white_goodman
BOC
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- 13 December 2007
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Cramer is scarier.
VERY!
a fundy basing his sole reasoning on an Oscillator HA!
Cramer is scarier.
As the subject says, all of a sudden today (pretty much soon after today's close on the ASX) I began to feel bearish. Not just hopefully bearish, but really, really bearish
Hope this thread can bring those together with similar views on where the market may trend either up but in my view down over the next 3 to 6 months.
VERY!
a fundy basing his sole reasoning on an Oscillator HA!
Bernanke's Next Tasks Will Be Undoing His First- NYT
Congress and much of the nation are in utter denial about the country’s unfolding fiscal catastrophe, as evidenced by federal spending that is actually accelerating, producing all-time debt and deficit records that exceed anything ever experienced by any nation on earth, at any time in history.
Denial is a psychotropic, mind-altering drug that by comparison makes crack cocaine look like health food, and addiction to it shuts down the brain. America’s denial about its out-of-control spending, non-repayable debt, financial sector fraud and deceit, decadent political institutions, epic dereliction of leadership duty, fiscal and monetary immorality, and disastrously dishonest system of cronyism is leading the nation into an economic nuclear winter of desolation and chaos.
As the subject says, all of a sudden today (pretty much soon after today's close on the ASX) I began to feel bearish. Not just hopefully bearish, but really, really bearish - I've not been this bearish since I read that:
"David Koch is one of Australia's foremost business and finance commentators. One of the 10 most influential people of all time in the financial services industry"
Hope this thread can bring those together with similar views on where the market may trend either up but in my view down over the next 3 to 6 months.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/...sues-fresh-alert-on-global-stock-markets.html
"I expect this risk rally to continue into – and maybe through – a large part of August. What happens after that? The next ugly leg of the bear market begins as we get into the July through September 'tipping zone', driven by the failure of the data to validate the V (shaped recovery) that is now fully priced into markets."
http://www.zerohedge.com/article/chinas-credit-bubbleicious-trade-balance-pain
In essence what is going on, is that the brief pick up in German and US GDPs on the trade balance side, are being facilitated exclusively by the credit bubble in China. By dint of China being able to recognize GDP at production instead of expenditures (like normal Western countries), China is now trying to back fill into the trade void left from the collapse of Western economies by promoting the same kind of irresponsible lending (and borrowing) that lead the US economy to its current sorry state. This will eventually end very, very badly.
Best of luck
P.S. Thanks to Michael D! His thoughts would be interesting!
G
"We were on course for a Great Depression in February, but Armageddon was avoided. Governments did not repeat the policy errors of the 1930s."
"We have seen the lows of this crisis. This is a genuine rebound rally, and it has been short by historical standards so far," he said.
Mr Draaisma, who called the top of the bull market almost to the day in mid-2007, has crunched the worldwide data on 19 major stock market crashes over the last century. They show that the typical rebound rally (as opposed to bear trap rallies, when markets later plunge to new lows) lasts 17 months and stocks rise 71pc.
The 1993 rally in the US was 170pc over 13 months. Finland's rally in 1994 was 295pc. Hong Kong rallied 159pc in 2000. This rebound is only five months old. The key indexes have risen 49pc in the US and 42pc in Europe.
MARC FABER: No, but I have to say in Asia and in emerging economies in general we had a collapse in exports and in industrial production. But the domestic economy is relatively sound and, unlike what the conditions were before the Asian crisis in '97. We in Asia, we have large foreign exchange reserves. So in other words, the Asian countries are financially very strong and by the way also Australia. We have inflated property market in Australia. But as an economy, Australia is becoming more integrated into the Asian bloc. I have a relatively high opinion of the future prospects of Australia. I mean higher than, say, of the US. Plus, Australians are hard-working people.
A bit of hedging both ways perhaps?
ALI MOORE: And then the next question is how that stimulus is wound back and whether or not governments can do it. Is that what you see as triggering the next crisis?
MARC FABER: I don't think they will wind it back voluntarily. I think one stimulus package will lead to the next one and to more money printing. So in five to 10 years time the real crisis will break out when the whole system collapses. That will be the end because the -
ALI MOORE: What do you mean by that?
MARC FABER: The system collapse occurs when at the moment we have the private sector failing basically and triggered partly by government policies and by Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae which were government-sponsored enterprises in the US. But the government was still in a position to bailout but the next time around the government will go bust, basically. And so before they go bust and fold, in other words don't pay the interest on their government debts because - don't misunderstand it - as the fiscal deficit goes up, the interest payments on the government they also go up. They're now around $400 billion annually. I think they will be around the trillion dollars in five to so seven years time and that will then become burdensome on the GDP.
And so then the government goes bust but before it does that it will try to inflate its way out. That won't work. So the next step will be to go to war. And the whole thing will collapse.
As the subject says, all of a sudden today (pretty much soon after today's close on the ASX) I began to feel bearish. Not just hopefully bearish, but really, really bearish - I've not been this bearish since a bear ate my lunch
As the subject says, all of a sudden today (pretty much soon after today's close on the ASX) I began to feel bearish. Not just hopefully bearish, but really, really bearish - I've not been this bearish since I read that:
"David Koch is one of Australia's foremost business and finance commentators. One of the 10 most influential people of all time in the financial services industry"
Hope this thread can bring those together with similar views on where the market may trend either up but in my view down over the next 3 to 6 months.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/...sues-fresh-alert-on-global-stock-markets.html
"I expect this risk rally to continue into – and maybe through – a large part of August. What happens after that? The next ugly leg of the bear market begins as we get into the July through September 'tipping zone', driven by the failure of the data to validate the V (shaped recovery) that is now fully priced into markets."
http://www.zerohedge.com/article/chinas-credit-bubbleicious-trade-balance-pain
In essence what is going on, is that the brief pick up in German and US GDPs on the trade balance side, are being facilitated exclusively by the credit bubble in China. By dint of China being able to recognize GDP at production instead of expenditures (like normal Western countries), China is now trying to back fill into the trade void left from the collapse of Western economies by promoting the same kind of irresponsible lending (and borrowing) that lead the US economy to its current sorry state. This will eventually end very, very badly.
Best of luck
P.S. Thanks to Michael D! His thoughts would be interesting!
G
Well you chose a good moment to be bearish Gecko, as today the market closed at the high for the year
Off to London and Scotland for 2 weeks so all the best and best of luck!!!
G
I am more of a bear then ever and am still happy fully 100% in cash! If it makes posters feel better to bring to my attention my short comings regarding how much money "I could have made" by not trading etc etc than feel free.
I sold out at 3800 and will wait for an entry point much lower than that. If it never comes well than who care I'm ****ing loaded already!!
Off to London and Scotland for 2 weeks so all the best and best of luck!!!
G
Yep, have to admit, thats exactly how it is....very funny
Well if you are loaded in 100% cash, would you worry that cash coudl lose alot of value in the future?
thx
MS
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