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Whitney Gets Bearish: Will She Be Right Again? [View article]
Rolling top or H & S top, looks like a small bear flag into the 50 EMA the past few days, major MACD negative divergence dating back to August 10
stockcharts.com/h-sc/u...
An End to 'Too Big to Fail' [View article]
On Nov 11 10:02 AM john s. gordon wrote:
> mr. sanders has the right idea.
> but common sense does not necessarily prevail over big $.
> in today's political context anyone who is at all concerned about
> the rights and interests of the common man and objects to getting
> run over by the corporate steamroller gets tarred with the label
> 'socialist'.
An End to 'Too Big to Fail' [View article]
Too Big to Fail = Too Big to Exist! Senator Bernie Sanders (VT) has a petition for Treasury Secretary Geithner asking that the "TBTF" banks that caused the near destruction of the world's financial system in September 2008 be "downsized" and broken apart so they cannot threaten the world financial system with systemic meltdown again, or blackmail US taxpayers with threats of such an event in order to extort more free taxpayer money from us. The concentration of financial and POLITICAL power in their hands is terrifying, and they are already pulling the same stunts that we spent TRILLIONS bailing them out for just one year ago! I am a big supporter of this petition, and I ask that you consider taking a moment to sign it and let our government know how you feel about the menace these banks hold for us, our children, our grandchildren. Thank you,
Nine U.S. Bank Stocks for Right Now [View article]
Just curious... I don't hear much about the bank stress tests lately... where do these numbers today line up with the most adverse scenarios Mr. Geithner?
Again, just curious... because, I seem to recall, people thought the banks might have a few problems getting people to pay their loans in this magnificent green shoots recovery if unemployment kept jacking up... but it musta just been my imagination I guess.
Business Trends: Banks, Cars, Healthcare and Safe Vermont Mortgages [View article]
On Aug 26 08:35 AM john s. gordon wrote:
> there re people who spend summers in vermont & spend winters
> in florida. they are called snowbirds. where do they vote?
Expecting a Sell-Off: 35 Ways to Protect for Less [View article]
The cause is a spammer.. taking an educated guess, I would say in all probability the same "iamned" guy who has been spamming the site relentlessly for months now, and who management has been totally unable to get rid of.
On Aug 18 12:25 PM Atypical wrote:
> I have had one similar occurance. Never happened before last week.
> Would like to know what caused it.
Expecting a Sell-Off: 35 Ways to Protect for Less [View article]
Recently, however, I've been getting virus and spyware warning messages and actual screens popping up trying to hijack my PC and force it into doing virus scans. They appear randomly when I access different articles on this site. They've been happening off and on for a week or two, no rhyme or reason to when they occur. They do not occur on any other programs of the hundreds I access weekly.
I have no idea whether others are receiving similar stuff but I have no interest in subjecting my system and my records to crap like that.
Hence, I will not be contributing comments to this site anymore - its just not worth it.
I've enjoyed reading and participating in what have usually been serious subjects and discussions that have taken place here, and I've developed respect for a number of authors and commenters, like swashbuckler, john gordon and trader mark, etal.
I wish you all good fortune on your investing and personal lives... and as the sarge used to say in Hill Street Blues, "Be careful out there!" because we are far from home and there are many miles to go before we sleep.
Expecting a Sell-Off: 35 Ways to Protect for Less [View article]
Fundamentals don't matter, technicals don't matter, nothing matters in the least until they return the markets to the real participants, and they show no interest in doing so whatsoever.
Weekly Preview: Last Week's Rally Should Be Viewed with as Much Suspicion as Relief [View article]
Look to the East, young man, specifically eastern Europe, Spain, Italy... for that is where the financials may find their next Waterloo... tick tick tick
Ranking U.S. Banks by Insurance Income [View article]
Goldman's Profits Soar [View article]
Surely you jest... their monopoly supplemental liquidity position in NYSE program trading thru SLP (supplemental liquidity program), the destruction and emasculation of most of their major market competitors, their self-admitted manipulative code sitting right adjacent to the NYSE computers reading and in position to front run every order that comes through for execution, and their alumni spread through the key leadership of financial and governmental infrastructure thicker than flies, and you consider this Q's results a surprise?
I think not.
"Goldman’s results bolster the belief that the condition of financial markets is stabilizing now, though the overall economy continues to be very weak."
No, see comments above - it merely proves that monopolists make lots and lots of money at the expense of formerly free markets.
Meredith Whitney Ratings [View article]
On Jul 13 10:49 PM ZeroCred wrote:
> AIG is up b/c everyone and their sister is short the PoS and covered
> some. Worth a look if you can get a borrow.
Paul Volcker: The Voice in the Wilderness [View article]
Paul Volcker was FED chairman, arguably the last strong leader in the FED and a man who ignored political expediency, and he had singlehandedly taken on the battle against inflation and was wringing nearly every drop of it out of the system. It was a grinding, terribly painful process, and those high rates were viewed as HIS high rates, and the pain for anyone needing to finance a business investment, or home, etc. was viewed as pain caused by HIM.
Volcker won his battle, and inflation was beaten down,and interest rates finally started coming down hard, and the U.S. embarked on a solid 20 year economic expansion that saw low inflation, increasing corporate profits, increasing asset prices and a much more economically powerful middle class. And lower rates led to higher capital investment in a booming technology sector that in turn fed even higher growth.
But Volcker won the battle and lost the war, and to this day our corporatocracy remembers the necessary pain he had laid on the landscape back then, and elephants have great memories. So there is still I'm sure a large segment of Washington and Wall Street that would prefer that Mr. Volcker keep himself and his strong views in the background.
You see, he wasn't one to be led around with a ring in his nose.
It seems the corporatocracy in Washington and Wall Street don't like strong leaders in the FED and Treasury... wonder why?
The Next Major Financial Crisis [View article]
The government's chin deep in the markets via their two proxies who know where all the bodies are buried, because THEY buried them, and until that changes news, good, bad or ugly, won't matter a whit.
Bear Market Rally: Hoping Cramer's Not the Ultimate Contrarian Indicator [View article]
I guess the question would have to be, who'd be taking the other side of THAT trade, hmmmm?
And it seems to work on his sells (in reverse) quite a bit.
Probably just a coincidence.