ellio
- 15 May 2006 09:10
The market seems to be selling-off on the back of limited bad news imo, apart from the dollar that is.
If you can hold your nerve and apart from any short term requirements to offload poor performing stocks, I have a couple!!, my advice would be sit tight. This does not have the feel of the tech(mining!) bubble at all. Difference being there are a lot of good fundamentals, unlike in 2000 when there were a lot of over rated nothing companies.
maddoctor
- 31 Oct 2007 19:18
- 1366 of 1564
this falling dollar and rising crude price is going to cause a crack somewhere imho
HARRYCAT
- 31 Oct 2007 19:41
- 1367 of 1564
Surely DOWN one quarter of 1% Stan???
Cynic's shorting of the DOW is looking risky at the moment, but maybe tomorrows trading will compensate.
cynic
- 31 Oct 2007 20:40
- 1368 of 1564
indeed harry .... seems like i might have made a wrong call, but not convinced and have left my Dow short and $ long both running
halifax
- 31 Oct 2007 20:45
- 1369 of 1564
You are both out of touch FTSE heading for 7000+ DOW 14400 before 31/12
Stan
- 31 Oct 2007 21:56
- 1370 of 1564
Oops sorry H my mistake -):
HARRYCAT
- 31 Oct 2007 23:34
- 1371 of 1564
Phew! Scary moment there Stan!!! :o)
Symantics possibly, but I'm sure careers have been lost & won by 'Ups' which should have been 'downs' !!!
HARRYCAT
- 01 Nov 2007 08:50
- 1372 of 1564
Looks like the FTSE is fairly neutral over the FED rate decision. Booted up this morning expecting lots of blue, only to find trading very slow.
cynic
- 01 Nov 2007 09:47
- 1373 of 1564
suggest you revisit and you will find FTSE falling, DOW indications now down about 60 and $ strengthening againgst ...... perhaps i haven't been so rash after all, even if slightly premature in opening my positions, but one can never know that in advance
HARRYCAT
- 01 Nov 2007 22:21
- 1374 of 1564
Laughing all the way to the bank now, Cynic, after successful shorting of the DOW today? Amazing how things change in just 24 hours.
cynic
- 01 Nov 2007 22:32
- 1375 of 1564
not exactly but certainly much much happier than many
HARRYCAT
- 02 Nov 2007 09:00
- 1376 of 1564
Having seen the Nikkei & the Dow fall over 300 points, I was expecting a big sell off first thing this morning. Dow futures are currently only 20 points down, so maybe the FTSE can ride out this particular storm.
BigTed
- 02 Nov 2007 09:32
- 1377 of 1564
I'm viewing the market with the expectation of sideways tracking for the foreseeable future, it has remained bullish overall this year, but every time it gets a head of steam now, events on the other side of the Atlantic peg it back, and long term holds aside, it appears a good time, currently to take profits as and when and buy back in on dips...
cynic
- 02 Nov 2007 11:03
- 1378 of 1564
am glad to have been hedging with shorts ..... Dow saved me a bundle last night and am now making a modest profit on FTSE short ..... but do wish $ would strengthen, though took out 50% last night with a very small profit
steveo
- 02 Nov 2007 21:00
- 1379 of 1564
Mixed day for dow with strong recovery at end of play, ftse future well up due to...
On the data front, the Labor Department reported the economy created 166,000 jobs in October, helping investors brush aside lingering fears over weakness in the housing and credit sectors. The growth in nonfarm payrolls marked the best showing since May, with the unemployment rate holding steady at 4.7%.
These figures are likely to be revised at some point as usual. I expect reasonable start to week. Next economics from states on tues with redbook on retail sales, job vacancies and public debt.
cynic
- 03 Nov 2007 16:53
- 1380 of 1564
Monday looks to be heading for another horror with news that Citigroup is in a real mess ...... i am currently long both FTSE and Dow but shall be closing those PDQ and quite probably reversing same.
Falcothou
- 04 Nov 2007 11:40
- 1381 of 1564
Leeson's losses were small change compared with the current ones irrespective on inflation .
As the losses grew, Leeson requested extra funds to continue trading, hoping to extricate himself from the mess by more deals. Over three months he bought more than 20,000 futures contracts worth about $180,000 each in a vain attempt to move the market. Some three quarters of the $1.3 billion he lost Barrings resulted from these trades. When Barings executives discovered what had happened, they informed the Bank of England that Barings was effectively bust. In his wake Nick Leeson had wiped out the 233 year old Baring investment Bank, who proudly counted HM The Queen as a client. The $1.3 billion dollars of liabilities he had run up was more than the entire capital and reserves of the bank.
HARRYCAT
- 06 Nov 2007 09:14
- 1382 of 1564
Just heard on BBC news that Mervyn King has said that it will take months for all of the U.K. banks to report on their exposure to sub-prime debt. It will be intersting to see if the FTSE falls dramatically each time they produce their figures. I can't personally see any of them coming out with good figures; only either 'better or worse than expected'. Each piece of news should see a broker revaluation which should make for intersting times!
maddoctor
- 08 Nov 2007 15:48
- 1383 of 1564
interesting quote on marketwatch about US yesterday "plunge prtection team did not want to step in front of a train"
maddoctor
- 09 Nov 2007 12:03
- 1384 of 1564
for those calling a bear market the number is 12850 , below will be the bear
cynic
- 09 Nov 2007 12:22
- 1385 of 1564
nasty reversal this morning and with Dow indications suddenlt dumping 100+ points ...... have heard, but can find no confirmation, that yet another US bank has horrid results due to sub-prime
curiously, $ has suddenly found some strength, but then it could not keep tanking for ever without at least pausing