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Bangladesh cricketer Arafat Sunny is embroiled in a scandal after revealing he had secretly married a woman, who earlier this year pressed charges against him for posting intimate photos of her online<br><br>A top Bangladeshi cricketer is embroiled in a scandal after revealing he had secretly married a woman who filed a case against him for posting intimate photos of her on social media -- even though he already had a wife.<br><br>Left arm spinner Arafat Sunny was arrested in January and taken into custody after Nasrin Sultana filed the case against him, but at the time it was not known that the pair had married.<br><br>Polygamy is legal in Bangladesh, where men can take up to four wives, but it is increasingly rare, particularly in young urban communities.<br><br>The 30-year-old cricketer was released on bail in March, but on Wednesday, lawyers for Nasrin said they had asked the court to cancel his bail.<br><br>Lawyer Delwar Jahan Rumi told AFP they had taken the step because the cricketer had broken a promise to give her expenses and start a family with her.<br><br>The spinner was initially accused of opening a fake Facebook account in Nasrin's name and posting "intimate photos" which she found "offensive and defamatory".<br><br>If found guilty, Sunny could be jailed for up to 14 years and fined 10 million taka ($125,000) under tough cyber laws.<br><br>The Bangladesh Cricket Board has said that Sunny, who has played 16 one-day internationals and 10 Twenty20 internationals, could also be banned from the sport.<br><br>He was suspended from international matches during the 2016 ICC World Twenty20 for an illegal bowling action, and has been playing domestic first-class cricket since.<br><br>Sunny's lawyer Jewel Ahmed said Nasrin was refusing to live with him unless he divorced his first wife -- a claim she denied.<br><br>"We told the court that he wants to keep both wives," Ahmed said.<br><br>"Sunny has rented an apartment for Nasrin but she has refused to live with him there unless he divorces his first wife."<br><br>The court asked one of Sunny's lawyers to settle the dispute between the two and set July 6 as the next day for hearing.<br><br>Here is more information in regards to Jewel Star 2018 stop by the page.
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bubble shooter pet - https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.pandakidgame.bubbleshooterpetraccoon. Here is a chart showing interest rates set by Sweden's central bank plotted against property price increases, from HSBC global economist James Pomeroy: <br><br>HSBC<br><br><br><br>You can't find a clearer warning that ultra-low, zero, or negative interest rates fuel bubbles in the property market. Rates go down, house prices go up. Low interest rates let consumers borrow mortgage money at ultra-low rates. That increases the amount of debt those consumers hold, but because the money is in the form of mortgage loans it drives demand for houses and pushes property prices upward.  <br><br>The fear is that if Sweden ever reverses course and increases interest rates — or if a recession hits — then all of that goes into reverse, with disastrous consequences for the Swedes. Imagine an entire country trying to pay down its debt and<br> sell its houses in order to raise cash, all at the same time. <br><br><br>HSBC's James Pomeroy<br>HSBC / video screengrab<br><br><br><br><br>The problem stems from the Riksbank's inflation target of 2%, which it has missed for at least three straight years: <br><br><br>Target inflation: 2%<br><br><br>Actual inflation: 0.1%<br><br><br>Central bank policy rate: -0.35%<br><br><br>Q3 2015 year-on-year GDP growth: 3.9% <br><br><br>Credit growth year-on-year: 7%<br><br><br>House price growth: 25%<br><br><br>If you believe — as economists do — that low interest rates fuel inflation, then one of those numbers is the odd man out: When the central bank is printing money at -0.35% rates, then actual inflation should be spiralling through the roof. Especially when you have got healthy GDP growth of nearly 4%. At Business Insider, our pet theory is that inflation is already<br>through the roof in Sweden<br>: in the form of house prices, growing at 25% a year. Pomeroy wrote in a recent note to investors:<br><br>Credit growth is running at around 7% yoy in one of the most highly indebted economies in the world. Simply, Sweden's economy does not warrant negative interest rates. <br><br>He added in an accompanying video:<br><br>All in all, we have no success in achieving monetary objectives, we've got a potential house price bubble, and the economy does not warrant interest rates this low. This presents a warning, not just to the Bank of Japan or to the ECB but to any other central bank around the world who may be considering such a policy. <br><br>Note: The chart actually understates house price rises in Sweden because it describes percentage growth, not actual growth.

Revision as of 21:54, 24 November 2017

bubble shooter pet - https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.pandakidgame.bubbleshooterpetraccoon. Here is a chart showing interest rates set by Sweden's central bank plotted against property price increases, from HSBC global economist James Pomeroy:

HSBC



You can't find a clearer warning that ultra-low, zero, or negative interest rates fuel bubbles in the property market. Rates go down, house prices go up. Low interest rates let consumers borrow mortgage money at ultra-low rates. That increases the amount of debt those consumers hold, but because the money is in the form of mortgage loans it drives demand for houses and pushes property prices upward. 

The fear is that if Sweden ever reverses course and increases interest rates — or if a recession hits — then all of that goes into reverse, with disastrous consequences for the Swedes. Imagine an entire country trying to pay down its debt and
 sell its houses in order to raise cash, all at the same time.


HSBC's James Pomeroy
HSBC / video screengrab




The problem stems from the Riksbank's inflation target of 2%, which it has missed for at least three straight years:


Target inflation: 2%


Actual inflation: 0.1%


Central bank policy rate: -0.35%


Q3 2015 year-on-year GDP growth: 3.9% 


Credit growth year-on-year: 7%


House price growth: 25%


If you believe — as economists do — that low interest rates fuel inflation, then one of those numbers is the odd man out: When the central bank is printing money at -0.35% rates, then actual inflation should be spiralling through the roof. Especially when you have got healthy GDP growth of nearly 4%. At Business Insider, our pet theory is that inflation is already
through the roof in Sweden
: in the form of house prices, growing at 25% a year. Pomeroy wrote in a recent note to investors:

Credit growth is running at around 7% yoy in one of the most highly indebted economies in the world. Simply, Sweden's economy does not warrant negative interest rates.

He added in an accompanying video:

All in all, we have no success in achieving monetary objectives, we've got a potential house price bubble, and the economy does not warrant interest rates this low. This presents a warning, not just to the Bank of Japan or to the ECB but to any other central bank around the world who may be considering such a policy.

Note: The chart actually understates house price rises in Sweden because it describes percentage growth, not actual growth.