iShares MSCI Emerg Mkts Index (EEM)
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- iShares ETF Tracking Error: Risks and Explanations [view article]
- Friday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
- Wednesday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
- India Battered by Global Storm [view article]
- Tuesday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
- Steep Sell-off Makes Chinese Equities More Attractive [view article]
- Global Market Roundup: Will the Bailout Work? [view article]
- Why Now Could Be the Right Time to Buy Emerging Markets Equities [view article]
- Tactical Asset Allocation, Part I [view article]
- Opportunity in Emerging Markets Amidst This Panic [view article]
- Friday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
- Global Liquidity Crisis: What Now? [view article]
Recent EEM Articles
- iShares ETF Tracking Error: Risks and Explanations
- Global Stock Markets: The Crash of 2008?
- Emerging Markets Crash and Burn: Look to Africa & Middle East Frontier Instead
- Friday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets
- India Battered by Global Storm
- Wednesday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets
- Steep Sell-off Makes Chinese Equities More Attractive
- Tuesday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets
- Why Now Could Be the Right Time to Buy Emerging Markets Equities
- Opportunity in Emerging Markets Amidst This Panic
- Full List of Articles »
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Friday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
Those are some great charts (and comments)!My brain hurts right now, but those are some great charts! Reply
Friday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
this is getting ridiculous, and I thought I was a perma-bear. I'm going to buy something today. ReplyLogic
Friday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
"Technical analysis at these levels is not as helpful as one would like as markets are blowing through support levels quicker than we can identify them."Lee Adler, who runs Captialstool.com, has a saying: "There's no such thing as support in a bear market." Reply
Friday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
"The markets are as oversold as they can get" - Most crashes are preceded by oversold conditions. But when we get the reversal today or Monday it will be the trading opportunity of a lifetime (unless it's different this time) ReplyFriday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
In an up-market, mark-to-market spirals up the market. But, in a down market, when combined with margin calls, it becomes a death spiral. All collateralized debt instruments will be devalued, called, devalued, called … till it is worthless and bellied up. Regardless of how we got into the mess we are in now, it is this twins that will do us in. If we do not repeal mark-to-market immediately, we ain’t seen anything yet. Where are we now in Dante’s Inferno? ReplyWednesday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
Hey Ben Dinsmore...Why do you feel sorry for folks who are already in retirement? We don't have to sweat a paycheck like you do. Most of us have executed our plan with sufficient income and safely invested nesteggs so we don't take big risks in equities or commodities like folks your age do. I'm sleeping very well the last couple of weeks.
However, I do agree with your feeling for those who are (were) getting close to retiring. Their schedule will probably be delayed some. Reply
Wednesday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
"You are FORCED TO READ THIS STUFF TO KNOW WHAT THE TECH HERD IS THINKING?I hate playing-the-players because I should be working full time doing bottom-up research. But I can not do that."
Vancan: Take your meds. Get back to your bottom up research and stop this pathetic drivel. Reply
e
India Battered by Global Storm [view article]
If the Indian economy can still grow based on domestic demand, this global downturn can be advantageous to it. The price of gasoline will fall as there will be less demand for it globally. Since India is a net importer this benefits it. But what will the falling demand for service (software etc.( do to Indian export income? ReplyWednesday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
Trader Vic:Because if it is possible that technical analysis is part of the reason we have bubbles which are terribly disruptive to our economy and our lives, then I am going to say so.
But how did I get to this post and hundreds of others like it? I am forced to read this stuff to know what the tech herd is thinking, because I am forced to play-the-players as a bubble inflates and again when it deflates. I have to do the same thing with the shorts. Figuring out which rumor is true and which is not takes time. (Who knows maybe their rummers will bring down another bank today. Great.) I hate playing-the-players because I should be working full time doing bottom-up research. But I can not do that. It would be ruinous as a bubble deflates to concentrate on a company's value. So once in a while I say so. You know. Free speech.
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India Battered by Global Storm [view article]
"The problems which are hitting the Indian economy at the moment, from the rapid rise in inflation to the sudden withdrawal of sentiment have a common origin: the dynamics of the global economy, and it is to these we must now look if we are to be able to sort the wood from the trees about what happens next. Basically, when the dust settles, "These are questions that every country in the world is going to have in the next year or two... "Where do we stand relative to everyone else now that the world economy has been drastically reshuffled?" Reply
Wednesday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
Vancan, so why even bother to post or read the charts if you don't believe it has any merit or value in the first place? What a waste of your time and this space. ReplyWednesday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
Oh, please! W. Buffet would take all those nice looking charts, shuffle them, glued them end-to-end, turn the resulting super-chart upside down, and see that it was just as predictive as any of them or the whole lot of them or the flip of a fair coin. Its no wonder we have bubbles. ReplyIndia Battered by Global Storm [view article]
Edward,Articles like these would go a long way in reviving the Glorious Indian Bull Run.
It is urgently needed :
indiaplay.blogspot.com...
Reply
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India Battered by Global Storm [view article]
sir,have you taken into consideration the iNDIAN politicians who play significant suicidal game in India as shown in the case of NANO? Reply
India Battered by Global Storm [view article]
This analysis is incisive! It implicitly focuses the reader on the essentials in the differences between the economies (and problems) of that of India with those of an emerging China. Or shall we say developed China!The Indian (and also Brazil, perhaps) industrial growth story is still preserved though at a slower pace while that of China faces a significant slowdown or marginal decline. China's economy is much more meshed in with the larger global economy due to heavy export dependency, while India's is less so. The effect of commodities is larger on the Indian economy since it weighs in at heavier relative level in its consumption and much of it based on imports. Thus the effects of commoditities recently on Indian inflation based on this dependency has been much larger. Perhaps, with the fall in commodity prices globally there soon woul be significant relief from inflation for the Indian economy.
India is also likely to see significant pick-up in investments after the elections expected soon in development of its infrastructure which has been subpar in recent years. The authror's suggestion of the likelihood of the preservatgion of India's growth story is plausible. I would bet that it is highly likely. The one area of concern is in India's poor track record for development and growth of its farm sector and agri-industry.
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