Intel Corp. (INTC)
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- Stop the Week, We Want to Get Off [view article]
- Is This the Nasdaq or a Dollar Store? [view article]
- 25 Cash Cows to Ride Out the Storm- Barron's [view article]
- 36 Opportunities for the Beginning of the Bull [view article]
- Chocolate Lover - Cramer's Mad Money (10/7/08) [view article]
- Intel: Consistent Strength [view article]
- World's Biggest WiMax Bet [view article]
- 10 Ways the Financial Meltdown Impacts Tech [view article]
- Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News [view article]
- Gadget Stock Watch: Blu-Ray Checkmate, Wii Fit, More [view article]
- Options Trader: Friday Outlook - Too Little Too Late? [view article]
- Semiconductors: Sector in Transformation [view article]
Recent INTC Articles
- Bargain Buys For Patient Investors - Barron's
- Stop the Week, We Want to Get Off
- Is This the Nasdaq or a Dollar Store?
- Intel: Consistent Strength
- Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News
- 36 Opportunities for the Beginning of the Bull
- 25 Cash Cows to Ride Out the Storm- Barron's
- 10 Ways the Financial Meltdown Impacts Tech
- Options Trader: Friday Outlook - Too Little Too Late?
- World's Biggest WiMax Bet
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Chocolate Lover - Cramer's Mad Money (10/7/08) [view article]
Sorry, I ment to say Norman........... ReplyIs This the Nasdaq or a Dollar Store? [view article]
The time to buy is when they are going up, not on the way down. There is time to wait yet. Great companies had P/Es of 5 or 6 at the end of the Depression. We might still have a long way down to go. ReplyLepoff, M.D.
Chocolate Lover - Cramer's Mad Money (10/7/08) [view article]
I have only one question. Why is Cramer still on the air? ReplyIntel: Consistent Strength [view article]
The problem with buying tech at these "cheap" levels, is that I believe tech will be the last shoe to drop since the market hasn't factored in the global slowdown. Intel most likely has more to drop when they start announcing earnings and future earnings forecasts.Reply
World's Biggest WiMax Bet [view article]
I just hope that one day they start making the WiMax modems much like the "pay-as-you-go) type of service option. The subsription model might work well with the road-warrior types but I suspect won't work well with occasional business travellers of which many people are. I might go on travel and need internet access maybe once a month. Am I going to pay for yet another subscription for that? Of course not, especially when I already have a blackberry to check email with and some basic web functionality. But I'd be willing to pay for a pay as you go thing where I just pay for what I use bandwidth-wise. I suspect many others are in that same boat. When I last looked into getting something like that, all the main players had only subscription plans. Isuppose they will start to offer something like that.Reply
25 Cash Cows to Ride Out the Storm- Barron's [view article]
I ponder the idea of a stronger dollar and come up with "stronger than what" ReplyIs This the Nasdaq or a Dollar Store? [view article]
I believe you're right. The problem is that most of us were in during the slide or part of the slide. No more money to enter. ReplyChocolate Lover - Cramer's Mad Money (10/7/08) [view article]
What a load of cr*p. At the height of the tech boom CSCO was trading at a pe of 100, obviously unsustainable. Its fwd pe today is now under 10. I agree that Hershey will do well with lower commodity prices, but getting a $45 stock for $38 is hardly a bargain in this market. Replyughguy.com
25 Cash Cows to Ride Out the Storm- Barron's [view article]
Lame. A lot of these names (HPQ, MSFT, KO etc.) are going to get absolutely destroyed by the stronger dollar during Q3. I don't know why any rational human being would want to own these stocks this earning season. Reply10 Ways the Financial Meltdown Impacts Tech [view article]
Oracle's stock dropped 30% since it board of directors approved the $83.6 million dollar salary for the CEO less than two months ago. A six dollar drop in share price. I hope all the stockholders fire the board. ReplyCreek Blog
25 Cash Cows to Ride Out the Storm- Barron's [view article]
Definitely some surprises on this list.No KFT, no JNJ, I guess no one consulted Mr. Buffett. Reply
Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News [view article]
Thought it interesting that some pundits see oil between $50 and $80, link between oil & NG seems frayed. True, some nat gas producers are slowing down extraction, true PBR has a major oil field find which will ultimately increase supply, but I personally doubt the pundit's crystal balls. Decrease in US dependence on foreign oil, much of it coming from unfriendly nations, is going to be painful and not come overnight, but I strongly doubt we will see oil at $50 or even $80 and remain long PBR, WMB, EWZ and CHK with gradual add to these positions with what is left of my money. ReplyWall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News [view article]
Newsflash - the Fed said today it will start buying "commercial paper" - loans with NO collateral. The beginning of the end of the dollar. These people wouldn't get to $1,000 on "Are you smarter than a fifth grader". ReplyWall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News [view article]
SF points out that 2/3 of the US economy is consumer spending. And much of that 2/3 is DEBT spending, not from income. If you realistically think of debt as pre-spent income, one needs to have a debt returement plan to keep even. Alas many ( most ?) Americans don't.Not only do they not have savings to use to deal with economic problems, they also have debt levels that they cannot reduce at current income. We have become an "upside-down"... society. And the folks who think that reinflating the credit bubble wil bring the economy back again don't realize that the economy was dysfunctional.
You could pump any anount of new potential credit into the system and who's going to use it ? The already overextended ?
You want the credit markets to come back the way they were ? Be careful what you wish for, You might get it. And regret it. Reply
San
Francisco
Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News [view article]
Too much of the discussion is about financial engineering. The reality:1. Two thirds of the US economy is consumer spending.
2. Consumers (e.g. taxpayers; e.g voters; e.g. you and me) have been overspending for years, and have way too much personal debt and not enough savings.
3. A major enabler has been the housing bubble and loose financing which, partly through home equity loans, has allowed people to have that extra SUV. That's over.
4. As the Baby Boomers edge along toward retirement, they have miniscule (and becoming more so) savings. They have to conserve.
So, what could save us?
1. A better distribution of wealth that puts more buying power in the middle class;
2. Foreign growth (Asia) that will support US exports - and purchase of US assets.
3. A lot of personal and national belt tightening.
Pogo had it right. We have met the enemy, and it is us.
Reply