| #1,471 - Posted 26 June 2009, 7:29 PM | |
Location: Dominican Republic Join date: September 2008 Member #: 1444 Posts: 6778 | RE: 'Barack Obama is the American Dream' Quote: abc200 previously said: Mostly people die in Amerika....... HEY AdummyBC, mostly people die everywhere, in fact everyone dies last time I checked...as will you in God's appointed hour. It is appointed once to man to die, and after that the Judgement". Are you ready? Sober up amigo! Wrongdoers eagerly listen to gossip; liars pay close attention to slander. Proverbs 17:4 |
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| #1,472 - Posted 26 June 2009, 7:31 PM | |
Location: Dominican Republic Join date: September 2008 Member #: 1444 Posts: 6778 | RE: 'Barack Obama is the American Dream' Quote: abc200 previously said: Quote: cabaretewilliam previously said: again you ignored (or could not understand Mostly people die in Amerika....... The debt is not repaid to the black population but everybody suffers. The fact of no decent health care as of right frightens people into abortions. http://stories.barackobama.com/healthcare Excess infant mortiality kills millions of babies. Short of imprisoning someone, force feeding them and performing a compulsory cesarean section there is no way you can force someone to go to terrm. They will stick needles in their stomachs, go to back street abortionists, starve themselves, take abortion inducing drugs etc. etc. If you want for society to care for its babies, children, then as in other countries good support is essential; and education regarding contraception. People are also in a free society entitled to consider if a baby to be born with severe handicaps this is not a good idea. It is a difficult moral question if endless resources should be used prolonging the life of that child or if these resources could not save others with the chance of good outcomes. S. Yes, selfish careless people will kill their own babies, and suffer guilt the rest of their lives. 50 MILLION and counting, a holocaust of innocent babies. Wrongdoers eagerly listen to gossip; liars pay close attention to slander. Proverbs 17:4 |
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| #1,473 - Posted 26 June 2009, 8:02 PM | |
Location: United Kingdom, Dominican Republic Join date: August 2008 Member #: 1307 Posts: 10609 | RE: 'Barack Obama is the American Dream' Quote: cabaretewilliam previously said: Quote: abc200 previously said: Quote: cabaretewilliam previously said: again you ignored (or could not understand Mostly people die in Amerika....... The debt is not repaid to the black population but everybody suffers. The fact of no decent health care as of right frightens people into abortions. http://stories.barackobama.com/healthcare Excess infant mortiality kills millions of babies. Short of imprisoning someone, force feeding them and performing a compulsory cesarean section there is no way you can force someone to go to terrm. They will stick needles in their stomachs, go to back street abortionists, starve themselves, take abortion inducing drugs etc. etc. If you want for society to care for its babies, children, then as in other countries good support is essential; and education regarding contraception. People are also in a free society entitled to consider if a baby to be born with severe handicaps this is not a good idea. It is a difficult moral question if endless resources should be used prolonging the life of that child or if these resources could not save others with the chance of good outcomes. S. Yes, selfish careless people will kill their own babies, and suffer guilt the rest of their lives. 50 MILLION and counting, a holocaust of innocent babies. We all know where you are taking us - Nazi style baby farms - careful supervision etc. http://todayspictures.slate.com/20061115/ Infnt mortality Worldwide is huge - wanted children. As I pointed out US is 29 in World league. Also malnutrion in children. S. S. Edited on 6/26/2009 8:05 PM by abc200. |
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| #1,474 - Posted 26 June 2009, 8:12 PM | |
Location: Dominican Republic Join date: September 2008 Member #: 1444 Posts: 6778 | RE: 'Barack Obama is the American Dream' nuts! |
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| #1,475 - Posted 27 June 2009, 4:35 PM | |
Location: United Kingdom, Dominican Republic Join date: August 2008 Member #: 1307 Posts: 10609 | RE: 'Barack Obama is the American Dream' Quote: cabaretewilliam previously said: nuts! Sounds as if you have an excellent policy. Compulsory pregnancy test every month and if pregnant must be supervised. Take passport away of course. Could go to Brazil, UK etc. http://www.mcclatchydc.com/world/v-print/story/20661.html If the pregnancy terminates naturallly without a live birth then hold an investigation. If valid then do not charge otherwise suspect abortion in USA or elsewhere. Then if guilty prison. S. |
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| #1,476 - Posted 27 June 2009, 7:08 PM | |
Location: Dominican Republic, Parque Colon statue of Anacaona Join date: April 2009 Member #: 2573 Posts: 3334 | RE: 'Barack Obama is the American Dream' strangled in your crib would have answered the question that should never have been asked My daughter Yaina aka ". Chucky la Nina Diabolica " |
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| #1,477 - Posted 27 June 2009, 8:18 PM | |
Location: Dominican Republic Join date: September 2008 Member #: 1444 Posts: 6778 | RE: 'Barack Obama is the American Dream' Quote: FredCDobbs previously said: strangled in your crib would have answered the question that should never have been asked ABCdummy and Vac-anus have someting in common! Their floppy works very well but the hard drive is missing Wrongdoers eagerly listen to gossip; liars pay close attention to slander. Proverbs 17:4 |
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| #1,478 - Posted 30 June 2009, 8:01 AM | |
Location: Dominican Republic Join date: September 2008 Member #: 1444 Posts: 6778 | Why the Dow Is Headed to 6000 The global capital-market rally since the March lows was a great trading opportunity, but the rally may have been based on shifting-sentiment (as opposed to structural improvements in the economy). The market was “pricing in” (or hoping for) a quick recovery; even though there was no evidence to suggest clear-&-compelling improvement in GDP, employment, deleveraging consumers, or corporate earnings. Yes, the government was able to stop Financial Armageddon; but that’s not the same thing as an improving economy. Yes, the US economy is resilient and will recover and prosper in the long-run. But “In the long-run, we’re all dead”, to quote the Nobel Prize winning economist Keynes. Like the cartoon character that has run off the ledge of the mountain but has not yet noticed the fact that he’s running on thin-air, once equity investors look down it may get ugly. Neither Borrower, Nor Lender Be Whether you’re a bull or a bear, we can all agree on the following fundamental-facts: Deleveraging Consumers and Businesses. Everyone (except for the government) is tightening their belt and reducing their consumption. Government alone cannot carry the economic load forever, and if consumers (or businesses) don’t quickly step in we may face a double-dip recession. The $64,000 question is: How does the private sector look (or what’s left of it)? Unemployment Is Above 9% and Climbing. Unemployment is a lagging-indicator, and historically continues to get worse even if the economy picks up. This bit of bad news is not going to get better anytime soon, even if you think the economy is recovering now! Depressed Wages. Many corporations take advantage of high unemployment levels to keep wages down for their existing employees. This makes sense for the firms (the weaker economy justifies lower wage growth) but it has the unintended consequence of reducing the purchasing power of those already employed. Demographic Disaster. If consumers are the engine of the US economy, then Baby-Boomers are the turbo-charger; since they make up such a large demographic. But Baby-Boomers are nearing retirement and even if the economy picks up this year they have a lot of saving to do in order to repair the massive damage to their wealth. In short, deleveraging consumers & businesses, unemployment, depressed wages, and fortifying baby-boomers cast doubt on the bulls believe the economy is going to rebound…at least not by the consumer. Catch 22. Corporations cannot lead a recovery until banks are healthy. But banks cannot repair their balance sheets until they can lend to consumers that are both financially sound (which they are not), and willing to borrow (which they do not). But if things continue as the current rate (or “improve” only slightly) then banks cannot rebuild their balance sheets because for every item a bank recapitalizes, it faces another default somewhere else (foreclosure, credit cards, etc). Government Tapped Out. The resources and credit-worthiness of the US government are almost unlimited. Almost. But there’s only so much the government can borrow before it too must tap-out. Furthermore, if the borrowing becomes too excessive, then the medicine will become worse than the disease. Too much borrow may eventually crowd out private sector borrowing, increase borrowing costs, place a huge burden on taxpayers which reduces future consumption and economic activity, etc. Global Economic Decline. The US cannot export itself out of this problem, because the rest of the world is in the same position (if not a lot worse). The BRICs (or any other emerging market) grow largely due to exports and not organic domestic-growth. The OECD nations are all sickly, one worse than the other. Unfortunately, bad economic news has come “not as spies, but as battalions”. Fear, Greed, & Beauty-Contests So where is the DOW headed, as we enter Q2 earnings season? In the end, Q2 earnings will not matter. Nor will the mountain of forecasts dissecting it. What matters is how the market responds to Q2 earnings. As a trader, I agree with the Keynesian “beauty contest” rule: to determine winners of a beauty contest look to and anticipate the judge’s decision and don’t bother deciding who you think will win because you think they’re “pretty”. In short, what the market thinks matters, even if you think the market is “wrong”. The rally off the March lows was based on shifting-sentiment. Fear of losing out on the rally, greed to jump in and make profits, and “pricing in” (or hoping for) a quick recovery. What the market thinks matters, even if you think the market is “wrong”. But the market is also self-correcting…like the cartoon character that has run off the ledge of the mountain, once it realizes its predicament, it will eventually come crashing down (or, “mark to market”). OOPS, I DID IT AGAIN…I MADE YOU BELIEVE The things you can always count on are: death, taxes, and whipsaw. Any trader worth his or her salt can attest to the fact that the market throws some wicked sucker punches, or whipsaws. Prior to a major rally, market participants will become convinced that the sky is falling (think fear). Right at a market top, investors and traders will be told that good times are here to last, things are “really different” this time, if you don’t buy now you’ll miss the opportunity of a life-time (think greed), “green shoots”, etc. The cycle repeats itself, ad infinitum. Trading Options If you believe that the market has rallied on sentiment, and not sound structural economic changes; if the seven-fundamentals I’ve outlined give you pause, then trade defensively and consider shorting via the Direxion 3-times leverage Bear ETFs (BGZ, TZA, FAZ). The additional leverage allows you to produce larger gains while committing smaller amounts of your capital. So when should traders commit capital? I’ll save the technical-&-fundamental analysis of “entry-points” for another article, but the chart below shows that the 8,200 level for the DOW is critical from a trading perspective (since the March rally, we’ve hit but not broken through the 8,200 support level…at least, not yet). But that’s a discussion for another article… Wrongdoers eagerly listen to gossip; liars pay close attention to slander. Proverbs 17:4 |
Post IP: 201.229.183.24* | |
| #1,479 - Posted 30 June 2009, 11:06 AM | |
Location: United States Join date: February 2009 Member #: 2141 Posts: 110 | RE: Why the Dow Is Headed to 6000 http://www.scribd.com/doc/12664933/Gabriel-Garcia-Marquez-Su-DespedidaPps |
Post IP: 70.138.0.5* | |
| #1,480 - Posted 30 June 2009, 6:29 PM | |
Location: United Kingdom, Dominican Republic Join date: August 2008 Member #: 1307 Posts: 10609 | RE: Why the Dow Is Headed to 6000 Quote: cabaretewilliam previously said: The global capital-market rally since the March lows was a great trading opportunity, but the rally may have been based on shifting-sentiment (as opposed to structural improvements in the economy). The market was “pricing in” (or hoping for) a quick recovery; even though there was no evidence to suggest clear-&-compelling improvement in GDP, employment, deleveraging consumers, or corporate earnings. Yes, the government was able to stop Financial Armageddon; but that’s not the same thing as an improving economy. Yes, the US economy is resilient and will recover and prosper in the long-run. But “In the long-run, we’re all dead”, to quote the Nobel Prize winning economist Keynes. Like the cartoon character that has run off the ledge of the mountain but has not yet noticed the fact that he’s running on thin-air, once equity investors look down it may get ugly. Neither Borrower, Nor Lender Be Whether you’re a bull or a bear, we can all agree on the following fundamental-facts: Deleveraging Consumers and Businesses. Everyone (except for the government) is tightening their belt and reducing their consumption. Government alone cannot carry the economic load forever, and if consumers (or businesses) don’t quickly step in we may face a double-dip recession. The $64,000 question is: How does the private sector look (or what’s left of it)? Unemployment Is Above 9% and Climbing. Unemployment is a lagging-indicator, and historically continues to get worse even if the economy picks up. This bit of bad news is not going to get better anytime soon, even if you think the economy is recovering now! Depressed Wages. Many corporations take advantage of high unemployment levels to keep wages down for their existing employees. This makes sense for the firms (the weaker economy justifies lower wage growth) but it has the unintended consequence of reducing the purchasing power of those already employed. Demographic Disaster. If consumers are the engine of the US economy, then Baby-Boomers are the turbo-charger; since they make up such a large demographic. But Baby-Boomers are nearing retirement and even if the economy picks up this year they have a lot of saving to do in order to repair the massive damage to their wealth. In short, deleveraging consumers & businesses, unemployment, depressed wages, and fortifying baby-boomers cast doubt on the bulls believe the economy is going to rebound…at least not by the consumer. Catch 22. Corporations cannot lead a recovery until banks are healthy. But banks cannot repair their balance sheets until they can lend to consumers that are both financially sound (which they are not), and willing to borrow (which they do not). But if things continue as the current rate (or “improve” only slightly) then banks cannot rebuild their balance sheets because for every item a bank recapitalizes, it faces another default somewhere else (foreclosure, credit cards, etc). Government Tapped Out. The resources and credit-worthiness of the US government are almost unlimited. Almost. But there’s only so much the government can borrow before it too must tap-out. Furthermore, if the borrowing becomes too excessive, then the medicine will become worse than the disease. Too much borrow may eventually crowd out private sector borrowing, increase borrowing costs, place a huge burden on taxpayers which reduces future consumption and economic activity, etc. Global Economic Decline. The US cannot export itself out of this problem, because the rest of the world is in the same position (if not a lot worse). The BRICs (or any other emerging market) grow largely due to exports and not organic domestic-growth. The OECD nations are all sickly, one worse than the other. Unfortunately, bad economic news has come “not as spies, but as battalions”. Fear, Greed, & Beauty-Contests So where is the DOW headed, as we enter Q2 earnings season? In the end, Q2 earnings will not matter. Nor will the mountain of forecasts dissecting it. What matters is how the market responds to Q2 earnings. As a trader, I agree with the Keynesian “beauty contest” rule: to determine winners of a beauty contest look to and anticipate the judge’s decision and don’t bother deciding who you think will win because you think they’re “pretty”. In short, what the market thinks matters, even if you think the market is “wrong”. The rally off the March lows was based on shifting-sentiment. Fear of losing out on the rally, greed to jump in and make profits, and “pricing in” (or hoping for) a quick recovery. What the market thinks matters, even if you think the market is “wrong”. But the market is also self-correcting…like the cartoon character that has run off the ledge of the mountain, once it realizes its predicament, it will eventually come crashing down (or, “mark to market”). OOPS, I DID IT AGAIN…I MADE YOU BELIEVE The things you can always count on are: death, taxes, and whipsaw. Any trader worth his or her salt can attest to the fact that the market throws some wicked sucker punches, or whipsaws. Prior to a major rally, market participants will become convinced that the sky is falling (think fear). Right at a market top, investors and traders will be told that good times are here to last, things are “really different” this time, if you don’t buy now you’ll miss the opportunity of a life-time (think greed), “green shoots”, etc. The cycle repeats itself, ad infinitum. Trading Options If you believe that the market has rallied on sentiment, and not sound structural economic changes; if the seven-fundamentals I’ve outlined give you pause, then trade defensively and consider shorting via the Direxion 3-times leverage Bear ETFs (BGZ, TZA, FAZ). The additional leverage allows you to produce larger gains while committing smaller amounts of your capital. So when should traders commit capital? I’ll save the technical-&-fundamental analysis of “entry-points” for another article, but the chart below shows that the 8,200 level for the DOW is critical from a trading perspective (since the March rally, we’ve hit but not broken through the 8,200 support level…at least, not yet). But that’s a discussion for another article… I think about 4000 - there are a lot eof empty shopping malls, unsold homes etc. and few profitable companies. However it does not matter much as in the post war era US was 45% of World's economy now only 15%. However stock markets in Russia and Brazil will do well. Countries still need raw materials and food. There is also good potential for increase in consumer demand in those countries as social programs are rolled out. S. |
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