The real reason is market cycles. Market cycle up, then they correct – it is the timing and magnitude which is elusive.theasxgorilla said:I've heard this a few times this bull run already...tell me WHY it's different this time? Not a new set of negative circumstances (before it was oil, now it's Shanghai etc.)...the REAL reason.
It's not a case of wimps, it really depends on how the trader trades, and to what end.Garpal Gumnut said:I think all you guys and gals are wimps, unless the all ords falls below 5500 there is no reason to panic.
Just take 2 bex and lie back and relax,
You are going to develop some dreadful disease like stroke, heart attack or something worse otherwise.
Its only money and on my analysis your not going to lose it all this time.
Garpal
Of course they should be, it's a dip/ correction. This is when they should be most active. I'm no buffett investor, but after/ during this correction is the time where I will be setting up my long termers, not before like some people have decided to do on this forum.wayneL said:Buffet style investors shouldn't really be batting an eyelid.
As Homer Simpson would say, "The two sweetest words in the English language... 'De'," and, "'fault'".Garpal Gumnut said:I struggle to find a reason why this retracement has occurred.
Lets keep the market in perspective.
Garpal,Garpal Gumnut said:It pisses me off when there are so many negative posts as it really freaks out the novice investors.
One guy above just put his toe in the market on Monday and is in turmoil as a result.
There is no evidence on charts or fundamentals that we are in a Bear market.
I struggle to find a reason why this retracement has occurred.
Lets keep the market in perspective.
Garpal
But according to Marc Pado, the Wednesday rebound was not convincing enough.
"If Tuesday was just an aberration, then we should have gained back half of the loss," he said. "Being up 50 points when we should have been up 200 or more means that the economic data and investor sentiment was worth 150 points of downside pressure."
On Thursday, major Asian markets, including China, Japan and Hong Kong, ended lower as investors focused on developments in Shanghai, where shares gave back about two-thirds of gains from the previous day.
There was also renewed concern that the yen carry trade, which has been a major source of funding for investors globally, might be subsiding.
In addition, rumors that a big lender was in distress were floating around the market, according to research firm Action Economics.
Garpal Gumnut said:It pisses me off when there are so many negative posts as it really freaks out the novice investors.
Magdoran said:Mag
P.S. maybe it's just that there are more sellers than buyers???
I don't know exactly, higher than now.Freeballinginawetsuit said:What were interest rates like in 87 Wayne?
misterS said:...just an amateur's observation...people with real money, and somewhere else profitable to put it will probably have a better idea
Are you serious?Garpal Gumnut said:It pisses me off when there are so many negative posts as it really freaks out the novice investors.
One guy above just put his toe in the market on Monday and is in turmoil as a result.
There is no evidence on charts or fundamentals that we are in a Bear market.
I struggle to find a reason why this retracement has occurred.
Lets keep the market in perspective.
Garpal
You like that! I do too! Mwahahahatheasxgorilla said:Keeping it simple...a man after my own heart.
You can’t compare straight rates with straight rates, a whole host of modifications are needed since the whole financial structure was so different then…wayneL said:I don't know exactly, higher than now.
Relevance?
Magdoran said:You can’t compare straight rates with straight rates, a whole host of modifications are needed since the whole financial structure was so different then…
NYSE imposes trading curbs as stocks fall
Corrects to programme selling from programme buying in final paragraph.
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The New York Stock Exchange said on Thursday it instituted downside trading curbs as U.S. stocks fell sharply in early trading.
The U.S. market's fall followed a sharp sell-off in equities on Tuesday. On Thursday, renewed inflation worries and a rise in the yen stirred concern that investors were being forced to unwind carry trades.
The New York Stock Exchange Composite Index <.NYA>, which is used to determine when to begin trading curbs, was down 159.75 points, or 1.8 percent, at 8964.79.
The trading curbs require that all programme selling of S&P 500 stocks must be on an up-tick.
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