A very Scary Day today Stock Market

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  • thesightless
    Someone will marry me. Hell Yeah!
    • Jun 2004
    • 13567

    #16
    Re: A very Scary Day today Stock Market

    i bought nvidia the day they were granted the SONY PS3 contracts..
    your life is an occasion, rise to it.

    Join My Chant. new mix. april 09. dirty fuck house.
    download that. deep shit listed there

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    • Johnnyboy
      Addiction started
      • Jun 2004
      • 349

      #17
      Re: A very Scary Day today Stock Market

      Originally posted by thesightless
      are you an analyst or sales?
      Originally posted by thesightless

      i know financial advisors that are simply sales guys.

      i.e. front or back of house?

      personally im a back house person. i evaluate a variety of investments, focused on equity buys and stock evaluations. i stay away from the risk based commodities and things like pension investments... too annoying and more for the actuaries.



      I run a branch with 20 people in it... I gave my book up about 2 1/2 years ago... I miss working with clients, now my advisors are my clients... I know what you mean about just sales guys... I see the shit that so called "FAs" put their clients in each day... When cases come to my desk to review and I see the mess that other firms (and sometimes my firm) puts people in is horrifying...

      I love this field and I would never give it up… However, some days you just want to toss in the towel with all of this market volatility…
      Remember: You are never more than six days away from FRIDAY!!!

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      • runningman
        Playa I'm a Sooth Saya
        • Jun 2004
        • 5995

        #18
        Re: A very Scary Day today Stock Market

        Jesus the stock market has been getting the shit kicked out of it the last couple days,eh??

        Looks like Wallstreet isn't to excited for the Obama Inauguration

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        • thesightless
          Someone will marry me. Hell Yeah!
          • Jun 2004
          • 13567

          #19
          Re: A very Scary Day today Stock Market

          nope. been saying that for a long time. all historical data shows market declines when the dems take over. and considering the volatility nowadays, they are gonna be cautious, expecting the big brother hand to be put in. best thing barak can do is to forgo the captial gains tax and encourage a massive public reinvestment into the markets, notably the equity stocks and the purchase of well graded debt lines.
          your life is an occasion, rise to it.

          Join My Chant. new mix. april 09. dirty fuck house.
          download that. deep shit listed there

          my dick is its own superhero.

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          • etincelles
            Addiction started
            • Jun 2005
            • 336

            #20
            Re: A very Scary Day today Stock Market

            .........
            Last edited by etincelles; March 24, 2010, 03:43:06 PM.

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            • Miroslav
              WHOA I can change this!1!
              • Apr 2006
              • 4122

              #21
              Re: A very Scary Day today Stock Market

              Originally posted by runningman
              Jesus the stock market has been getting the shit kicked out of it the last couple days,eh??

              Looks like Wallstreet isn't to excited for the Obama Inauguration
              This has nothing to do with Obama or the Democrats. It has to do with the fact that we're in a brutal economic downturn; specifically, with horrible economic data coming out on Dec 08 retail sales and with disappointing Q4 results from a variety of companies.

              And get used to it - most every day is a scary day for the markets now, and we probably won't bottom out until second half of this year - and that's an optimistic scenario.

              Originally posted by thesightless
              best thing barak can do is to forgo the captial gains tax and encourage a massive public reinvestment into the markets, notably the equity stocks and the purchase of well graded debt lines.
              Maybe he can forego the capital gains tax as well as most of his other tax gain plans. But who in his/her right mind would invest big into equities right now, when companies' profits and cash flows are dropping like a rock? What I suspect Obama needs to do - and probably will do - is:
              (1) Push government spending and support for public infrastructure in order to keep people in jobs and in homes.
              (2) Take additional actions if necessary to inject liquidity into the financial system to ensure that it does not collapse.

              Both will up the deficit in the near term, but unfortunately that's what has to happen in a heavy, broad recession to keep it from turning into a heavy, broad depression.
              mixes: www.waxdj.com/miroslav

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              • thesightless
                Someone will marry me. Hell Yeah!
                • Jun 2004
                • 13567

                #22
                Re: A very Scary Day today Stock Market

                the reason i suggest a massive public push to reinvest in balance sheets is to open up cash flow to ensure that jobs are retained and created thereby increasing cash flow into the worldwide market.

                then again, he can just tax the heck out of imports effectivly forcing us to buy american. its worked before in our history.
                your life is an occasion, rise to it.

                Join My Chant. new mix. april 09. dirty fuck house.
                download that. deep shit listed there

                my dick is its own superhero.

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                • Miroslav
                  WHOA I can change this!1!
                  • Apr 2006
                  • 4122

                  #23
                  Re: A very Scary Day today Stock Market

                  Originally posted by thesightless
                  the reason i suggest a massive public push to reinvest in balance sheets is to open up cash flow to ensure that jobs are retained and created thereby increasing cash flow into the worldwide market.
                  So it sounds to me like you're asking for the general public (which is already in financial trouble) to basically foot the bill for the losses incurred by corporations? This is already being done today! It's called a bailout...
                  mixes: www.waxdj.com/miroslav

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                  • thesightless
                    Someone will marry me. Hell Yeah!
                    • Jun 2004
                    • 13567

                    #24
                    Re: A very Scary Day today Stock Market

                    no, not that. and that in that sense.

                    a reinvestment of the public money like it was invested a few years ago could aid everyone. everyone's companies essentially rely on each other as it is in the scale of the national market. in the sense of even the small business benifits when things are going well and people can spend money. if the balance sheets are healthy andwe avoid greed then people can spend money on affordable goods and keep the markets turning.
                    your life is an occasion, rise to it.

                    Join My Chant. new mix. april 09. dirty fuck house.
                    download that. deep shit listed there

                    my dick is its own superhero.

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                    • Miroslav
                      WHOA I can change this!1!
                      • Apr 2006
                      • 4122

                      #25
                      Re: A very Scary Day today Stock Market

                      Originally posted by thesightless
                      no, not that. and that in that sense.

                      a reinvestment of the public money like it was invested a few years ago could aid everyone. everyone's companies essentially rely on each other as it is in the scale of the national market. in the sense of even the small business benifits when things are going well and people can spend money. if the balance sheets are healthy andwe avoid greed then people can spend money on affordable goods and keep the markets turning.
                      I know. was baiting you a bit to see how you'd respond.

                      But seriously... The drastic fall in the equities markets is ultimately a reflection of economic fundamentals. The economy right now is a runaway train, where the losses from the mortgage/credit bubble have spread throughout the economy. Now consumers aren't spending because they're in debt and getting laid off; corporations aren't making money because people aren't spending and credit isn't available; potential lenders aren't giving credit because corporations aren't making money and consumers aren't spending. It's a vicious, self-reinforcing cycle, and you won't break that runaway train by having everyone put a big chunk of money into equities. For one, that money won't even directly shore up corporate balance sheets; corporations don't get cash inflow from secondary market transactions. From that standpoint, it actually would be better if we just directly gave our money to corporations so that they could increase their capital to better survive further future write-downs of their assets. For another, the potential benefits of wealth increase in some pockets of the financial services sector, which profit from market-making fees and transactions, will be offset by the immediate wealth loss of those who just invested their money. And finally, everyone who invested their money would quickly watch their investment turn into half or less because the economic fundamentals haven't changed and the markets are still in heavy decline almost every day.

                      So how do we get out of this? We get out of this when economic fundamentals start to improve. When does that happen? When we reach an new supply-demand equilibrium in which people feel that most outstanding losses have been realized on personal and corporate balance sheets. Put another way, consumers and companies simply must deleverage and write down their asset values; once they do, trust in asset valuations will return and the foundation will be set for growth. That's when you'll see people coming back into the markets to partake in the next bull run. It'll happen, but it takes time.
                      mixes: www.waxdj.com/miroslav

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                      • thesightless
                        Someone will marry me. Hell Yeah!
                        • Jun 2004
                        • 13567

                        #26
                        Re: A very Scary Day today Stock Market

                        what really kills me is that if the major news media didnt act like .003% of a credit default was doomsday, this shit would have never happened.

                        they could have opened the news that day like this.

                        " lehman had a minor default of a credit line in thier equity portfolio and otherwise than that, everyone still making a ton and the time to invest is even better than ever.

                        and that night, the news would have been about the bump the market took after the report.
                        your life is an occasion, rise to it.

                        Join My Chant. new mix. april 09. dirty fuck house.
                        download that. deep shit listed there

                        my dick is its own superhero.

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                        • Miroslav
                          WHOA I can change this!1!
                          • Apr 2006
                          • 4122

                          #27
                          Re: A very Scary Day today Stock Market

                          Originally posted by thesightless
                          what really kills me is that if the major news media didnt act like .003% of a credit default was doomsday, this shit would have never happened.

                          they could have opened the news that day like this.

                          " lehman had a minor default of a credit line in thier equity portfolio and otherwise than that, everyone still making a ton and the time to invest is even better than ever.

                          and that night, the news would have been about the bump the market took after the report.
                          Ok I was going to stop, but now I just have to ask: do you seriously believe that this entire economic downturn is just due to overblown media reporting? I find it very hard to believe that, and here is why:

                          Even if the media can affect equity values in the short term, they do not really have the power to fundamentally affect the actual cash flows of banks' assets over the long run. Think of a securitized pool of mortgages on a bank's balance sheet: cash flows are ultimately driven by the mortgage holders' solvency and ability to repay their debt, not by what the media decides to write tomorrow.

                          So again, what happens if the media did somehow caused banks' equity values to fall? Well, over the longer run those equity values are actually determined by the present value of the future stream of cash flows that the bank gets from its assets. That stream of future cash flows is unaffected by the news story. In semi-strong form efficient markets (which, I'd argue, is a good assumption for the most part), some smart money will end up recognizing that the equity is underpriced (i.e., it's basically like an arbitrage opportunity). That individual will buy it up and make an outsized profit on it, and in the process the equity price will be brought back in line with its fundamental value. So the point is: cash is ultimately king, and the truth about cash flows comes out sooner or later. The short-term impact that the media may have will just be statistical noise that won't really affect the fundamental trend over the longer term.

                          Consider how drastically banks' asset values have fallen over the past 6-9 months. They've fallen by record amounts across many asset classes and even across most geographies around the world. It seems very implausible to me that the media could singlehandedly have cause this, along with the 30%+ decline in the markets in 2008. It seems much more plausible to me that the cash flows from those assets are simply not there, because banks made risky loans and investments that they ultimately didn't understand. And I think investors broadly recognize that. So now all that can be done is to write those asset values down to the reality of the future cash flows...and that's a process that will still be ongoing for the near future.
                          mixes: www.waxdj.com/miroslav

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                          • thesightless
                            Someone will marry me. Hell Yeah!
                            • Jun 2004
                            • 13567

                            #28
                            Re: A very Scary Day today Stock Market

                            i agree there, but the media has most of the blame for inciting panic. and CONGRESS has the second part, because if they passed the bush proposals 6 years ago like he wanted, they would have had a grasp on this and been able to prepare and initiate laws to correct clintons "give a poor minority a house" laws. also, BARNEY FUCKING FRANK, the idiot who was in charge with this from government's POV let it go and now points blame everywhere but on him. he sat on the finance committee that oversees the fannie freddie GCEs, and he still is clueless. its like the NOLA levee board keeping thier jobs and blaming everyone else but themselves for what happened. so much more, busy now. miro, be on tonight. i have a hankering for some discussions.
                            your life is an occasion, rise to it.

                            Join My Chant. new mix. april 09. dirty fuck house.
                            download that. deep shit listed there

                            my dick is its own superhero.

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                            • Miroslav
                              WHOA I can change this!1!
                              • Apr 2006
                              • 4122

                              #29
                              Re: A very Scary Day today Stock Market

                              ^^ I agree with you on the government's blame... Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, along with the whole manifesto of sticking everyone in a house (whether they could afford it or not) helped set the stage for the bubble...and the Greenspan's "zero money down" care dealer philosophy on interest rates certainly didn't help, either.
                              mixes: www.waxdj.com/miroslav

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                              • Localizer
                                Platinum Poster
                                • Jul 2004
                                • 2021

                                #30
                                Re: A very Scary Day today Stock Market

                                Originally posted by runningman
                                Jesus the stock market has been getting the shit kicked out of it the last couple days,eh??

                                Looks like Wallstreet isn't to excited for the Obama Inauguration
                                no not really. this is a pre-inaug runup. the solar sector snapped this week and posted gains, especially amid China's news to have one the largest solar fields in the world. I'm presuming a larger runup on Monday based on the age old market adage 'buy on rumor, sell on news.'
                                Many people would sooner die than think; In fact, they do so.
                                -Bertrand Russell

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