communique
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No just double happy to visit again and read the calls of doom from the bears and the cultists.
So are we calling an imminent and severe in 2010 guys? Or is this not the right thread, being a collection of what could go wrong articles and best sellers without necessarily putting money where mouth is?
Hi uncle, I hear what you say!!!
Most people only learn from experience and until it happens to them it won’t sink in.
It is clear that as you show there will be a correction of magnitude. However, when do you believe it will occur? What will be the trigger. Will it be when interest rates start climbing in the US?
(I know you are only flaming here so I will take up your troll, coz you can't be that naive can you - can you????)
Would you like to back your comments up with some facts, which you are continually short of? If you had even the slightest comprehension of economics you would see that there is a huge disparity between what the stock markets are doing and what the underlying economies are doing - the disparity of which is occasionally presented here - and does not, in my case anyway, have anything to do with how I trade. Investing is a different matter though (buy & hold is dead??)
Presenting factual data for discussion has been the point of this thread, and all threads generally, but the majority of your posts are based on your Lemming-like follow-the-herd opinion and rhetoric only. It does however show everyone your psychology for trading/investing, so when the next round begins you will be severely disappointed.
Now, back to some facts. Here is the problem for the USA - increasing debt (previous post) but decreasing income with which to pay it off. Combine that with the fact that a lot of the (manufacturing) jobs lost in this depression will not return, having been exported to China & India, and you have a continuing quantitative easing program by the US Fed & Treasury in order to 'create' more dollars with which to pay for it all, meaning a dilution of existing dollars ei lower living standards and lower consumption. Lower consumption of goods made in China - who's economic management is probably the biggest Government sponsored Ponzi scheme ever seen?
PS if you think Australia is going to ride off into the sunset on the back of China, how about you have a look at the LME metal data every now and then and tell me if there is a shortage of commodities ie the coming glut?
Oh, the FTSE is severely overbought too, considering the basket case they are, even worse than the USA as they can't print their way out of this mess.
What do you think of this chart? Some tin foil hat wearing rantings of the loonatic fringe dwellers who occasionally get the call right? Please enlighten us all with some analysis rather than the usual Pollyanna only-look-at-the-good-news ignorance!
Professionals hedge - Amateurs hope (and ridicule the hedgers).
I would suggest a refinement, in that professionals make an effort to know when to hedge. It is expensive to be hedged when a market is tearing along (in either direction).
Maybee its Obama's strange way of appreciating the Chinese currency. smash your own with a printing press.
After a couple of weeks lukeaye, reckon it's a draw, depending on what anyone bought on 27th Nov - Dubai sure freaked a few people out though. Here we are nearly Christmas and no closer to a severe correction. My ASX 5000 prediction during Aug/Oct won't come true, though will be happy if we get around 4750 and Dr Smith at 4000 still has a chance to grab a draw as well.
I'm very bullish for 2010 especially with the miners that have been drifting and in many cases reaching into my pocket for SSPs. Wonder whether the instos decided to just stop buying on market and simply snap up the bargains on the capital raisings, e.g. FMS, PRU, ESG, KGL, ORD, JPR. All have great prospects in the New Year and suspect the resources and energy sector will reignite after the past few months breather, the one we had to have to keep the bears away.
(I know you are only flaming here so I will take up your troll, coz you can't be that naive can you - can you????)
Would you like to back your comments up with some facts, which you are continually short of? If you had even the slightest comprehension of economics you would see that there is a huge disparity between what the stock markets are doing and what the underlying economies are doing - the disparity of which is occasionally presented here - and does not, in my case anyway, have anything to do with how I trade. Investing is a different matter though (buy & hold is dead??)
Presenting factual data for discussion has been the point of this thread, and all threads generally, but the majority of your posts are based on your Lemming-like follow-the-herd opinion and rhetoric only. It does however show everyone your psychology for trading/investing, so when the next round begins you will be severely disappointed.
Now, back to some facts. Here is the problem for the USA - increasing debt (previous post) but decreasing income with which to pay it off. Combine that with the fact that a lot of the (manufacturing) jobs lost in this depression will not return, having been exported to China & India, and you have a continuing quantitative easing program by the US Fed & Treasury in order to 'create' more dollars with which to pay for it all, meaning a dilution of existing dollars ei lower living standards and lower consumption. Lower consumption of goods made in China - who's economic management is probably the biggest Government sponsored Ponzi scheme ever seen?
PS if you think Australia is going to ride off into the sunset on the back of China, how about you have a look at the LME metal data every now and then and tell me if there is a shortage of commodities ie the coming glut?
Oh, the FTSE is severely overbought too, considering the basket case they are, even worse than the USA as they can't print their way out of this mess.
What do you think of this chart? Some tin foil hat wearing rantings of the loonatic fringe dwellers who occasionally get the call right? Please enlighten us all with some analysis rather than the usual Pollyanna only-look-at-the-good-news ignorance!
The end will come for the US just as it did for Great Britain and there will be another major economic crisis. Now if you wish to discuss what may happen around the world in the next ten years that will have a part in that crisis and explore the events and timing that could be interesting. Better than the articles and books which tend to portray events closer and more dramatically to compete for attention. And let's leave the graphs at school.
The Chinese currency is pegged to the USD, so if the USD gets smashed against other currencies so does the Yuan. Next conspiracy, please
Now we are talking, but why does your time frame go out to 10 years for the next big crisis?
Will poke my head in here every now and then to ensure you and your tribe aren't overly spooking the youngsters. May even consider starting a new thread along the lines of Fanciful Forecasts - events leading to the next economic crisis. But that may contradict one of my resolutions to reduce time on shares blogs
AUSTRALIA is on the crest of a demographic tsunami, with the first wave of 5.3 million baby boomers eligible for the age pension from next week.
The country's money box faces the double whammy of paying for older Australians who need extra care and for workers who are retiring in greater numbers than ever before.
Recall Prof George Lodge in 1995 telling the class how Japan would lead the world in the late 90's, into the new millenium and he was utterly convinced the US economy was heading for a major crisis before 2000. Even used those graphs. Within 2 years Japan crashed and the US like the movies lived to fight another day.
I think the 'enlightened age' is around 40'ish or so - the last real recession - so most of those youngsters have only ever known prosperity based on credit and living beyond their means ie 'everything always goes up' mentality.
Comparing Japan with China and quoting Japan's experience against what China is facing currently, and assuming a similar outcome, I reckon is a big mistake considering the vast differences in terms of financial capital, human, material, mineral and other natural resources.
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