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  #1  
Old 10-09-2008, 10:54 PM
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dalakhani dalakhani is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Coach Pants
Unless you have inside information and/or have fuc|< you money..well it would just be retarded to invest right now. Over half of the companies on the stock exchange could be gone in the next 5 years.
You are 1000% right. Fundamentals are out the window. Judging "value" based on graphs showing 5 years worth of market performance today is about as useful as using past beyers to guage the ability of a horse with a broken leg.
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  #2  
Old 10-09-2008, 11:35 PM
docicu3 docicu3 is offline
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A question for the financial professional among us.....

Is there a significant amount of money that continues to "short" these indexes.
In other words are there traders who are able to find significant volume that they are buying daily or essentially betting that the market will continue to fall. Is it enough at this point to drive the Dow or Nasdaq down....?
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  #3  
Old 10-09-2008, 11:57 PM
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dalakhani dalakhani is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by docicu3
A question for the financial professional among us.....

Is there a significant amount of money that continues to "short" these indexes.
In other words are there traders who are able to find significant volume that they are buying daily or essentially betting that the market will continue to fall. Is it enough at this point to drive the Dow or Nasdaq down....?
Shorts didnt cause what happened today. This is capitulation in grand fashion. If this was merely shorts, it would be confined to certain sectors. If shorts were indeed the culprit, then there should have been some sort of recovery during the short ban over the last couple of weeks.

This is a classic case of hedge funds and mutuals selling anything and everything to pay skittish investors who want out. This is proven by typical flight to safety plays (long term treasuries and mortgage backs) also getting sold off. Most telling? When Big blue gets sold off for no apparent reason, houston we have a problem...and it aint shorts.
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  #4  
Old 10-10-2008, 06:59 AM
Danzig Danzig is offline
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it's like stopping a cattle stampede. good luck. a lot of people are panicked. they don't want to lose anything, so a lot are trying to bail-which is the last thing they should do, as it only makes a bad situation worse.
i haven't moved anything, and have no intention of doing so. our 401k is taking a hit, but the further down it goes, the cheaper the mutual funds i continue to buy into get, which will (hopefully) increase the gains i make later, when everything improves.
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  #5  
Old 10-10-2008, 07:09 AM
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Cajungator26 Cajungator26 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Danzig
it's like stopping a cattle stampede. good luck. a lot of people are panicked. they don't want to lose anything, so a lot are trying to bail-which is the last thing they should do, as it only makes a bad situation worse.i haven't moved anything, and have no intention of doing so. our 401k is taking a hit, but the further down it goes, the cheaper the mutual funds i continue to buy into get, which will (hopefully) increase the gains i make later, when everything improves.
Agreed. And I like the last sentence too ... not IF everything improves, but WHEN.

I guess I should be sorry that I have enough faith in this country to think that it's going to pick itself back up and keep going.
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  #6  
Old 10-10-2008, 07:21 AM
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Cajungator26 Cajungator26 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dalakhani
Shorts didnt cause what happened today. This is capitulation in grand fashion. If this was merely shorts, it would be confined to certain sectors. If shorts were indeed the culprit, then there should have been some sort of recovery during the short ban over the last couple of weeks.

This is a classic case of hedge funds and mutuals selling anything and everything to pay skittish investors who want out. This is proven by typical flight to safety plays (long term treasuries and mortgage backs) also getting sold off. Most telling? When Big blue gets sold off for no apparent reason, houston we have a problem...and it aint shorts.
Agreed 100%.

So what do you think we should do? Do you think that every American should sell off everything they own in the market? What would be your advice to people calling all day long in panick mode?
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  #7  
Old 10-10-2008, 10:24 AM
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CSC CSC is offline
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No bottom in sight, for those in the market. I feel your pain.
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  #8  
Old 10-10-2008, 10:35 AM
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MaTH716 MaTH716 is offline
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Down huge on the opening, and made gigantic rally to the plus side. Unfortunatley I am guessing that anyone who did buy on the opening is already out. Going into the weekend (actually Monday is Columbus day, markets are open, not sure about banks) would you really want to be long? Who knows who might go out of buisness this weekend. Unfortunatley I think we will be down big again. As I type this it is down -393.16 and going lower.
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  #9  
Old 10-10-2008, 10:43 AM
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dalakhani dalakhani is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MaTH716
Down huge on the opening, and made gigantic rally to the plus side. Unfortunatley I am guessing that anyone who did buy on the opening is already out. Going into the weekend (actually Monday is Columbus day, markets are open, not sure about banks) would you really want to be long? Who knows who might go out of buisness this weekend. Unfortunatley I think we will be down big again. As I type this it is down -393.16 and going lower.
You would have to be some kind of f.u.kc.ing maniac to wake up this morning, see what happened to the rest of the world and decide that today would be a good day to go long on anything.

Nothing is safe except for maybe gold and do you really want to buy into gold at 915?

Again, this is a market where even treasuries and blue chips arent safe because everyone is hoarding cash.

We need one big giant butt kicking before it is safe to call a bottom. One final cataclysmic capitulation.
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  #10  
Old 10-10-2008, 11:39 AM
Scav Scav is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cajungator26
Agreed 100%.

So what do you think we should do? Do you think that every American should sell off everything they own in the market? What would be your advice to people calling all day long in panick mode?
let me preface the below by saying that I am far from a market guru

The only people that should be selling now are the people that are 2-3 years from retirement. And if I were them I would still ride it out and hopefully get back some of the 50% they have lost. If anyone our age sells they should be shot in the head. If anything, people our age should be getting ready to put every penny they have into this market.

In about 30 years, there will be alot of people that made the decision to dump some cash into the market right around now, and they will be retiring pretty happy because of that very decision.

It is an amazing opportunity for 20-30's to solidify their retirement and make some real money, a year ago we were trying to play into a 15k Dow, and now, we will get to play within a 7k Dow....
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  #11  
Old 10-10-2008, 11:59 AM
GPK GPK is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Scav
let me preface the below by saying that I am far from a market guru

The only people that should be selling now are the people that are 2-3 years from retirement. And if I were them I would still ride it out and hopefully get back some of the 50% they have lost. If anyone our age sells they should be shot in the head. If anything, people our age should be getting ready to put every penny they have into this market.

In about 30 years, there will be alot of people that made the decision to dump some cash into the market right around now, and they will be retiring pretty happy because of that very decision.

It is an amazing opportunity for 20-30's to solidify their retirement and make some real money, a year ago we were trying to play into a 15k Dow, and now, we will get to play within a 7k Dow....

Im no financial expert either..but this is what I was thinking too. Since I'm 35, it will be a while before I retire. For the first 8 months of this year, I was dumping 20% into my 401K. I dropped it back to 10% in August...but now I'm thinking of jacking it up back up to 20 maybe even 25%.
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  #12  
Old 10-10-2008, 01:02 PM
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dalakhani dalakhani is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by GPK
Im no financial expert either..but this is what I was thinking too. Since I'm 35, it will be a while before I retire. For the first 8 months of this year, I was dumping 20% into my 401K. I dropped it back to 10% in August...but now I'm thinking of jacking it up back up to 20 maybe even 25%.
Okay. I hear you. Do you realize that if you did this a week ago you would probably looking at about a 25% loss right now? And everyone was calling it a bottom THEN.

For there to be a bottom, you need capitulation. You need to scrape the abyss and there needs to be some type of resolution to get us out of there.

You are a good guy GPK. I dont know you but i can tell you are. Believe me when I tell you that there are more dominoes to fall.

Remember that this isnt a typical market. This is an unwinding of not only a speculative housing bubble but a 25 year credit bubble. Lots of parties that we are paying for.
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  #13  
Old 10-11-2008, 09:09 AM
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2Hot4TV 2Hot4TV is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by GPK
Im no financial expert either..but this is what I was thinking too. Since I'm 35, it will be a while before I retire. For the first 8 months of this year, I was dumping 20% into my 401K. I dropped it back to 10% in August...but now I'm thinking of jacking it up back up to 20 maybe even 25%.
Buy low and sell high. I'm 55 and only plan on working 5 more years and I will jump back in with half of my total savings on afew selected stocks.

No gut, no glory.
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