StockFetcher Forums · Stock Picks and Trading · Intraday Alerts<< 1 ... 587 588 589 590 591 ... 1903 >>Post Follow-up
johnpaulca
12,036 posts
msg #93877
Ignore johnpaulca
6/15/2010 1:30:01 PM

straken: they downgraded Greece this morning so we have the flight to safety by traders.


straken
469 posts
msg #93878
Ignore straken
6/15/2010 1:35:11 PM

Ok Thank You,
Here are some stocks showing record call volume today
AA
GS
HL
HGSI
HL
MEE
XLY

Eman93
4,750 posts
msg #93887
Ignore Eman93
6/15/2010 7:38:52 PM

straken
- Ignore straken 6/15/2010 1:20:24 PM

Have I missed some news? True strength indicator on the euro is flying and it just made a new daily high but I see increasing volume starting to climb in the gold stocks.

========================================

no... I love to play chess... think 3 moves ahead at all times and know what ammo your enemy has to cause damage....

Why is gold up... dollar down and the safety trade? I have been fouled up more times listing to news or other blogs... trade what you see.

Eman93
4,750 posts
msg #93889
Ignore Eman93
modified
6/15/2010 8:00:40 PM

removed ---- I dont want to bias anyone.

johnpaulca
12,036 posts
msg #93899
Ignore johnpaulca
6/16/2010 9:02:49 AM

Bank index BKX closed above wma21, look for higher prices in this sector. I will be nibbling at the very oversold GS(136.90).

$DJI....we will see some resistance today at the upper BB200,0.45

johnpaulca
12,036 posts
msg #93905
Ignore johnpaulca
6/16/2010 11:05:03 AM

"Stocks are a great long-term investment."

"Stocks return about 10% a year over the long-term."

No doubt you've heard these words of conventional wisdom in many forms from many investment "gurus". Both statements are false and/or misleading.

What does "long-term" mean to you? Five years, ten years, twenty, thirty? What would make these statements false?

In this newsletter, I've decided to show you the work of Professor Robert Shiller of Yale University. Dr. Shiller is both a professor of finance and economics and is the author of "Irrational Exuberance", published in 2000. He is a proponent of the view that investors' appetite for risk is driven by a complex of forces (including propaganda) which are irrational. These forces produce stock market bubbles and crashes.

Part of his work includes mapping the real, inflation-adjusted price of the stock market. The chart below shows the real price of the S&P 500 historically since 1871.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic


As you can see, there have been long periods of stagnation and decline in the market, punctuated by equally long periods of real advancement. Because the price of the stock index is adjusted for inflation, it is easy to see the effects of high inflation on the market. These periods include the inflations of 1917-1920, 1942-1945 and 1968-1981.

The price index does not include dividends. A policy of continuously reinvesting dividends would flatten out the declining years, but would not convert them to "great investment" periods. It is also easy to see that someone who invested a lump sum in stocks at certain crucial times was doomed to negative real returns for decades.

The claim that the stock market has returned 10% a year over the long-term is based on the starting point of 1926 and the ending point of 2000. Stocks were still relatively cheap in 1926 and very expensive in 2000. Over the entire period inflation averaged 3.5% a year. The long-term calculation includes the biggest and longest bull market in history from 1981-2000. As the market has corrected some of the excesses of the 1990's, the long-term return is dropping. It's now 9.5%. Convert that to real terms and you get a 6% growth rate.

Over the most recent decade, the S&P 500 has delivered a real return of -3.5% annually including dividends (ending 3/31/10). Most investors have nothing to show for the past ten years since most mutual funds have tracked the general market. The only stock index to show a positive return has been the S&P MidCap 400 Index with a 3.2% real annual return. That index, however, only covers about 3% of the total stock market valuation.

A close look at stock market history provides us, I think, with a clear lesson - prudent investors should not buy into "long-term" stories of productive, real returns from the stock market. Instead, think of the market as a tool, like a wrench, to be used for a limited time, under well-defined conditions when the odds of robust gains are high.

Source:
Jerry Minton, Ph.D.
President


jrbikes
624 posts
msg #93939
Ignore jrbikes
6/17/2010 1:39:30 AM

FRE and FNM amazing! WOW, Delisting yeah!

johnpaulca
12,036 posts
msg #93946
Ignore johnpaulca
6/17/2010 9:16:07 AM

OIH($102)....Look for higher prices, buy signal triggered on Monday. The most oversold is RIG, very risky because of the blow out in the gulf. I will look for a close above wma21 for my entry.

johnpaulca
12,036 posts
msg #93957
Ignore johnpaulca
6/17/2010 11:20:36 AM

Anyone else caught MTB, up $6 today, still has $1 left in it before hitting resistance. Banks will pullback so be ready.

jrbikes
624 posts
msg #93968
Ignore jrbikes
6/17/2010 2:01:16 PM

RNN right at resistance! good one for today also!

StockFetcher Forums · Stock Picks and Trading · Intraday Alerts<< 1 ... 587 588 589 590 591 ... 1903 >>Post Follow-up

*** Disclaimer *** StockFetcher.com does not endorse or suggest any of the securities which are returned in any of the searches or filters. They are provided purely for informational and research purposes. StockFetcher.com does not recommend particular securities. StockFetcher.com, Vestyl Software, L.L.C. and involved content providers shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for any actions taken based on the content.


Copyright 2022 - Vestyl Software L.L.C.Terms of Service | License | Questions or comments? Contact Us
EOD Data sources: DDFPlus & CSI Data Quotes delayed during active market hours. Delay times are at least 15 mins for NASDAQ, 20 mins for NYSE and Amex. Delayed intraday data provided by DDFPlus


This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.