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Japan's population decreasing at fastest postwar rate
TOKYO (Kyodo) -- Japan's population decreased in 2011 at the fastest pace in the postwar era with the decline, calculated by deducting the number of deaths from that of births, coming to an estimated 204,000, health ministry estimates showed Saturday.
The decrease was over 1.5 times higher than the revised figure of about 125,000 the year before and was the biggest since comparable data became available in 1947, the survey said. It was the fifth straight annual decline since 2007.
http://mdn.mainichi.jp/mdnnews/news/20120101p2g00m0dm030000c.htmlAn official of the ministry predicted that Japan's population will keep decreasing at a faster pace as the number of deaths will continue to rise given the rapid aging of society, while the size of the younger generation will shrink.
(Mainichi Japan) January 1, 2012
Bear market bearing down on us all. It will continue into the next year and the next 2 decades.
Once baby boomers are done, if the world still exists by then - then perhaps we can have another bull market.
+1, as i just wrote in another post, is it going to be a manipulated slow burn of economies for the next 15 years, or will it at some point collapse in a heap over night, seeing us to the bottom in a few months(and staying there for a looonnnggg time).
My guess - a manipulated slow incineration.
Why?
Pollies & the "filthy rich" elite will do absolutely anything & everything to hang on to their power, wealth & standards of excessive living they have become addicted to.
Create money out of thin air, sell the farm, granny & the kids if that's what it takes to keep the Krug flowing....
LOL.
Enjoy the ride....
So I take it all you blokes are in cash are you? If you haven't any cash then what about your super, did you put it into cash? And if you didn't, why not? I mean with such long term negative views that would be the way to go wouldn't it? Just wondering...
buy and hold no longer works, and if things get bad enough, cash isnt going to make you any money either. its upto us to assess economic situations day to day and decide whats best. every situation is different, and it cannot be argued that being in cash for 2011 was not better than being in a managed fund in a market that fell 14%
buy and hold no longer works
buy and hold has never worked.buy and hold no longer works, and if things get bad enough, cash isnt going to make you any money either. its upto us to assess economic situations day to day and decide whats best. every situation is different, and it cannot be argued that being in cash for 2011 was not better than being in a managed fund in a market that fell 14%
So I take it all you blokes are in cash are you? If you haven't any cash then what about your super, did you put it into cash? And if you didn't, why not? I mean with such long term negative views that would be the way to go wouldn't it? Just wondering...
Remember CBA IPO? And what about long term BHP or ANN or RHC?buy and hold has never worked.
If it was that easy, everybody would just buy into IPOs (remember Telstra or QANTAS?) and rake in the dough.
buy and hold has never worked.
If it was that easy, everybody would just buy into IPOs (remember Telstra or QANTAS?) and rake in the dough.
We got to be smarter than that:
Take profit when it stops increasing. Never follow the herd, rather do the opposite.
And don't anybody come with their favourite super fund manager either: They live off those additional fees and charges that they syphon off regardless whether they win, lose, or draw.
All ORDS definitely underperformed internationally.
Everyone should just buy U.S. shares lol... the DOW ended the year not too shabby.
Or buy maccas shares
Long-term investors
If you’re investing for the long term, say more than 7 years, you want your capital to grow in value. Risks you face include:
* Inflation may erode the purchasing power of your money (this means that a fixed amount of money will buy less things in the future)
* The timing of your decisions may cause lower returns or loss of capital (buying at a market peak, selling when the market is down).
* Interest rate changes, currency movements and changes in the law can all affect how your investments perform.
Of course I remember CBA. But between October 2007 and May 2009 I did not hold any. Nor do I hold any CBA at the moment.Remember CBA IPO? And what about long term BHP or ANN or RHC?
Isn't that the truth! Sounds like you are giving your finances a lot of thought, good luck mate.and it cannot be argued that being in cash for 2011 was not better than being in a managed fund in a market that fell 14%
I don't think there are too many of those anymore.And don't anybody come with their favourite super fund manager either:
What about your Super Fund? You would have to be going backwards with that one particularly with that dog GFF in it....I've been near fully invested since mid 2007...my PA return (gross dividends and distributions) on (original) capital is close to 10% ~ PA return (gross dividends and distributions) on recycled capital close to 7%
buy and hold baby, buy and hold
Why?
Had a change of heart over a couple of days, huh, banco?Even some really basic MA systems seem to outperform buy and hold.
I don't especially see why buy and hold should relate to a period of 2, 3 or 4 years, or why the term 'investing' makes any particular difference. Not at all having a go at you here, young-gun, just think the terminology is ill defined and therefore the discussion doesn't make as much sense as it could.i guess it depends on your definition of buy and hold. buy and hold to me regards a time frame of 2-3 or even 4 years. i guess a better term for it would be 'investing' as opposed to day trading.
(With thanks to Wikipaedia)Investment has different meanings in finance and economics. Finance investment is putting money into something with the expectation of gain, that upon thorough analysis, has a high degree of security for the principal amount, as well as security of return, within an expected period of time.
You are here following my suggestion above.i would never buy a stock with the intent of holding it for over 5 years. although if 5 years passed and a bull market isnt showing signs of slowing then why not hold a bit longer?
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