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FTSE + FTSE 250 - consider trading (FTSE)     

cynic - 20 Oct 2007 12:12

rather than pick out individual stocks to trade, it can often be worthwhile to trade the indices themselves, especially in times of high volatility.

for those so inclined, i attach below charts for FTSE and FTSE 250, though one might equally be tempted to trade Dow or S&P, which is significantly broader in its coverage, or even NASDAQ

for ease of reading, i have attached 1 year and 3 month charts in each instance

required field - 01 Oct 2011 18:22 - 6991 of 21973

I have simply no profits showing at all.....just have to wait for better times.....never thought that we'd see such a burst bubble like this...a pullback yes I was expecting that but this has been terrible so I'm just staying put and hoping for a recovery.

Bernard M - 02 Oct 2011 13:00 - 6992 of 21973

Sorry Mr.C but if FTSE Futures are anything to go by closing at 5040 down over actual FTSE close AT 16.30 5128 it looks like Monday open will be down around 88 points.

cynic - 02 Oct 2011 14:33 - 6993 of 21973

i fear you're right ..... w/e press makes dismal reading

Bernard M - 02 Oct 2011 14:37 - 6994 of 21973

Things will get better.

tyketto - 02 Oct 2011 18:58 - 6995 of 21973

Flash on BBC news about 5.30 that documents seen
seem to indicate that Greece has failed the test.
Been monitoring since but no further mention.

dreamcatcher - 02 Oct 2011 19:03 - 6996 of 21973

Deficit targets missed in Greek budget draft -
18:04, Sunday 2 October 2011

ATHENS (Reuters) - Greece will miss the deficit targets set in its EU/IMF (Berlin: MXG1.BE - news) bailout this year and next as it faces worse-than-expected recession, sources said ahead of the adoption by the cabinet of the 2012 draft budget on Sunday.

Greece sees its 2011 budget deficit reaching 8.5 percent of GDP this year, missing a 7.6 percent target, the documents set to be approved by the cabinet show, two sources said.

The budget draft foresees that the deficit will be brought down to 6.8 percent of GDP, above a 6.5 percent target in the bailout that saved Greece from bankruptcy, the sources said.

In the same documents, Greece sees its economy contracting by 5.5 percent this year and 2 percent next year. This is in line with the IMF's World Economic Outlook, published last month, but much worse than the projections used for the July bailout negotiations, which predicted the country's economy would return to growth next year.

Athens blames its failure to meet EU/IMF deficit targets on the worse-than-forecast contraction of the economy, while its lenders say failure to push through much-needed structural reforms is also largely to blame.

A deeper-than-expected recession makes it harder for Greece to collect revenues and meet its deficit targets. It also makes the impact of austerity measures such as tax hikes and wage cuts weigh harder on people.

(Reporting by Ingrid Melander)

cynic - 02 Oct 2011 20:11 - 6997 of 21973

fwiw .....
19:45, Sunday 2 October 2011
ATHENS (Reuters) - The Greek cabinet approved on Sunday a draft budget for 2012, the finance ministry said in a statement after a cabinet meeting.

"The budget draft will be submitted tomorrow to parliament," the statement said.

dreamcatcher - 02 Oct 2011 20:19 - 6998 of 21973

cynic, good news . Dare I say a reasonable day Monday.

cynic - 02 Oct 2011 20:26 - 6999 of 21973

i really do not know at all

dreamcatcher - 02 Oct 2011 20:34 - 7000 of 21973



= Economic week ahead =

The focus of the week falls on Thursday, when the Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee makes its October decision. Economists believe that a deteriorating economic outlook has increased the likelihood that the MPC (KOSDAQ: 050540.KQ - news) will decide to restart quantitative easing its asset purchasing programme at that meeting, in a bid to stimulate the economy.

It may, however, wait until its November (Berlin: NBXB.BE - news) meeting, when it will have to hand the Bank's latest detailed forecasts ahead of its next quarterly Inflation Report. Interest rates are expected to remain unchanged at 0.5pc for a significant period ahead.

On Wednesday, the Office for National Statistics is expected to confirm its earlier estimate that the economy grew by 0.2pc in the second quarter. PMI data for the manufacturing, construction and services sectors are expected to show that activity weakened further in September, boding ill for the UK economy as a whole in the third quarter.

gibby - 02 Oct 2011 20:55 - 7001 of 21973

most likely more qe yet again - but most in the know are against this - it justt postpones the real trouble then when it arrives again it will hit even harder

no surprises with greece that alone may put the brakes on a bit - we'll see

gibby - 02 Oct 2011 20:56 - 7002 of 21973

and the trouble is potentially much worse than so far so hold on to your hats if it happens - gla

dreamcatcher - 02 Oct 2011 20:59 - 7003 of 21973

Gloom and doom - Bumpy next week


Kept this brief as it goes on and on.


Banking crisis set to trigger new credit crunch

Harry Wilson, 20:48, Sunday 2 October 2011

The global financial system is on the edge of a new credit crunch as the cost of insuring the bonds of banks across the world hits new highs, analysts have said.

gibby - 02 Oct 2011 21:05 - 7004 of 21973

yep afraid so - i expect to be very busy next week :-((((((((((((((

but make the right choices & ......................

gl

Bernard M - 03 Oct 2011 06:39 - 7005 of 21973

Monday bloodbath again looks like FTSE will open down over 100 points. Happy to be short today.



(c) Sky News 2011, 7:12, Monday 3 October 2011


Markets across Asia slumped overnight, after debt-ridden Greece warned it would miss its deficit targets.

Japan (NYSE: MCO - news) 's Nikkei 225 (Osaka: ^N225 - news) fell 2.3%, Hong Kong's Hang Seng (HKSE: ^HSI - news) fell 4.1% and Australia's S&P ASX slumped 2.2%.

The Euro also fell to its lowest level in more than eight months during early trading in Asia.

The reaction came after government draft budget figures from Greece showed the country would miss a deficit target set just months ago in a massive bailout package.

Greece's deficit for 2011-12 is now expected to reach 8.5% of its gross domestic product - down from 10.5% in 2010, but short of the 7.6% target.

Inspectors from the IMF (Berlin: MXG1.BE - news) , EU and European Central Bank are in Athens to decide whether Greece should get a key bailout instalment - cash the country needs to avoid going bankrupt next month.

Meanwhile, the German finance minister also ruled out a higher German contribution to the eurozone's rescue fund than approved by their parliament last week, adding to concerns across the world markets.

And new figures showed inflation had jumped to 3% in September in the 17 countries that use the euro - possibly ruling out an interest rate cut from the European Central Bank this week.

The inflation figure is the highest since October 2008.

Bernard M - 03 Oct 2011 06:52 - 7006 of 21973

FTSE set to open sharply lower as Greek default fears grow
StockMarketWire.com
PRE-OPEN REPORT: Headline shares are tipped to open with heavy losses, according to financial websites, as global markets tumble following reports Greece will miss debt reduction targets this year and next.

cynic - 03 Oct 2011 09:34 - 7007 of 21973

i guess a sharp rally both here and in us is a def possibility, but i think there'll be heavy selling into same ..... get the rhythm right (not like me who chickened out this morning!) and there'll be some good quick profits to be made in both directions

Bernard - would you disagree?

Bernard M - 03 Oct 2011 09:56 - 7008 of 21973

Law of averages dictate there will be a rise, but one rise does not make up for what world indices, and stocks have lost. Until greece defaults, and Europe sorts things out shorters will win hands down for the rest of this year imho.

cynic - 03 Oct 2011 10:05 - 7009 of 21973

exactly that

Bernard M - 03 Oct 2011 12:33 - 7010 of 21973

Italy and Spain next, and there is little money in the pot for them. I see FTSE ending 2011 around 3,900 Feel sorry for guys with just long positions.
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