Sean K
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stocksontheblock, I think you are generally misinterpreting the stockmarket for the economy.
stocksontheblock, I think you are generally misinterpreting the stockmarket for the economy.
I would also suggest that these companies are not, "generate a consistent profit at the new demand level" as you suggested. My whole point about the lastest reporting season is that they have excess cash yet they have not generated or provided a new level of profit based on their products, the 'profit' is based on cost cutting, which is very different. If sales had stayed equal or increased then you would be right, however they have declined - possibly not in line with cost cutting, hence cutting outweights sales and sales - as a headline figure look better than what they are.
I completely agree. Great statement, however are these 'profit reports' really PROFIT's, or just excess cash from cutting/scaling back so much, and not driven by real sales. Thats my whole point in starting this thread, I cant see - with much of the market - how this is a sales driven profit, its a cost cutting driven profit?!?!
But surely if earnings stay the same for next qtr or two, market keeps going up because results "exceed expectations", we can't keep trading on expectations? In other words, are we creating a bubble by trading on expectations - if earnings do not improve significantly over the next 12 months?
"post the initial crash of 1929-1930 equity rally lasted 147 days and the market was up 46% from it's low before the apocalypse kicked everyone in the teeth and we went to the all time low! Now we're 145 days off the March 6th low this year and the market is up 46%..."
Where did those yields come from? E-trade has MQG with a div yield of 4.3% with 60% franking.Yep and perfectly summed up....just look at some of the dividend yields, buying at today's prices...its woeful EG : CSR under 2% TOL under 3.5% MQG under 1%, not to mention most of the real estate stocks that have simply stopped paying them.
Where did those yields come from? E-trade has MQG with a div yield of 4.3% with 60% franking.
Of course it is.
Software has even been developed to attempt to track the big players.
Works well.
Do you think that instos that pour million after million into the market (and as has been pointed out are the ones that move the market) do not know this?
What you are not taking into account in your lagging view is the room for improved revenue.
Yes, the profits have exceeded expectations mainly on running tighter ships but that is in the past.
The market is clearly looking forward and seeing businesses running leaner and with the possibility of an improvement in economic conditions, as many indicators GLOBALLY are pointing to, as the next expectation for revenue growth.
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