hegemony phase.
21:28In the fifties and sixties, Amdica grew
21:30And the stock market is getting bigger and bigger and bigger
21:32And it sits atop the world's stock exchanges.
21:34But, my dear, there was a very big problem.
21:36The stock exchange was, up to this point, a club
21:38For the song only, whoever enters must wear
21:40A suit and the purchase is expensive
21:42At the same time, a parallel market emerged, which
21:45The market that appears in traders who buy and sell stocks by phone
21:49Without the need for a formal stock exchange
21:50And here comes the brilliant idea
21:51Unofficially or officially removed
21:53Instead of people going to the New York Stock Exchange to buy and sell paper
21:55One guy ended up spending his time at a club in the middle of the hall.
21:57The matter was resolved electronically by phone; you buy the stock.
22:00And you are back at home, or what you write, the arrow is a family
22:02May I please request a specific stock?
22:04If you wish to request the stock from the same portfolio
22:06No, on another wallet, it's a car company that made a new offer.
22:08Five shares with three liquid
22:10Do you need anything else? Don't you need a box? Or any investment fund?
22:13Okay, Fanam, 30 minutes and the share will be yours.
22:14He went out, went out, went out, went out, went out
22:17He came out, he came out, he came out, he came out, he came out
22:17Buying and selling now depends on something that can be done through a computer.
22:19Her name, my dear, was Terminal.
22:21A device that records the buying and selling process, and that's all there is to it.
22:24Within a few days, the buyer's money will be transferred to the seller.
22:26The seller's shares are transferred to the buyer.
22:28On February 4, 1971
22:30The National University is being established
22:32For securities traders
22:34Nasdaq still has a small-cap stock market.
22:36And the average market still exists
22:38For non-revenue startups
22:40New York Press, but at the same time
22:42A crowded, inviting group with oversight and regulation
22:44Rahmad, don't talk to me about startups.
22:46I don't like these; they're just small companies.
22:47Where exactly are you going with just a look?
22:49Dear, if you're putting money into Nasdaq
22:51You used to do them in your time.
22:53Startups that were starting
22:55When she intervened in Nazdak, who was she?
22:57They crushed them for you and a quarter of them so you'd have a stroke all at once
22:59We'll get rid of you before Microsoft, Amazon, Google, and Facebook.
23:02My dear Al-Fayer, my companies have a trillion-dollar business.
23:04This, my dear, is what they use to shrink stocks.
23:05It is contagious
23:06My dear, over time Nazdak has its own index.
23:09The Dow Jones is not a New York Stock Exchange stock exchange.
23:11I'm telling you about these companies to show you how tough the Nasdaq stock exchange is, but
23:14I'll show you that times are changing around us.
23:16And the phone will become a computer
23:17And that's it, the stock market is progressing and seeing technological advancements.
23:20Finally, we'll see which arrow is ink and which arrow is green.
23:22But I didn't come back to you, my dear. Nothing comes easy.
23:24Take your car, seven by eight, because we're going over a high speed bump.
23:26We'll hit the ceiling of history.
23:28In 1987, everything was going perfectly, as usual.
23:32The American economy was recovering so well that it was nice to recover on our chassis.
23:35Inflation said, and unemployment said
23:37And the stocks no longer know any other direction.
23:39Astronomical figures, people are extremely, extremely, extremely, extremely...
23:42Besides, computers have entered people's lives
23:45Trading has become easier, whether on the New York Stock Exchange or on Nasdaq.
23:47But with this ease, people started using computer programs for automated trading.
23:52This program was sensitive to what was happening.
23:55If the price drops to a certain level, the computer will automatically execute massive sell orders for you.
23:59And here is the second one, O Azin, from the world
24:01The Middle East was and
24:02There was resentment from Iraq and Iran
24:04Causing a state of public anxiety
24:06Instability in global markets
24:08Of course you know why he was chewing something other than what he had done at the time, when it was under censure.
24:11And what about the passage through which approximately a third of the world's oil passes?
24:14At that point, investors should be worried.
24:16And in October 1987, my dear America acted rashly.
24:18Iranian oil platforms were hit
24:21This is where the market began to fear its larger war.
24:23Guys, we're afraid America will enter into an open confrontation with Iran.
24:26On Monday, October 19, 1987
24:28People decide to sell their shares on the New York Stock Exchange and Nas Dak
24:32The problem is that everyone is selling at the same time.
24:35The stock price dropped, and the programmed computers started selling at the same time.
24:39Automatic, automatic, price keeps dropping.
24:41And with the same automatic mechanism, the world collapsed and fell apart.
24:43The Quds Jones index lost 508 points in one day.
24:47With a decrease of 22.5%
24:49This, my dear, is a setback in the language of the stock market.
24:51The 500-day moving average doesn't drop 34% in a single day.
24:54People are committing suicide
24:5622.5%, my dear, you'll spend the whole day listening to this.
24:59And the Moroccan woman is coming, we are in a state of obligation.
25:02The biggest daily loss in the long history of the American market
25:06Up to today
25:06My dear uncle, the brokers are shouting in the halls.
25:09The phones are ringing but no one is answering them.
25:11Businessmen are overdoing ties because they're suffocating.
25:14People started selling anything and everything
25:16Large stocks are collapsing and small stocks are disappearing
25:19My dear, the media are saying this is the end of the economy.
25:22Now let's get back to the barter and whoever has a kozandra
25:24We go down and get food for one day
25:25The stock exchange, my dear, was forced to temporarily halt trading.
25:28This is because it was unable to keep up with the low demand for sales.
25:31People were expecting a collapse like the one that happened in 1929
25:34That's what happens, my friend; the market recovers within months.
25:37And the US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) intervenes very quickly and says its famous line.
25:44I mean, I'm here as a central bank, or in this case, a federal bank.
25:47This is the most important and needed economic solution right now.
25:49Blood thinning injection
25:50The matter, my dear, thank God, is passing and nothing has happened since then.
25:53Give me a few simple, light things.
25:55The internet was discovered in 2000, and one person insulted many people and caused them to lose their livelihood.
25:58The one who calls his money "AI" is different from the one who calls it "AI".
26:00Justin Kiss means
26:01And of course, the 2008 crisis and what happened with Chrissia Bell.
26:03Coronavirus crisis 2020
26:05James Toba Crisis 2021
26:06The 2022 Russian-Ukrainian War
26:09And the tariffs that Trump imposed in 2025
26:11Who knows what will happen next?
26:15My dear friend, the Black Moon crisis is one of the most dangerous crises the stock market has ever faced.
26:18The biggest problem with it is that it's often decided in the next couple of days.
26:21As you can see, in the age of AI, stock market trading has developed significantly.
26:24A great deal of information and quick, instantaneous decisions.
26:26This is exactly how artificial intelligence works.
26:28He solves data, catches on, and makes decisions.
26:31Now AI learns from the market and builds trading strategies
26:34And she herself is much harder than humans.
26:36He buys and sells in Milli Skins
26:38Dear friend, we are in the world of High Frequency Trading.
26:40This account tracks hundreds, if not thousands, of assets simultaneously.
26:44It can also make stock price predictions.
26:47He has a Prodictive Analysis tool that analyzes market news with great precision.
26:50He gathers his information from everywhere.
26:52To the point that sometimes he might see tweets on X
26:54He knows what people are saying and understands what's happening around him.
26:57If people started with a certain degree of embarrassment, they would talk about a particular market.
26:59This might be in addition to the possibility that he might be involved in fraud attempts.
27:02Or catch anyone who is manipulating the market abnormally.
27:05There is AI today that is being dreamed of
27:07Emotional analysis
27:09He solves the interviews with company presidents
27:11He can tell from their tone of voice if they are attractive.
27:13No, not if they are interactive.
27:15No
27:15But my dear, despite all these advantages, it might happen again.
27:18The same thing happened on Black Monday
27:19It's possible that AI will control the market.
27:21One decision by Gabe Automation could cause the market to crash.
27:24He might suddenly decide that he's selling
27:25It's possible that AI companies themselves will remain a bubble of this era.
27:28Its share price remains inflated.
27:30Because everyone sees it as the trend
27:31Everyone is investing in it
27:33Or she says she's investing in it
27:35And she doesn't invest in it.
27:36If someone selling dental floss today says
27:38I use AI in my work
27:41Which doesn't actually exist because there isn't a team in all the teeth
27:43What are you talking about?
27:44It's possible that in a moment, my dear, AI could become a bubble.
27:46investment bubble
27:47Not a tech bubble
27:48It is a technology that can remain in its current state.
27:50But maybe Babqash will win
27:51And here, my dear, it is very possible that history will repeat itself.
27:53And everything you have gained and acquired in your life
27:54O son of Adam, he will lose in a calamity.
27:56And don't drown, my dear, this theatrical performance isn't just romantic talk.
27:59Go watch the Nvidia episode and you'll understand what I mean.
28:01By the way, my dear Nvidia is dominating the stock market.
28:03So you know I only make YouTube videos
28:06This topic of economics
28:07Global policy D
28:09And the predictions are not
28:11This episode, my dear, means that if Nvidia hadn't been filmed, it would have reached four trillion dollars.
28:14Oh Abu Hamad, four trillion dollars
28:16In the name of God, O Pasha, God
28:16Are you worried about Nvidia?
28:18Who is Hassan?
28:18By God, my dear, you are kind and wonderful, and the world is lucky to have you.
28:22Are you picking Jensen Hwang and giving Im Di a hard time?
28:25The story of the stock market, my dear, is not just about numbers and shares.
28:28The stock market is a game where the simplest thing is possible.
28:30And also, Askee Askee Askee the world lost in it.
28:32A lucky person trying for the first time could win big!
28:35And Isaac might lose their personal intentions.
28:36The stock market is like the story of your grandfather being offered a partnership in a plot of land in Fifth Settlement.
28:48And I won't know where to begin with your questions because of all the...
28:51It's possible that in the end, the Bedouin poultry market will be affected.
28:53Then a war breaks out in a poultry-exporting country, and you'll find the boys jumping into the sky.
28:57The arrow of the filthy one, we won't catch it
28:59It's also possible that the same individual chick could catch a cold.
29:01An infection that will cause you to lose everything you've done.
29:03The story of the stock market is a story of probabilities and fluctuations.
29:05My dear, it's exactly like life
29:07As they say, if you don't like surprises, don't go into the circus.
29:09But my dear, the most important mistake is that which becomes apparent in the stock market.
29:11Although history repeats itself
29:13Unless it seems that no one is learning from him
29:14Every time someone says
29:16The intended subject is different.
29:17The stock market throughout history has often been a similar story.
29:20It doesn't change
29:21Even we, my dear, don't change.
29:22What changes, my dear, are the names, companies, and dates.
29:26But where can you go, you capitalist, from a relationship with my family?
29:28The stock exchange is neither an angelic entity nor an evil one.
29:30It's just a long story and history.
29:32A long history of bizarre ideas and terrifying twists
29:35We can simply say that the stock market is a mirror
29:37It's not just a mirror of the economy, as they say.
29:39It is but a mirror for man
29:41His greed, his fear, his avarice, and even his ambitions, dreams, and hopes
29:45All of this is visible on the stock exchange screen.
29:46And most importantly, man's constant and false conviction that he is superior to everyone around him
29:51Or as the writer William Vedder says, from the stock market
29:54At every moment someone is buying, someone else is selling.
29:57And they both feel like they are the bald one
30:00That's all, my dear brother, not "our brother"
30:01You'll see the previous case, then you'll see the next one.
30:03Tunstabos on sources
30:03If we're on YouTube
30:04Subscribe to the channel
30:05Belk ya dhimi mara thafari
30:06Please, keep working bubble after bubble after bubble
30:09Until it became foam
30:10Money laundering
30:11Muhammad, if you descend, O my victory
30:13After this, I went down a lot
30:14Okay, my dear, that's fine.
30:16peace
30:19Short selling, short selling quickly

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