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I follow the general concept that economic expansions last 5 years on average, while downturns, recessions, et al. last approximately two years. We're in the early stages of a downturn right now, which is perfectly healthy in the big picture(long term). Things got way out of control with housing, which was not unlike the late 90's "irrational exuberance" with the stock market. You'll hear horror stories, and perhaps experience some pain of your own. When all the excesses get wrung out, we'll expand again. When people capitulate and throw the towel in you can bet we're near a bottom, which isn't the case right now.
I think the credit crunch is far from over. Consider the millions of ARM resets pending and you have another catalyst for further systemic deterioration in the credit and housing markets. It ain't over yet, in fact its just beginning, IMO. Your best hedge of course is to buy wooden fishing plugs. As the economy slows and unemployment rises, participation in leisure activities such as fishing will increase, thus increasing demand for complemantary items such as wooden fishing lures. Better yet, buy some Alaskan yellow cedar futures... |
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priceless. i love this guy. i recommend you go out and get this weekend's edition of Barrons and read the 2008 roundtable article.
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:hihi: |
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check your stock trader's almanac.
* every time the S&P 500 posted a loss for the full month of January, a flat market - or a new, extended BEAR market always followed. * a loss for January is followed by a market decline for the year that averages 13%. |
My daughters boyfriend is a student at NYU's finance school. He's saying were heading there if not already.
You gotta figure with all the higher expenses centralized around the price of oil, we have the opposite of the situation in the nineties. |
The pieces of the puzzle are coming together. A little justification for investing in questionable lending practices?
http://money.cnn.com/2008/01/17/news...ex.htm?cnn=yes |
the futures market went UP when the merill news came out this morning and jobless claims were reported - people were expecting bigger sub-prime writeoffs by merill and higher jobless claims.
then the philadelphia manufacturing index came out at a six year low and ben bernanke started flapping his gums on the telly. has anyone been paying attention to the stock market carnage over the past couple of weeks? :sick: a recession is being baked in by the markets. |
If its being baked in, I would anticipate a bounce off the March lows for the major indexes and then some sideways action for several months while the subprime stuff works its way out. We're only about three percent above the lows now, which I think we'll hit prior to fed meeting. If that level doesn't hold, its gonna be....:behead:
Just a pure laymen's guess though, but hey, even the pros are right only 50 percent of the time at best. |
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i'm a little confused as to why certain economists are looking to the second half of the year for the economy to rebound, given that housing woes (delinquencies and defaults) are really just starting to take off, and credit card and other installment loans (car loans, etc) are also showing signs of weakness. :bc: oh well, at least if the economy tanks, gas might get a little cheaper. my profound question for you all: will custom wood continue to sell for $50/pop? :hihi: :bc: |
Look out below tomorrow. Overseas markets got crushed today, many experiencing 5-7% one day declines. :behead:
50 handle on wood is baked in....:laugha: |
i suspect beachmasters will go on sale in a few months. :faga:
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holy crap bbj, you weren't kidding.
cash market is closed today, but ... dow futures are down 500 (FIVE FRICKIN HUNDRED POINTS)! s&p futures are down 60 (SIXTY FREAKING POINTS)! gonna get UGLEEEEEEE tomorrow at 9:30 a.m. EST. |
Big FishPOOPOO in the market tomorrow.
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well I dont understand all that stock market stuff but I sure am glad my 401K did so well last year:uhoh::rollem:
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jenn, hopefully our 401k's don't become 201k's. :err:
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Cash is king at least for the moment..........:grins:
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when
a guy i used to work for
who's one of the best quality carpenters in the state of MASS has to go to work as an employee instead of a contractor and hasn't had his phone ring for months... I also know an electrician whose phone hasn't rung for 4 months it becomes an issue of public perception not stock market analysis because the public is always very apprehensive during an election year http://i25.photobucket.com/albums/c66/ravenob1/poll.jpg until homeowners start hiring skilled laborers again to upgrade their homes the economy is gonna be lousey so pray for an early spring |
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