karennma 8,057 posts msg #57177 - Ignore karennma |
11/29/2007 3:08:39 PM
Hmmmmmm?
Or is that a bad thing to do ... ?
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nikoschopen 2,824 posts msg #57197 - Ignore nikoschopen |
11/29/2007 9:26:52 PM
My retarded advice is that when the interest rate is slashed down to zero, zip, nada, which Bernanke is more than qualified to do so, then bet ure farm against the Fed.
Cheers!
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marine2 963 posts msg #57207 - Ignore marine2 |
11/30/2007 1:13:56 AM
Last time the Fed lowered their rates consitanty a few years back look what it did, it created a huge wave of buyers into the market, it created mass home buyers, mass home improvement buyers, many many businesses went wild with profits. Look what the stock market did, it went straight up. Hey, it's election time folks do you really think the Government wants our markets to crash, I don't think so. Enjoy the ride.
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betyerbottomdollar 169 posts msg #57251 - Ignore betyerbottomdollar |
11/30/2007 6:07:05 PM
Sometimes I read.
The latest book I read was Greenspan's tome, The Age of Turbulence. In it, Greenspan describes the volatility of the markets due to the rate changes.He explains how, after a few surprise increases that rocked world markets in the nineties , they decided to ease people into it by dropping hints way before. If the general consensus is that there will be a rate cut, you can bet it was planned that way to soften the impact.
Maybe M4M was right and the market will be bullish for the rest of the year.
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nikoschopen 2,824 posts msg #57265 - Ignore nikoschopen |
11/30/2007 9:16:30 PM
If we will indeed get the rate cut, it's already baked into the price. There was a knee-jerk reaction in the after-hours trading to Bernanke's much expected comment about a possible rate cut, but nothing even remotely comparable to what we got on Tuesday was ever seen during the regular trading hours. Moreover, the S&P 500 failed to close above the key resistance at 1490 that must be broken before the perennial bulls like M4M can declare a decisive victory.
It remains to be seen where we'll end up on Monday, which also happens to be the first trading day of the month that often attracts buyers. Should the market nosedive on Monday, however, you can kiss this rally goodbye.
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curmudgeon 103 posts msg #57283 - Ignore curmudgeon |
12/1/2007 10:26:59 AM
I wonder how much of the volatility we've seen of late is related to the death of the old short rule. Nobody benefits from that more than a quant machine.
I kept thinking there was a group of freaking retards who kept buying like, well, retards on acid every time the market move sharply downward. Then it dawned on this tard that it isn't people....it's emotionless machines.
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betyerbottomdollar 169 posts msg #57478 - Ignore betyerbottomdollar |
12/3/2007 8:44:27 PM
Yo Niko, if the reaction to the possible rate cut is already baked into the price, does that mean that when (if) the cut comes there will not be any obvious reaction? Is that a characteristic of "efficient market theory"? I always wondered about that...
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nikoschopen 2,824 posts msg #57482 - Ignore nikoschopen |
12/3/2007 9:02:24 PM
Back in 2001, as Greenspan started agrgressively slashing rates, the market popped for about a week or two before continuing its downward spiral. Needless to say, as a daytrader I don't care which way the market moves. If it goes up, I'm long; if down, I'm short. But I think Bernanke's "magic pill" is running out of its charm. In my opinion, he's only delaying what's inevitable.
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curmudgeon 103 posts msg #57500 - Ignore curmudgeon |
12/4/2007 1:26:17 AM
Looks pretty inevitable to me.
http://www.hussmanfunds.com/wmc/wmc071126.htm
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