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Lindsay Lohan

Lindsay Lohan Lindsay Lohan Lindsay Lohan Lindsay Lohan Lindsay Lohan Lindsay Lohan Lindsay Lohan
Added: 12th July, 2008
166426 Views
Comments :
  1. :aaa
    :aaa on 12-07-2008 at 05:42 pm

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  2. the king
    the king on 12-07-2008 at 05:56 pm

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  3. Anonymous
    Anonymous on 12-07-2008 at 05:56 pm

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  4. abdolali bahraini
    abdolali bahraini on 12-07-2008 at 06:13 pm

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  5. Anonymous
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  6. Anonymous
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  7. wellington_lopes_14hotmail.cm  msn
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  8. Anonymous
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  9. sub ka baap
    sub ka baap on 13-07-2008 at 09:35 am

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  10. sabbukabir
    sabbukabir on 13-07-2008 at 12:36 pm

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  11. Anonymous
    Anonymous on 16-07-2008 at 04:10 pm

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  12. TeddyBear
    TeddyBear on 16-07-2008 at 06:28 pm

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  13. newmichael11@yahoo.com
    newmichael11@yahoo.com on 30-07-2008 at 04:45 am

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  14. INFANT JESUS
    INFANT JESUS on 06-09-2008 at 05:35 pm

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Part3 Bikini Fest Tits Nice Trick Carmen Electra Angela Taylor Video: mad ping pong Subscribe to Picvi via Email get our daily updates on your mail Comments : Anonymous on 14-06-2008 at 11:12 pm sezgin on 16-06-2008 at 3:41 am Anonymous on 16-06-2008 at 1:53 pm i don’t get it Anonymous on 21-07-2008 at 11:31 pm Anonymous on 30-07-2008 at 5:30 pm coptagel on 05-08-2008 at 6:27 pm PICASSO on 08-08-2008 at 1:25 pm GANDHIJI>M.K. on 06-09-2008 at 5:17 pm Saturday, September 06, 2008 India has only 1% of global wealth: Report India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report says. New York: The old saying holds true: The rich do get richer. Even as world financial markets broke down last year, personal wealth around the world grew 5 per cent to $109.5 trillion, according to a global wealth report released by the Boston Consulting Group. However, India accounts for just about 1 per cent of the worldwide wealth market size of over $100 trillion. India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report said. Worldwide, it was the sixth consecutive year of expanding wealth. The fastest growth was among households in developing regions, such as China and the Gulf States and among families who were already rich. That wealth also is increasingly concentrated among the richest. The top 1 per cent of all households owned 35 per cent of the world’s wealth last year. Meanwhile, the top 0.001 per cent, ultra-rich households holding at least $5 million in censored commanded $21 trillion — a fifth of the world’s wealth. The planet also continues to mint new millionaires rapidly. The biggest jumps in 2007 came from emerging countries in Asia and Latin America. Overall, the number of millionaire households grew 11 per cent to 10.7 million last year. While the rich are still rich, they have been making some adjustments as a result of the financial crisis, the report said. This year, censored are being shifted to more conservative investments, more money is being kept onshore in home markets and some individuals have curtailed new investment. Yet BCG cautioned the outlook for wealth markets and the banks who serve them, is dimmed by the current financial crisis. North American personal wealth growth slowed to 3.8 per cent last year, compared with 9 per cent in 2006, reflecting the the mortgage crisis and the onset of the credit crunch last summer. “The financial crisis continue to cast a pall over established wealth markets,” said Victor Aerni, a Zurich based partner who co-authored the report. BCG forecasts personal wealth will continue growing, but at a slower pace. This year, with Wall Street suffering one of its worst slumps in decades, growth in censored is expected to rise less than 1 per cent. Things will improve over the next five years, BCG said. Wealth is growing at much faster rates among the Saturday, September 06, 2008 India has only 1% of global wealth: Report India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report says. New York: The old saying holds true: The rich do get richer. Even as world financial markets broke down last year, personal wealth around the world grew 5 per cent to $109.5 trillion, according to a global wealth report released by the Boston Consulting Group. However, India accounts for just about 1 per cent of the worldwide wealth market size of over $100 trillion. India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report said. Worldwide, it was the sixth consecutive year of expanding wealth. The fastest growth was among households in developing regions, such as China and the Gulf States and among families who were already rich. That wealth also is increasingly concentrated among the richest. The top 1 per cent of all households owned 35 per cent of the world’s wealth last year. Meanwhile, the top 0.001 per cent, ultra-rich households holding at least $5 million in censored commanded $21 trillion — a fifth of the world’s wealth. The planet also continues to mint new millionaires rapidly. The biggest jumps in 2007 came from emerging countries in Asia and Latin America. Overall, the number of millionaire households grew 11 per cent to 10.7 million last year. While the rich are still rich, they have been making some adjustments as a result of the financial crisis, the report said. This year, censored are being shifted to more conservative investments, more money is being kept onshore in home markets and some individuals have curtailed new investment. Yet BCG cautioned the outlook for wealth markets and the banks who serve them, is dimmed by the current financial crisis. North American personal wealth growth slowed to 3.8 per cent last year, compared with 9 per cent in 2006, reflecting the the mortgage crisis and the onset of the credit crunch last summer. “The financial crisis continue to cast a pall over established wealth markets,” said Victor Aerni, a Zurich based partner who co-authored the report. BCG forecasts personal wealth will continue growing, but at a slower pace. This year, with Wall Street suffering one of its worst slumps in decades, growth in censored is expected to rise less than 1 per cent. Things will improve over the next five years, BCG said. Wealth is growing at much faster rates among the Saturday, September 06, 2008 India has only 1% of global wealth: Report India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report says. New York: The old saying holds true: The rich do get richer. Even as world financial markets broke down last year, personal wealth around the world grew 5 per cent to $109.5 trillion, according to a global wealth report released by the Boston Consulting Group. However, India accounts for just about 1 per cent of the worldwide wealth market size of over $100 trillion. India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report said. Worldwide, it was the sixth consecutive year of expanding wealth. The fastest growth was among households in developing regions, such as China and the Gulf States and among families who were already rich. That wealth also is increasingly concentrated among the richest. The top 1 per cent of all households owned 35 per cent of the world’s wealth last year. Meanwhile, the top 0.001 per cent, ultra-rich households holding at least $5 million in censored commanded $21 trillion — a fifth of the world’s wealth. The planet also continues to mint new millionaires rapidly. The biggest jumps in 2007 came from emerging countries in Asia and Latin America. Overall, the number of millionaire households grew 11 per cent to 10.7 million last year. While the rich are still rich, they have been making some adjustments as a result of the financial crisis, the report said. This year, censored are being shifted to more conservative investments, more money is being kept onshore in home markets and some individuals have curtailed new investment. Yet BCG cautioned the outlook for wealth markets and the banks who serve them, is dimmed by the current financial crisis. North American personal wealth growth slowed to 3.8 per cent last year, compared with 9 per cent in 2006, reflecting the the mortgage crisis and the onset of the credit crunch last summer. “The financial crisis continue to cast a pall over established wealth markets,” said Victor Aerni, a Zurich based partner who co-authored the report. BCG forecasts personal wealth will continue growing, but at a slower pace. This year, with Wall Street suffering one of its worst slumps in decades, growth in censored is expected to rise less than 1 per cent. Things will improve over the next five years, BCG said. Wealth is growing at much faster rates among the Saturday, September 06, 2008 India has only 1% of global wealth: Report India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report says. New York: The old saying holds true: The rich do get richer. Even as world financial markets broke down last year, personal wealth around the world grew 5 per cent to $109.5 trillion, according to a global wealth report released by the Boston Consulting Group. However, India accounts for just about 1 per cent of the worldwide wealth market size of over $100 trillion. India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report said. Worldwide, it was the sixth consecutive year of expanding wealth. The fastest growth was among households in developing regions, such as China and the Gulf States and among families who were already rich. That wealth also is increasingly concentrated among the richest. The top 1 per cent of all households owned 35 per cent of the world’s wealth last year. Meanwhile, the top 0.001 per cent, ultra-rich households holding at least $5 million in censored commanded $21 trillion — a fifth of the world’s wealth. The planet also continues to mint new millionaires rapidly. The biggest jumps in 2007 came from emerging countries in Asia and Latin America. Overall, the number of millionaire households grew 11 per cent to 10.7 million last year. While the rich are still rich, they have been making some adjustments as a result of the financial crisis, the report said. This year, censored are being shifted to more conservative investments, more money is being kept onshore in home markets and some individuals have curtailed new investment. Yet BCG cautioned the outlook for wealth markets and the banks who serve them, is dimmed by the current financial crisis. North American personal wealth growth slowed to 3.8 per cent last year, compared with 9 per cent in 2006, reflecting the the mortgage crisis and the onset of the credit crunch last summer. “The financial crisis continue to cast a pall over established wealth markets,” said Victor Aerni, a Zurich based partner who co-authored the report. BCG forecasts personal wealth will continue growing, but at a slower pace. This year, with Wall Street suffering one of its worst slumps in decades, growth in censored is expected to rise less than 1 per cent. Things will improve over the next five years, BCG said. Wealth is growing at much faster rates among the Saturday, September 06, 2008 India has only 1% of global wealth: Report India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report says. New York: The old saying holds true: The rich do get richer. Even as world financial markets broke down last year, personal wealth around the world grew 5 per cent to $109.5 trillion, according to a global wealth report released by the Boston Consulting Group. However, India accounts for just about 1 per cent of the worldwide wealth market size of over $100 trillion. India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report said. Worldwide, it was the sixth consecutive year of expanding wealth. The fastest growth was among households in developing regions, such as China and the Gulf States and among families who were already rich. That wealth also is increasingly concentrated among the richest. The top 1 per cent of all households owned 35 per cent of the world’s wealth last year. Meanwhile, the top 0.001 per cent, ultra-rich households holding at least $5 million in censored commanded $21 trillion — a fifth of the world’s wealth. The planet also continues to mint new millionaires rapidly. The biggest jumps in 2007 came from emerging countries in Asia and Latin America. Overall, the number of millionaire households grew 11 per cent to 10.7 million last year. While the rich are still rich, they have been making some adjustments as a result of the financial crisis, the report said. This year, censored are being shifted to more conservative investments, more money is being kept onshore in home markets and some individuals have curtailed new investment. Yet BCG cautioned the outlook for wealth markets and the banks who serve them, is dimmed by the current financial crisis. North American personal wealth growth slowed to 3.8 per cent last year, compared with 9 per cent in 2006, reflecting the the mortgage crisis and the onset of the credit crunch last summer. “The financial crisis continue to cast a pall over established wealth markets,” said Victor Aerni, a Zurich based partner who co-authored the report. BCG forecasts personal wealth will continue growing, but at a slower pace. This year, with Wall Street suffering one of its worst slumps in decades, growth in censored is expected to rise less than 1 per cent. Things will improve over the next five years, BCG said. Wealth is growing at much faster rates among the Saturday, September 06, 2008 India has only 1% of global wealth: Report India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report says. New York: The old saying holds true: The rich do get richer. Even as world financial markets broke down last year, personal wealth around the world grew 5 per cent to $109.5 trillion, according to a global wealth report released by the Boston Consulting Group. However, India accounts for just about 1 per cent of the worldwide wealth market size of over $100 trillion. India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report said. Worldwide, it was the sixth consecutive year of expanding wealth. The fastest growth was among households in developing regions, such as China and the Gulf States and among families who were already rich. That wealth also is increasingly concentrated among the richest. The top 1 per cent of all households owned 35 per cent of the world’s wealth last year. Meanwhile, the top 0.001 per cent, ultra-rich households holding at least $5 million in censored commanded $21 trillion — a fifth of the world’s wealth. The planet also continues to mint new millionaires rapidly. The biggest jumps in 2007 came from emerging countries in Asia and Latin America. Overall, the number of millionaire households grew 11 per cent to 10.7 million last year. While the rich are still rich, they have been making some adjustments as a result of the financial crisis, the report said. This year, censored are being shifted to more conservative investments, more money is being kept onshore in home markets and some individuals have curtailed new investment. Yet BCG cautioned the outlook for wealth markets and the banks who serve them, is dimmed by the current financial crisis. North American personal wealth growth slowed to 3.8 per cent last year, compared with 9 per cent in 2006, reflecting the the mortgage crisis and the onset of the credit crunch last summer. “The financial crisis continue to cast a pall over established wealth markets,” said Victor Aerni, a Zurich based partner who co-authored the report. BCG forecasts personal wealth will continue growing, but at a slower pace. This year, with Wall Street suffering one of its worst slumps in decades, growth in censored is expected to rise less than 1 per cent. Things will improve over the next five years, BCG said. Wealth is growing at much faster rates among the JINNA on 06-09-2008 at 5:18 pm Username: Password: Register / Lost your password? Cute Ads Loading …5th June, 2008 ShareThis Email This Post ShareThis Email This Post Category: Fun Tags: Ads Random Posts : Celeste Star Body Art Jon Huls Drawings Games: Uphill Rush Celebs: Abbey Clancy Bikini (FHM) 1010 Girls Chevrolet Volt Concept Dolphins Photographer Zena Holloway Reef N Beef Commercial Subscribe to Picvi via Email get our daily updates on your mail Comments : Anonymous on 14-06-2008 at 11:12 pm sezgin on 16-06-2008 at 3:41 am Anonymous on 16-06-2008 at 1:53 pm i don’t get it Anonymous on 21-07-2008 at 11:31 pm Anonymous on 30-07-2008 at 5:30 pm coptagel on 05-08-2008 at 6:27 pm PICASSO on 08-08-2008 at 1:25 pm GANDHIJI>M.K. on 06-09-2008 at 5:17 pm Saturday, September 06, 2008 India has only 1% of global wealth: Report India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report says. New York: The old saying holds true: The rich do get richer. Even as world financial markets broke down last year, personal wealth around the world grew 5 per cent to $109.5 trillion, according to a global wealth report released by the Boston Consulting Group. However, India accounts for just about 1 per cent of the worldwide wealth market size of over $100 trillion. India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report said. Worldwide, it was the sixth consecutive year of expanding wealth. The fastest growth was among households in developing regions, such as China and the Gulf States and among families who were already rich. That wealth also is increasingly concentrated among the richest. The top 1 per cent of all households owned 35 per cent of the world’s wealth last year. Meanwhile, the top 0.001 per cent, ultra-rich households holding at least $5 million in censored commanded $21 trillion — a fifth of the world’s wealth. The planet also continues to mint new millionaires rapidly. The biggest jumps in 2007 came from emerging countries in Asia and Latin America. Overall, the number of millionaire households grew 11 per cent to 10.7 million last year. While the rich are still rich, they have been making some adjustments as a result of the financial crisis, the report said. This year, censored are being shifted to more conservative investments, more money is being kept onshore in home markets and some individuals have curtailed new investment. Yet BCG cautioned the outlook for wealth markets and the banks who serve them, is dimmed by the current financial crisis. North American personal wealth growth slowed to 3.8 per cent last year, compared with 9 per cent in 2006, reflecting the the mortgage crisis and the onset of the credit crunch last summer. “The financial crisis continue to cast a pall over established wealth markets,” said Victor Aerni, a Zurich based partner who co-authored the report. BCG forecasts personal wealth will continue growing, but at a slower pace. This year, with Wall Street suffering one of its worst slumps in decades, growth in censored is expected to rise less than 1 per cent. Things will improve over the next five years, BCG said. Wealth is growing at much faster rates among the Saturday, September 06, 2008 India has only 1% of global wealth: Report India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report says. New York: The old saying holds true: The rich do get richer. Even as world financial markets broke down last year, personal wealth around the world grew 5 per cent to $109.5 trillion, according to a global wealth report released by the Boston Consulting Group. However, India accounts for just about 1 per cent of the worldwide wealth market size of over $100 trillion. India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report said. Worldwide, it was the sixth consecutive year of expanding wealth. The fastest growth was among households in developing regions, such as China and the Gulf States and among families who were already rich. That wealth also is increasingly concentrated among the richest. The top 1 per cent of all households owned 35 per cent of the world’s wealth last year. Meanwhile, the top 0.001 per cent, ultra-rich households holding at least $5 million in censored commanded $21 trillion — a fifth of the world’s wealth. The planet also continues to mint new millionaires rapidly. The biggest jumps in 2007 came from emerging countries in Asia and Latin America. Overall, the number of millionaire households grew 11 per cent to 10.7 million last year. While the rich are still rich, they have been making some adjustments as a result of the financial crisis, the report said. This year, censored are being shifted to more conservative investments, more money is being kept onshore in home markets and some individuals have curtailed new investment. Yet BCG cautioned the outlook for wealth markets and the banks who serve them, is dimmed by the current financial crisis. North American personal wealth growth slowed to 3.8 per cent last year, compared with 9 per cent in 2006, reflecting the the mortgage crisis and the onset of the credit crunch last summer. “The financial crisis continue to cast a pall over established wealth markets,” said Victor Aerni, a Zurich based partner who co-authored the report. BCG forecasts personal wealth will continue growing, but at a slower pace. This year, with Wall Street suffering one of its worst slumps in decades, growth in censored is expected to rise less than 1 per cent. Things will improve over the next five years, BCG said. Wealth is growing at much faster rates among the Saturday, September 06, 2008 India has only 1% of global wealth: Report India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report says. New York: The old saying holds true: The rich do get richer. Even as world financial markets broke down last year, personal wealth around the world grew 5 per cent to $109.5 trillion, according to a global wealth report released by the Boston Consulting Group. However, India accounts for just about 1 per cent of the worldwide wealth market size of over $100 trillion. India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report said. Worldwide, it was the sixth consecutive year of expanding wealth. The fastest growth was among households in developing regions, such as China and the Gulf States and among families who were already rich. That wealth also is increasingly concentrated among the richest. The top 1 per cent of all households owned 35 per cent of the world’s wealth last year. Meanwhile, the top 0.001 per cent, ultra-rich households holding at least $5 million in censored commanded $21 trillion — a fifth of the world’s wealth. The planet also continues to mint new millionaires rapidly. The biggest jumps in 2007 came from emerging countries in Asia and Latin America. Overall, the number of millionaire households grew 11 per cent to 10.7 million last year. While the rich are still rich, they have been making some adjustments as a result of the financial crisis, the report said. This year, censored are being shifted to more conservative investments, more money is being kept onshore in home markets and some individuals have curtailed new investment. Yet BCG cautioned the outlook for wealth markets and the banks who serve them, is dimmed by the current financial crisis. North American personal wealth growth slowed to 3.8 per cent last year, compared with 9 per cent in 2006, reflecting the the mortgage crisis and the onset of the credit crunch last summer. “The financial crisis continue to cast a pall over established wealth markets,” said Victor Aerni, a Zurich based partner who co-authored the report. BCG forecasts personal wealth will continue growing, but at a slower pace. This year, with Wall Street suffering one of its worst slumps in decades, growth in censored is expected to rise less than 1 per cent. Things will improve over the next five years, BCG said. Wealth is growing at much faster rates among the Saturday, September 06, 2008 India has only 1% of global wealth: Report India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report says. New York: The old saying holds true: The rich do get richer. Even as world financial markets broke down last year, personal wealth around the world grew 5 per cent to $109.5 trillion, according to a global wealth report released by the Boston Consulting Group. However, India accounts for just about 1 per cent of the worldwide wealth market size of over $100 trillion. India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report said. Worldwide, it was the sixth consecutive year of expanding wealth. The fastest growth was among households in developing regions, such as China and the Gulf States and among families who were already rich. That wealth also is increasingly concentrated among the richest. The top 1 per cent of all households owned 35 per cent of the world’s wealth last year. Meanwhile, the top 0.001 per cent, ultra-rich households holding at least $5 million in censored commanded $21 trillion — a fifth of the world’s wealth. The planet also continues to mint new millionaires rapidly. The biggest jumps in 2007 came from emerging countries in Asia and Latin America. Overall, the number of millionaire households grew 11 per cent to 10.7 million last year. While the rich are still rich, they have been making some adjustments as a result of the financial crisis, the report said. This year, censored are being shifted to more conservative investments, more money is being kept onshore in home markets and some individuals have curtailed new investment. Yet BCG cautioned the outlook for wealth markets and the banks who serve them, is dimmed by the current financial crisis. North American personal wealth growth slowed to 3.8 per cent last year, compared with 9 per cent in 2006, reflecting the the mortgage crisis and the onset of the credit crunch last summer. “The financial crisis continue to cast a pall over established wealth markets,” said Victor Aerni, a Zurich based partner who co-authored the report. BCG forecasts personal wealth will continue growing, but at a slower pace. This year, with Wall Street suffering one of its worst slumps in decades, growth in censored is expected to rise less than 1 per cent. Things will improve over the next five years, BCG said. Wealth is growing at much faster rates among the Saturday, September 06, 2008 India has only 1% of global wealth: Report India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report says. New York: The old saying holds true: The rich do get richer. Even as world financial markets broke down last year, personal wealth around the world grew 5 per cent to $109.5 trillion, according to a global wealth report released by the Boston Consulting Group. However, India accounts for just about 1 per cent of the worldwide wealth market size of over $100 trillion. India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report said. Worldwide, it was the sixth consecutive year of expanding wealth. The fastest growth was among households in developing regions, such as China and the Gulf States and among families who were already rich. That wealth also is increasingly concentrated among the richest. The top 1 per cent of all households owned 35 per cent of the world’s wealth last year. Meanwhile, the top 0.001 per cent, ultra-rich households holding at least $5 million in censored commanded $21 trillion — a fifth of the world’s wealth. The planet also continues to mint new millionaires rapidly. The biggest jumps in 2007 came from emerging countries in Asia and Latin America. Overall, the number of millionaire households grew 11 per cent to 10.7 million last year. While the rich are still rich, they have been making some adjustments as a result of the financial crisis, the report said. This year, censored are being shifted to more conservative investments, more money is being kept onshore in home markets and some individuals have curtailed new investment. Yet BCG cautioned the outlook for wealth markets and the banks who serve them, is dimmed by the current financial crisis. North American personal wealth growth slowed to 3.8 per cent last year, compared with 9 per cent in 2006, reflecting the the mortgage crisis and the onset of the credit crunch last summer. “The financial crisis continue to cast a pall over established wealth markets,” said Victor Aerni, a Zurich based partner who co-authored the report. BCG forecasts personal wealth will continue growing, but at a slower pace. This year, with Wall Street suffering one Username: Password: Register / Lost your password? Cute Ads Loading …5th June, 2008 ShareThis Email This Post ShareThis Email This Post Category: Fun Tags: Ads Random Posts : Cute Barmaid Video: best bikini ever! Night. Beautiful Photos Motor Race Gumball 3000. Part3 Bikini Fest Tits Nice Trick Carmen Electra Angela Taylor Video: mad ping pong Subscribe to Picvi via Email get our daily updates on your mail Comments : Anonymous on 14-06-2008 at 11:12 pm sezgin on 16-06-2008 at 3:41 am Anonymous on 16-06-2008 at 1:53 pm i don’t get it Anonymous on 21-07-2008 at 11:31 pm So censored crazy sexy cool this work is, when you don`t be in a stress phase Otherwise……..so much sex and naked bodies in the work and you`ve could beeing tired about, when your girl say she wants sex with you. God damned is that a big censored when it worse to come rtyfr on 17-07-2008 at 5:30 am So censored crazy sexy cool this work is, when you don`t be in a stress phase Otherwise……..so much sex and naked bodies in the work and you`ve could beeing tired about, when your girl say she wants sex with you. God damned is that a big censored when it worse to come rtyfr on 17-07-2008 at 5:30 am So censored crazy sexy cool this work is, when you don`t be in a stress phase Otherwise……..so much sex and naked bodies in the work and you`ve could beeing tired about, when your girl say she wants sex with you. God damned is that a big censored when it worse to come rtyfr on 17-07-2008 at 5:30 am Anonymous on 30-07-2008 at 5:30 pm coptagel on 05-08-2008 at 6:27 pm PICASSO on 08-08-2008 at 1:25 pm GANDHIJI>M.K. on 06-09-2008 at 5:17 pm Saturday, September 06, 2008 India has only 1% of global wealth: Report India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report says. New York: The old saying holds true: The rich do get richer. Even as world financial markets broke down last year, personal wealth around the world grew 5 per cent to $109.5 trillion, according to a global wealth report released by the Boston Consulting Group. However, India accounts for just about 1 per cent of the worldwide wealth market size of over $100 trillion. India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report said. Worldwide, it was the sixth consecutive year of expanding wealth. The fastest growth was among households in developing regions, such as China and the Gulf States and among families who were already rich. That wealth also is increasingly concentrated among the richest. The top 1 per cent of all households owned 35 per cent of the world’s wealth last year. Meanwhile, the top 0.001 per cent, ultra-rich households holding at least $5 million in censored commanded $21 trillion — a fifth of the world’s wealth. The planet also continues to mint new millionaires rapidly. The biggest jumps in 2007 came from emerging countries in Asia and Latin America. Overall, the number of millionaire households grew 11 per cent to 10.7 million last year. While the rich are still rich, they have been making some adjustments as a result of the financial crisis, the report said. This year, censored are being shifted to more conservative investments, more money is being kept onshore in home markets and some individuals have curtailed new investment. Yet BCG cautioned the outlook for wealth markets and the banks who serve them, is dimmed by the current financial crisis. North American personal wealth growth slowed to 3.8 per cent last year, compared with 9 per cent in 2006, reflecting the the mortgage crisis and the onset of the credit crunch last summer. “The financial crisis continue to cast a pall over established wealth markets,” said Victor Aerni, a Zurich based partner who co-authored the report. BCG forecasts personal wealth will continue growing, but at a slower pace. This year, with Wall Street suffering one of its worst slumps in decades, growth in censored is expected to rise less than 1 per cent. Things will improve over the next five years, BCG said. Wealth is growing at much faster rates among the Saturday, September 06, 2008 India has only 1% of global wealth: Report India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report says. New York: The old saying holds true: The rich do get richer. Even as world financial markets broke down last year, personal wealth around the world grew 5 per cent to $109.5 trillion, according to a global wealth report released by the Boston Consulting Group. However, India accounts for just about 1 per cent of the worldwide wealth market size of over $100 trillion. India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report said. Worldwide, it was the sixth consecutive year of expanding wealth. The fastest growth was among households in developing regions, such as China and the Gulf States and among families who were already rich. That wealth also is increasingly concentrated among the richest. The top 1 per cent of all households owned 35 per cent of the world’s wealth last year. Meanwhile, the top 0.001 per cent, ultra-rich households holding at least $5 million in censored commanded $21 trillion — a fifth of the world’s wealth. The planet also continues to mint new millionaires rapidly. The biggest jumps in 2007 came from emerging countries in Asia and Latin America. Overall, the number of millionaire households grew 11 per cent to 10.7 million last year. While the rich are still rich, they have been making some adjustments as a result of the financial crisis, the report said. This year, censored are being shifted to more conservative investments, more money is being kept onshore in home markets and some individuals have curtailed new investment. Yet BCG cautioned the outlook for wealth markets and the banks who serve them, is dimmed by the current financial crisis. North American personal wealth growth slowed to 3.8 per cent last year, compared with 9 per cent in 2006, reflecting the the mortgage crisis and the onset of the credit crunch last summer. “The financial crisis continue to cast a pall over established wealth markets,” said Victor Aerni, a Zurich based partner who co-authored the report. BCG forecasts personal wealth will continue growing, but at a slower pace. This year, with Wall Street suffering one of its worst slumps in decades, growth in censored is expected to rise less than 1 per cent. Things will improve over the next five years, BCG said. Wealth is growing at much faster rates among the Saturday, September 06, 2008 India has only 1% of global wealth: Report India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report says. New York: The old saying holds true: The rich do get richer. Even as world financial markets broke down last year, personal wealth around the world grew 5 per cent to $109.5 trillion, according to a global wealth report released by the Boston Consulting Group. However, India accounts for just about 1 per cent of the worldwide wealth market size of over $100 trillion. India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report said. Worldwide, it was the sixth consecutive year of expanding wealth. The fastest growth was among households in developing regions, such as China and the Gulf States and among families who were already rich. That wealth also is increasingly concentrated among the richest. The top 1 per cent of all households owned 35 per cent of the world’s wealth last year. Meanwhile, the top 0.001 per cent, ultra-rich households holding at least $5 million in censored commanded $21 trillion — a fifth of the world’s wealth. The planet also continues to mint new millionaires rapidly. The biggest jumps in 2007 came from emerging countries in Asia and Latin America. Overall, the number of millionaire households grew 11 per cent to 10.7 million last year. While the rich are still rich, they have been making some adjustments as a result of the financial crisis, the report said. This year, censored are being shifted to more conservative investments, more money is being kept onshore in home markets and some individuals have curtailed new investment. Yet BCG cautioned the outlook for wealth markets and the banks who serve them, is dimmed by the current financial crisis. North American personal wealth growth slowed to 3.8 per cent last year, compared with 9 per cent in 2006, reflecting the the mortgage crisis and the onset of the credit crunch last summer. “The financial crisis continue to cast a pall over established wealth markets,” said Victor Aerni, a Zurich based partner who co-authored the report. BCG forecasts personal wealth will continue growing, but at a slower pace. This year, with Wall Street suffering one of its worst slumps in decades, growth in censored is expected to rise less than 1 per cent. Things will improve over the next five years, BCG said. Wealth is growing at much faster rates among the Saturday, September 06, 2008 India has only 1% of global wealth: Report India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report says. New York: The old saying holds true: The rich do get richer. Even as world financial markets broke down last year, personal wealth around the world grew 5 per cent to $109.5 trillion, according to a global wealth report released by the Boston Consulting Group. However, India accounts for just about 1 per cent of the worldwide wealth market size of over $100 trillion. India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report said. Worldwide, it was the sixth consecutive year of expanding wealth. The fastest growth was among households in developing regions, such as China and the Gulf States and among families who were already rich. That wealth also is increasingly concentrated among the richest. The top 1 per cent of all households owned 35 per cent of the world’s wealth last year. Meanwhile, the top 0.001 per cent, ultra-rich households holding at least $5 million in censored commanded $21 trillion — a fifth of the world’s wealth. The planet also continues to mint new millionaires rapidly. The biggest jumps in 2007 came from emerging countries in Asia and Latin America. Overall, the number of millionaire households grew 11 per cent to 10.7 million last year. While the rich are still rich, they have been making some adjustments as a result of the financial crisis, the report said. This year, censored are being shifted to more conservative investments, more money is being kept onshore in home markets and some individuals have curtailed new investment. Yet BCG cautioned the outlook for wealth markets and the banks who serve them, is dimmed by the current financial crisis. North American personal wealth growth slowed to 3.8 per cent last year, compared with 9 per cent in 2006, reflecting the the mortgage crisis and the onset of the credit crunch last summer. “The financial crisis continue to cast a pall over established wealth markets,” said Victor Aerni, a Zurich based partner who co-authored the report. BCG forecasts personal wealth will continue growing, but at a slower pace. This year, with Wall Street suffering one of its worst slumps in decades, growth in censored is expected to rise less than 1 per cent. Things will improve over the next five years, BCG said. Wealth is growing at much faster rates among the Saturday, September 06, 2008 India has only 1% of global wealth: Report India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report says. New York: The old saying holds true: The rich do get richer. Even as world financial markets broke down last year, personal wealth around the world grew 5 per cent to $109.5 trillion, according to a global wealth report released by the Boston Consulting Group. However, India accounts for just about 1 per cent of the worldwide wealth market size of over $100 trillion. India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report said. Worldwide, it was the sixth consecutive year of expanding wealth. The fastest growth was among households in developing regions, such as China and the Gulf States and among families who were already rich. That wealth also is increasingly concentrated among the richest. The top 1 per cent of all households owned 35 per cent of the world’s wealth last year. Meanwhile, the top 0.001 per cent, ultra-rich households holding at least $5 million in censored commanded $21 trillion — a fifth of the world’s wealth. The planet also continues to mint new millionaires rapidly. The biggest jumps in 2007 came from emerging countries in Asia and Latin America. Overall, the number of millionaire households grew 11 per cent to 10.7 million last year. While the rich are still rich, they have been making some adjustments as a result of the financial crisis, the report said. This year, censored are being shifted to more conservative investments, more money is being kept onshore in home markets and some individuals have curtailed new investment. Yet BCG cautioned the outlook for wealth markets and the banks who serve them, is dimmed by the current financial crisis. North American personal wealth growth slowed to 3.8 per cent last year, compared with 9 per cent in 2006, reflecting the the mortgage crisis and the onset of the credit crunch last summer. “The financial crisis continue to cast a pall over established wealth markets,” said Victor Aerni, a Zurich based partner who co-authored the report. BCG forecasts personal wealth will continue growing, but at a slower pace. This year, with Wall Street suffering one of its worst slumps in decades, growth in censored is expected to rise less than 1 per cent. Things will improve over the next five years, BCG said. Wealth is growing at much faster rates among the Saturday, September 06, 2008 India has only 1% of global wealth: Report India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report says. New York: The old saying holds true: The rich do get richer. Even as world financial markets broke down last year, personal wealth around the world grew 5 per cent to $109.5 trillion, according to a global wealth report released by the Boston Consulting Group. However, India accounts for just about 1 per cent of the worldwide wealth market size of over $100 trillion. India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report said. Worldwide, it was the sixth consecutive year of expanding wealth. The fastest growth was among households in developing regions, such as China and the Gulf States and among families who were already rich. That wealth also is increasingly concentrated among the richest. The top 1 per cent of all households owned 35 per cent of the world’s wealth last year. Meanwhile, the top 0.001 per cent, ultra-rich households holding at least $5 million in censored commanded $21 trillion — a fifth of the world’s wealth. The planet also continues to mint new millionaires rapidly. The biggest jumps in 2007 came from emerging countries in Asia and Latin America. Overall, the number of millionaire households grew 11 per cent to 10.7 million last year. While the rich are still rich, they have been making some adjustments as a result of the financial crisis, the report said. This year, censored are being shifted to more conservative investments, more money is being kept onshore in home markets and some individuals have curtailed new investment. Yet BCG cautioned the outlook for wealth markets and the banks who serve them, is dimmed by the current financial crisis. North American personal wealth growth slowed to 3.8 per cent last year, compared with 9 per cent in 2006, reflecting the the mortgage crisis and the onset of the credit crunch last summer. “The financial crisis continue to cast a pall over established wealth markets,” said Victor Aerni, a Zurich based partner who co-authored the report. BCG forecasts personal wealth will continue growing, but at a slower pace. This year, with Wall Street suffering one of its worst slumps in decades, growth in censored is expected to rise less than 1 per cent. Things will improve over the next five years, BCG said. Wealth is growing at much faster rates among the JINNA on 06-09-2008 at 5:18 pm Username: Password: Register / Lost your password? Cute Ads Loading …5th June, 2008 ShareThis Email This Post ShareThis Email This Post Category: Fun Tags: Ads Random Posts : Celeste Star Body Art Jon Huls Drawings Games: Uphill Rush Celebs: Abbey Clancy Bikini (FHM) 1010 Girls Chevrolet Volt Concept Dolphins Photographer Zena Holloway Reef N Beef Commercial Subscribe to Picvi via Email get our daily updates on your mail Comments : Anonymous on 14-06-2008 at 11:12 pm sezgin on 16-06-2008 at 3:41 am Anonymous on 16-06-2008 at 1:53 pm i don’t get it Anonymous on 21-07-2008 at 11:31 pm Anonymous on 30-07-2008 at 5:30 pm coptagel on 05-08-2008 at 6:27 pm PICASSO on 08-08-2008 at 1:25 pm GANDHIJI>M.K. on 06-09-2008 at 5:17 pm Saturday, September 06, 2008 India has only 1% of global wealth: Report India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report says. New York: The old saying holds true: The rich do get richer. Even as world financial markets broke down last year, personal wealth around the world grew 5 per cent to $109.5 trillion, according to a global wealth report released by the Boston Consulting Group. However, India accounts for just about 1 per cent of the worldwide wealth market size of over $100 trillion. India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report said. Worldwide, it was the sixth consecutive year of expanding wealth. The fastest growth was among households in developing regions, such as China and the Gulf States and among families who were already rich. That wealth also is increasingly concentrated among the richest. The top 1 per cent of all households owned 35 per cent of the world’s wealth last year. Meanwhile, the top 0.001 per cent, ultra-rich households holding at least $5 million in censored commanded $21 trillion — a fifth of the world’s wealth. The planet also continues to mint new millionaires rapidly. The biggest jumps in 2007 came from emerging countries in Asia and Latin America. Overall, the number of millionaire households grew 11 per cent to 10.7 million last year. While the rich are still rich, they have been making some adjustments as a result of the financial crisis, the report said. This year, censored are being shifted to more conservative investments, more money is being kept onshore in home markets and some individuals have curtailed new investment. Yet BCG cautioned the outlook for wealth markets and the banks who serve them, is dimmed by the current financial crisis. North American personal wealth growth slowed to 3.8 per cent last year, compared with 9 per cent in 2006, reflecting the the mortgage crisis and the onset of the credit crunch last summer. “The financial crisis continue to cast a pall over established wealth markets,” said Victor Aerni, a Zurich based partner who co-authored the report. BCG forecasts personal wealth will continue growing, but at a slower pace. This year, with Wall Street suffering one of its worst slumps in decades, growth in censored is expected to rise less than 1 per cent. Things will improve over the next five years, BCG said. Wealth is growing at much faster rates among the Saturday, September 06, 2008 India has only 1% of global wealth: Report India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report says. New York: The old saying holds true: The rich do get richer. Even as world financial markets broke down last year, personal wealth around the world grew 5 per cent to $109.5 trillion, according to a global wealth report released by the Boston Consulting Group. However, India accounts for just about 1 per cent of the worldwide wealth market size of over $100 trillion. India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report said. Worldwide, it was the sixth consecutive year of expanding wealth. The fastest growth was among households in developing regions, such as China and the Gulf States and among families who were already rich. That wealth also is increasingly concentrated among the richest. The top 1 per cent of all households owned 35 per cent of the world’s wealth last year. Meanwhile, the top 0.001 per cent, ultra-rich households holding at least $5 million in censored commanded $21 trillion — a fifth of the world’s wealth. The planet also continues to mint new millionaires rapidly. The biggest jumps in 2007 came from emerging countries in Asia and Latin America. Overall, the number of millionaire households grew 11 per cent to 10.7 million last year. While the rich are still rich, they have been making some adjustments as a result of the financial crisis, the report said. This year, censored are being shifted to more conservative investments, more money is being kept onshore in home markets and some individuals have curtailed new investment. Yet BCG cautioned the outlook for wealth markets and the banks who serve them, is dimmed by the current financial crisis. North American personal wealth growth slowed to 3.8 per cent last year, compared with 9 per cent in 2006, reflecting the the mortgage crisis and the onset of the credit crunch last summer. “The financial crisis continue to cast a pall over established wealth markets,” said Victor Aerni, a Zurich based partner who co-authored the report. BCG forecasts personal wealth will continue growing, but at a slower pace. This year, with Wall Street suffering one of its worst slumps in decades, growth in censored is expected to rise less than 1 per cent. Things will improve over the next five years, BCG said. Wealth is growing at much faster rates among the Saturday, September 06, 2008 India has only 1% of global wealth: Report India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report says. New York: The old saying holds true: The rich do get richer. Even as world financial markets broke down last year, personal wealth around the world grew 5 per cent to $109.5 trillion, according to a global wealth report released by the Boston Consulting Group. However, India accounts for just about 1 per cent of the worldwide wealth market size of over $100 trillion. India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report said. Worldwide, it was the sixth consecutive year of expanding wealth. The fastest growth was among households in developing regions, such as China and the Gulf States and among families who were already rich. That wealth also is increasingly concentrated among the richest. The top 1 per cent of all households owned 35 per cent of the world’s wealth last year. Meanwhile, the top 0.001 per cent, ultra-rich households holding at least $5 million in censored commanded $21 trillion — a fifth of the world’s wealth. The planet also continues to mint new millionaires rapidly. The biggest jumps in 2007 came from emerging countries in Asia and Latin America. Overall, the number of millionaire households grew 11 per cent to 10.7 million last year. While the rich are still rich, they have been making some adjustments as a result of the financial crisis, the report said. This year, censored are being shifted to more conservative investments, more money is being kept onshore in home markets and some individuals have curtailed new investment. Yet BCG cautioned the outlook for wealth markets and the banks who serve them, is dimmed by the current financial crisis. North American personal wealth growth slowed to 3.8 per cent last year, compared with 9 per cent in 2006, reflecting the the mortgage crisis and the onset of the credit crunch last summer. “The financial crisis continue to cast a pall over established wealth markets,” said Victor Aerni, a Zurich based partner who co-authored the report. BCG forecasts personal wealth will continue growing, but at a slower pace. This year, with Wall Street suffering one of its worst slumps in decades, growth in censored is expected to rise less than 1 per cent. Things will improve over the next five years, BCG said. Wealth is growing at much faster rates among the Saturday, September 06, 2008 India has only 1% of global wealth: Report India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report says. New York: The old saying holds true: The rich do get richer. Even as world financial markets broke down last year, personal wealth around the world grew 5 per cent to $109.5 trillion, according to a global wealth report released by the Boston Consulting Group. However, India accounts for just about 1 per cent of the worldwide wealth market size of over $100 trillion. India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report said. Worldwide, it was the sixth consecutive year of expanding wealth. The fastest growth was among households in developing regions, such as China and the Gulf States and among families who were already rich. That wealth also is increasingly concentrated among the richest. The top 1 per cent of all households owned 35 per cent of the world’s wealth last year. Meanwhile, the top 0.001 per cent, ultra-rich households holding at least $5 million in censored commanded $21 trillion — a fifth of the world’s wealth. The planet also continues to mint new millionaires rapidly. The biggest jumps in 2007 came from emerging countries in Asia and Latin America. Overall, the number of millionaire households grew 11 per cent to 10.7 million last year. While the rich are still rich, they have been making some adjustments as a result of the financial crisis, the report said. This year, censored are being shifted to more conservative investments, more money is being kept onshore in home markets and some individuals have curtailed new investment. Yet BCG cautioned the outlook for wealth markets and the banks who serve them, is dimmed by the current financial crisis. North American personal wealth growth slowed to 3.8 per cent last year, compared with 9 per cent in 2006, reflecting the the mortgage crisis and the onset of the credit crunch last summer. “The financial crisis continue to cast a pall over established wealth markets,” said Victor Aerni, a Zurich based partner who co-authored the report. BCG forecasts personal wealth will continue growing, but at a slower pace. This year, with Wall Street suffering one of its worst slumps in decades, growth in censored is expected to rise less than 1 per cent. Things will improve over the next five years, BCG said. Wealth is growing at much faster rates among the Saturday, September 06, 2008 India has only 1% of global wealth: Report India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report says. New York: The old saying holds true: The rich do get richer. Even as world financial markets broke down last year, personal wealth around the world grew 5 per cent to $109.5 trillion, according to a global wealth report released by the Boston Consulting Group. However, India accounts for just about 1 per cent of the worldwide wealth market size of over $100 trillion. India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report said. Worldwide, it was the sixth consecutive year of expanding wealth. The fastest growth was among households in developing regions, such as China and the Gulf States and among families who were already rich. That wealth also is increasingly concentrated among the richest. The top 1 per cent of all households owned 35 per cent of the world’s wealth last year. Meanwhile, the top 0.001 per cent, ultra-rich households holding at least $5 million in censored commanded $21 trillion — a fifth of the world’s wealth. The planet also continues to mint new millionaires rapidly. The biggest jumps in 2007 came from emerging countries in Asia and Latin America. Overall, the number of millionaire households grew 11 per cent to 10.7 million last year. While the rich are still rich, they have been making some adjustments as a result of the financial crisis, the report said. This year, censored are being shifted to more conservative investments, more money is being kept onshore in home markets and some individuals have curtailed new investment. Yet BCG cautioned the outlook for wealth markets and the banks who serve them, is dimmed by the current financial crisis. North American personal wealth growth slowed to 3.8 per cent last year, compared with 9 per cent in 2006, reflecting the the mortgage crisis and the onset of the credit crunch last summer. “The financial crisis continue to cast a pall over established wealth markets,” said Victor Aerni, a Zurich based partner who co-authored the report. BCG forecasts personal wealth will continue growing, but at a slower pace. This year, with Wall Street suffering one Username: Password: Register / Lost your password? Cute Ads Loading …5th June, 2008 ShareThis Email This Post ShareThis Email This Post Category: Fun Tags: Ads Random Posts : Cute Barmaid Video: best bikini ever! Night. Beautiful Photos Motor Race Gumball 3000. Part3 Bikini Fest Tits Nice Trick Carmen Electra Angela Taylor Video: mad ping pong Subscribe to Picvi via Email get our daily updates on your mail Comments : Anonymous on 14-06-2008 at 11:12 pm sezgin on 16-06-2008 at 3:41 am Anonymous on 16-06-2008 at 1:53 pm i don’t get it Anonymous on 21-07-2008 at 11:31 pm Anonymous on 30-07-2008 at 5:30 pm coptagel on 05-08-2008 at 6:27 pm PICASSO on 08-08-2008 at 1:25 pm GANDHIJI>M.K. on 06-09-2008 at 5:17 pm Saturday, September 06, 2008 India has only 1% of global wealth: Report India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report says. New York: The old saying holds true: The rich do get richer. Even as world financial markets broke down last year, personal wealth around the world grew 5 per cent to $109.5 trillion, according to a global wealth report released by the Boston Consulting Group. However, India accounts for just about 1 per cent of the worldwide wealth market size of over $100 trillion. India’s wealth market, despite being underdeveloped and relatively small, is “attractive enough to be competitive,” the report said. Worldwide, it was the sixth consecutive year of expanding wealth. The fastest growth was among households in developing regions, such as China and the Gulf States and among families who were already rich. That wealth also is increasingly concentrated among the richest. The top 1 per cent of all households owned 35 per cent of the world’s wealth last year. Meanwhile, the top 0.001 per cent, ultra-rich households holding at least $5 million in censored commanded $21 trillion — a fifth of the world’s wealth. The planet also continues to mint new millionaires rapidly. The biggest jumps in 2007 came from emerging countries in Asia and Latin America. Overall, the number of millionaire households grew 11 per cent to 10.7 million last year. While the rich are still rich, they have been making some adjustments as a result of the financial crisis, the report said. This year, censored are being shifted to more conservative investments, more money is being kept onshore in home markets and some individuals have curtailed new investment. Yet BCG cautioned the outlook for wealth markets and the banks who serve them, is dimmed by the current financial crisis. North American personal wealth

  15. Ricardo Quisen
    Ricardo Quisen on 13-09-2008 at 01:19 am

    The most beautiful woman in the world....

  16. diego
    diego on 07-11-2008 at 06:40 am

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  17. fernandes
    fernandes on 04-12-2008 at 04:41 am

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  18. fernandes
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  19. Victorigin
    Victorigin on 01-01-2009 at 10:38 am

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  20. amalucado
    amalucado on 04-01-2009 at 03:03 am

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  21. romeumotolouco
    romeumotolouco on 23-05-2009 at 10:25 pm

    28.gif I love lesbians!!! 28.gif

  22. Lithuanian
    Lithuanian on 28-06-2009 at 03:50 pm

    27.gif 26.gif

  23. Lithuanian
    Lithuanian on 28-06-2009 at 03:51 pm

    who dont love? 21.gif

  24. Peter Marchal
    Peter Marchal on 16-08-2009 at 02:57 pm

    33.gif \ 33.gif \...

  25. coollover
    coollover on 24-08-2009 at 08:22 pm

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  26. hohoho
    hohoho on 22-10-2009 at 01:29 pm

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  27. domino
    domino on 13-01-2010 at 06:33 pm

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  • Kim Kardashian
  • Kim Kardashian
    Kim was nominated in 2009 for the Razzie Award for Worst Supporting Actress for her carrying into action in Disaster Movie (2008). She noted it in her blog and instead of being insulted by it, she took it in good stride and was blandished by it.
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  • Megan Fox
  • Megan Fox
    Here are photos of beauty Megan Fox in lingerie...
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  • Kim Kardashian
  • Kim Kardashian
    Here we have fresh photos of Kim Kardashian, posing in long but still very elegant and attractive dress that opens us some very smacky parts of her body. Let's look and enjoy them!
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  • Ashley Tisdale
  • Ashley Tisdale
    Ashley is caught by paparazzi near the beach..here we can see her cool body in bikini..what can we say, looks very impressive!
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  • AnnaLynne McCord
  • AnnaLynne McCord
    Beautiful blonde AnnaLynne McCord likes sexy outfits...
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  • Hayden Panettiere
  • Hayden Panettiere
    Here we get fresh photos of Hayden Panettiere in biini, how do you find them? I guess she is really okey, but be friend is not, lol.
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