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- The Two-Ton Wall Street Conflict of Interest Few Dare To Talk About [view article]
- Friday's Employment Report: A Sobering Dose of Reality [view article]
- Global Stock Markets: We All Fall Down! [view article]
- When the Economy and Stock Market Detach [view article]
- Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News [view article]
- Equities: In the Eye of the Storm [view article]
- Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News [view article]
- Making Sense of the Current Market Weakness [view article]
- Theoretical Declines of a Bursting Oil Bubble [view article]
- Be It Resolved: No One Has a Clue [view article]
- Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News [view article]
- What's Pushing the Market Up? [view article]
Recent QQQQ Articles
- GDP Numbers are Deceiving: It Definitely Feels Like Recession
- When the Economy and Stock Market Detach
- Global Stock Markets: We All Fall Down!
- Employment Numbers Belay Economic Slump
- Friday's Employment Report: A Sobering Dose of Reality
- The Two-Ton Wall Street Conflict of Interest Few Dare To Talk About
- Dismal U.S. Jobs Not Bad Enough for USD
- Making Sense of the Current Market Weakness
- In This Environment, It's No Market for Young Men
- This Rally Is Over, and Here’s Why
- Full List of Articles »
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Equities: In the Eye of the Storm [view article]
LarryH,While I was taxing myself, crafting my rejoinder, you strode in and cut to the heart of the matter. Kudos. Reply
Equities: In the Eye of the Storm [view article]
wyosteven,Yes the boomers have it in for you. Remember, at 30 you're still young enough to be drafted if things go terribly wrong.
"We need another Vietnam to thin out their ranks a little." - B. Simpson
Sleep tight.
Reply
Equities: In the Eye of the Storm [view article]
Easy, wyosteven, you're going to have a stroke! Calm down. Sure, all our economic ills are the fault of perhaps the most productive generation this country has ever had. By they way, a lot of the 70 million Baby Boomers are also debt free and still working and are professionals! Get over it. ReplyEquities: In the Eye of the Storm [view article]
Nice article, you can indeed view this present situation as an eye in the storm. Case Schiller says 20% down until now so we have another 30% declining housing value to go before the long term relation with affordabillity is restored again.That means that countrywide in the USA another 7 trillion of family houshold equity will be wiped out; somehow the Wall Street traders refuse to understand such simple insights. Why they don't want to understand this is unknown to me: having a realistic view on economical affairs always makes more money in the long run.
So not for these Wall Street warriors... Reply
Equities: In the Eye of the Storm [view article]
Interesting perspective, yet nothing new. My concern (being a 30 year old debt free working professional) is that we are simply postponing the catastrophic financial inevitable from the boomers starting with bad policies in the 70's. This terrible blip of a storm, postponed, postponed, and postponed leaves me with little hope (at the present) that we will see a correction, instead another smoke and mirror strategy to artificially inflate everything until the boomers are dead -- then KABOOM. I say let the snake go!I WANT THE BOOMERS TO SEE THE TRAIN WRECK THEIR DECADES OF ABSURD SELF-INTERESTED DECISIONS AND BAD POLICIES HAVE ON THE YOUNGER GENERATION(S) AND PERHAPS THE FUTURE OF THE UNITED STATES!!!
The spend, spend, spend mentality is finite and I think it terrible there is nothing more than uncertainty left for us younger responsible individuals left to inherit. Reply
Sebastian
Equities: In the Eye of the Storm [view article]
I do think that the economic weakness which has emerged in the rest of the world may be beneficial for US equities simply because there are no "safe havens" left, so the US doesn't seem "as bad" in comparison ReplyEquities: In the Eye of the Storm [view article]
In the US in the 1930s, a first leg down is followed by rebound and relief before the next big downleg struck. John thinks we have seen the first down leg but the second possibly more severe downleg may strike. On the available evidence, John's assessment is probably right. We are in the eye of the hurricane! ReplyDollar Rally Likely a Short-Term Phenomenon [view article]
You're probably old school. In today's globalized economy, rebounding Dollar is VERY BAD for the US equities. Company revenues are made of a basket of currencies in US$, euro, yen or yuan, etc, but the US stock prices are always denominated only in US$. As we all know the dollar rebounce doesn't help the real value of company, its price in US$ should be lower than it was due to the increasing value of the currency that it's denominated. ReplyMarket Participation: 'Fools Jump In' [view article]
Interesting lament. There is a disconnect, my chief concern is the apparently inconsistent relationship between a strengthening dollar and falling interest rates. ReplyDo Rising Stock Prices Mean Fundamentals Have Bottomed? [view article]
The author well said the psychology behind price movement. Understanding this, investors, with knowledge of fundamentals of a stock, can buy and sell for profit, as well as, take steps against paper losses. ReplyCrash Opportunities: Part I [view article]
There will be a rise in beef but not for the reasons you cite. It is because of an early cull a few months ago in response to high corn/feed prices, their inventories are now extremely low and will put upward pressure on beef prices this fall. In fact, given the pullback in feed prices, the 4th quarter may be a banner period for the beef producers if costs trend lower. ReplyWall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News [view article]
Can airliners run on natural gas, and or fuel cells? ReplyPreview of Friday's Jobs Report [view article]
good article. employment is not the only measure of recession but is a good measure of economic health. ReplyCrash Opportunities: Part I [view article]
I profiled several wholesale food distributors(like SYY) and dining establishments (like BOBE) and they all were unable to hike the price past the ceiling already in place. If they raise prices further to pass on costs, they're going to lose revenue and if they don't raise, then they're going to lose revenue anyway. Catch-22 ReplyMarket Participation: 'Fools Jump In' [view article]
Oh yeah...rising dollar. Is that a bad thing? How much the US export and how much US import? Doesn't that means that the buying power of the people will increase, therefore they will have some more money to spend for something else. Doesn't the stronger dollar make the commodities cheaper? What about your tank full with gasoline? Multiply by the number of drivers? How much money will remain un-spent for gasoline ( and the example is just simple, the real effect is much more broader ) and would be spent for something else, boosting the economy? Do cheaper commodities mean increased companies profit? Reply