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have been wrong for 8 years now why should i worry about being wrong longer
maybe i should apply for a job at the RBA , incorrect is well tolerated there
YoooTooob is now replete with stock market crash warnings... (Which is actually probably a buy signal)
Insiders are selling in big numbers, which supports your point that it is probably retail investors doing all the buying atm.i can't believe they have managed to kick the can as long as they have
i suspect proportionately there are more retail investors in the market ( the big fund managers and instos have gone on holidays )
and they ( retail folk ) tend to focus more on long term gains/income
i think the days of Y-T videos causing panic-selling among the novices are fading into history ( that does NOT mean abandoning a cash reserve , and market meltdown plan , but keep it close and ready , not the only strategy )
since i have been investing .. 'buy the dip ' seems to have completely replaced 'averaging down ' , but does 'buy the dip' come with 'quick hands ' ( short term holds ) or diamond hands ( hold for much longer )
now one ' horror scenario ' is a complete loss confidence ( market , currency , Central Bank , etc etc ) so how does that play out ( i don't know but guess it will be BAD )
yes they are.Just bumping this... we are less than 10% from the high, but, despite no signs from CBs of a fair dinkum taper, bonds are selling off a bit.
officially it is an "officially "the ASX is tanking" panic" thread; to date, far too orderly and the buyers of the dips are still there.It's not a "the ASX is it officially tanking" moment yet, but I must say I have the hairs standing up on the back of my neck at the moment.
Indeed no panic.... yet. And ID expect Central Banks to come rising to the rescue in this instance.yes they are.
officially it is an "officially "the ASX is tanking" panic" thread; to date, far too orderly and the buyers of the dips are still there.
Ah, liquidity, ah depth ! O tempora, o mores .
From October 1993 to November 1994 US 10-year yields climbed from 5.2% to just over 8.0% fueled by concerns about federal spending in what became informally known as the "Great Bond Massacre."Just bumping this... we are less than 10% from the high, but, despite no signs from CBs of a fair dinkum taper, bonds are selling off.
The yield on the US 10-year note was down 3 basis points to 1.83 per cent in midday trading in New York. The yield has surged 32 basis points higher so far this month.
We are in a much more rate-sensitive environment than then. IMOFrom October 1993 to November 1994 US 10-year yields climbed from 5.2% to just over 8.0% fueled by concerns about federal spending in what became informally known as the "Great Bond Massacre."
Clinton political adviser James Carville said at the time, "I used to think that if there was reincarnation, I wanted to come back as the president or the pope or as a .400 baseball hitter. But now I would like to come back as the bond market. You can intimidate everybody."
And where are we, now?
I did say when I started bumping this thread that I don't expect a panic sell off anytime soon, only that I do believe at some point it will come... Maybe sometime this year, maybe next.Plenty of money has been flowing in this year, it's only natural most of the recently popped darlings blow off steam, profit taking.
Things are only down as much as they are up on a good day...?
I do wonder, how many people read the thread title and start panic selling? ?
I did say when I started bumping this thread that I don't expect a panic sell off anytime soon, only that I do believe at some point it will come... Maybe sometime this year, maybe next.
Vis a vis, there is no indication that the easy money is stopping.
But, the bond market is a beast when it gets the sh¹ts, and it is showing signs of getting a bit grumpy.
I'm not sure who shod it most recently mate, but it's got racing plates on and looks hard fitBreaking this support level, I'd saddle up at least one of those four horses Wayne.
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