UltraShort MSCI EAFE ProShares (EFU)
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- Short Cut to Profits? A Closer Look at Inverse Funds [view article]
- Tuesday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets, More [view article]
- Double Short ProShares ETFs [view article]
- ProShares UltraShort and UltraLong ETFs [view article]
- Wednesday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
- Thursday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
- Friday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
- 25 ETFs That Actually Are Making Money [view article]
- 2008: A Great Year for Short-Sellers [view article]
- ProShares ETFs: Why Volume Trading Makes a Difference [view article]
- Thursday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
Recent EFU Articles
- Tuesday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets, More
- Short Cut to Profits? A Closer Look at Inverse Funds
- Thursday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets
- Wednesday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets
- Friday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets
- 25 ETFs That Actually Are Making Money
- 2008: A Great Year for Short-Sellers
- Double Short ProShares ETFs
- ProShares UltraShort and UltraLong ETFs
- Thursday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets
- Full List of Articles »
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Thursday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
I have been enjoying this post since March. The comments seem to fit into my way of seeing the world, very refreshing. Enough of the intro, I'll cut to the chase.. I'll ask three questionsYou brought up a very interesting "incident" with CNY. It dropped from about 36 to 30 in one hour with no movement on the Yuan. Is this the result of some derivatives gone bad or one of the financial backers choking on its own black hole?
One of the money market funds is now at 97 cents. Is this more derivatives going down a hole... With so much cash in money market funds, do you think they are at risk?
TIP is slowly going down hill. I bought some in Feb at 107 and have been pleasantly surprised with the yield. In seven months of monthly dividends, the annual yield is at 7.78%. Not bad for AAA gov bonds. Maybe somewhere in the government data banks, there is a real number on inflation?
Yankee Running Dog
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Thursday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
McCain is very late to the party! ReplyThursday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
McCain is right: dump Chris Cox ! ReplySan
Francisco
Thursday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
This Chinese article is very significant. As McCain and Obama call for new regulation, the winner will not be able to do it alone. The global dominance of our currency would seem to be over. ReplyThursday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
There are going to be a lot of wrong calls about equity market capitulation, when we haven't seen the housing market capitulate yet. Of course there might be some more extended tradeable rallies, like last summer's. Any mark to market accounting right now is just an exercise in hallucinatory seller optimism or buyer pessimism, Three or four months of Case Shiller uptrend might tell us this is over, and even that might be misleading if it's only due to another wave of Treasury deficit "stimulus" from a Democrat Congress. ReplyEverything
Thursday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
If you are hoping to see complete capitulation, wait for your large cash positions drop below a dollar per share. If money markets go, we are in big trouble.Someone tell Chris Cox to go investigate Mr. BUY, BUY, BUY! Reply
Wednesday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
FXP was up $30 per share today to $144 new all time high.FXI is on it's way to $20/share.
Still no word on how they make it work. I love it, and hope it never breaks.
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Wednesday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
Why is gold in disfavor? It is and has been under considerable manipulation by foreign countries who like the U.S. are running theirpaper money printing presses on overtime. These countries sell at little
to drop prices, then buy more than they sell. This is a slow but methodical way to obtain gold and gold mining stocks at bargain prices.
Gold should be $1000 and set to soar to $2,500+ based on the world economic conditions and the swelling fiat currenies being printed.
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Wednesday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
FXP is the double short of FXI, it's had a HUGE run over the last couple of weeks, very voitile but you can catch some nice trades. ReplyWednesday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
Rumors weren't clear and my reference to Vanguard's Money Fund was incorrect. Many funds have similar names using Prime Reserve Fund in their description.www.bloomberg.com/apps...
This aforementioned article clarifies the matter and states it's NOT Vanguard. I repeat, NOT Vanguard. They're a little upset with me today. It's understandable but so many names seemed the same and as I indicated my source was a "rumor". This should clarify things. Reply
Wednesday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
FXI's 9/17 premarket indication is 32.78, breaking 35 level you mentioned. What now? Your comments on GLD are intriguing. The indications are indeed so. What now? Why gold is still in disfavor? ReplyFriday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
Old Limey, the hair is white now. Or, I'm told with the right products, fashionably silver. ReplyFriday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
Great stuff Mr. Fry. What with a reference to the McCoys a couple of weeks back and a quote from Dylan today, I'm guessing your target demographic has grey (or no) hair!Comment on XLI yesterday and today about not making stuff any more goes to the heart of the problem that both the US and the UK have created for themselves. I was walking down a shopping street on the edge of a (still - just about) fairly prosperous English county town today. It's a traditional 'High Street' - no malls, and probably as such soon to become a UNESCO World Heritage site. Of around 30 businesses 5 were coffee shops, 7 were banks or building societies (i.e., thrifts), 6 were estate agents (i.e., realtors), 3 were supermarkets (selling a bit of British stuff, but mostly produce from the other side of the world), and 4 were clothes stores (selling stuff made anywhere but Britain). Doesn't auger well.
Of course, we're world leaders in financial products (sic)!! I know it's small potatoes compared to the US, but until the credit crunch hit there were over 15,000 different mortgage 'products' on the market here. Now there are 'only' 5,000 and apparently that's the end of the world. Is it me....? Reply
Friday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
Er... wpdragon,Y'ever heard about the lesser evil being the adult fact of life in a general election? 4 more years of destruction by McCain? 4 new years of UTTER destruction by Obama sound better? Reply
Friday Outlook: Commodities, Emerging Markets [view article]
Great post sieraromero... the RNC is now filling the boards here with more of their hate filled socialist-marxist terrorism garbage every time they mention Barack Obama, because they're terrified the We the People understand what they are in denial about... that George W. McCain is nothing but 4 more years of destruction of our American way of life and Constitutional freedoms.Reply