Voor zowel dalingen als stijgingen zijn er altijd leuke redenen te vinden. Die financiėle media mouwen wat maar uit hun nek.quote:Op vrijdag 27 februari 2009 17:58 schreef Zero2Nine het volgende:
Je kan er gewoon geen pijl meer op trekken. Verklaringen worden ook altijd acheraf bij een stijging of daling gezocht.
Vet jammer trouwens dat die klote sprinters geen intraday grafieken hebben.quote:
Ik heb Binckie maar gemailt dat ze intraday grafieken voor sprinters moeten maken.quote:Op vrijdag 27 februari 2009 18:06 schreef pberends het volgende:
[..]
Vet jammer trouwens dat die klote sprinters geen intraday grafieken hebben.
premarket stond ie even -40 procentquote:Op vrijdag 27 februari 2009 18:16 schreef Zero2Nine het volgende:
De relatieve stijging van Wallstreet komt iig NIET door Citigroup (bijna -35% zojuist, net zo slecht als dat het aandeel pre-market stond)
Vrije marktquote:Op vrijdag 27 februari 2009 18:25 schreef pberends het volgende:
PPT gaat net zo lang door tot ze alle beursgenoteerde bedrijven in handen hebben.
Je gaat me toch niet vertellen dat ik straks nog gelijk krijg ookquote:Op vrijdag 27 februari 2009 15:26 schreef star_gazer het volgende:
Ik ben benieuwd. Gezien het verloop van de laatste tijd zou het me niets verbazen als de dow vanavond nog in de plus eindigt ofzo
Hoop etquote:Op vrijdag 27 februari 2009 18:38 schreef star_gazer het volgende:
[..]
Je gaat me toch niet vertellen dat ik straks nog gelijk krijg ook
quote:Marc Faber: Stocks Poised to Rally
Friday, February 27, 2009 10:52 AM
Investment guru Marc Faber, publisher of The Gloom, Boom & Doom Report newsletter, sees better times ahead for the stock market.
That may surprise many, given that stocks dropped to fresh lows this week as the government wrestled with bank bailouts and rumors of nationalization in the financial sector.
But Faber tells Bloomberg that the economy and markets have slumped so badly that they should soon rebound — at least a little bit.
“I wouldn’t give up entirely on the theory that you can have some kind of rally develop soon, for one simple reason: The news on the economy has been horrific,” he says.
Faber doesn’t expect the economy to recover instantly. Indeed, “economic news will stay bad for quite some time, and the global economy will continue to deteriorate,” he says.
But many financial markets already have discounted the bad news, Faber notes.
“And the news over the next three months might not be quite as bad,” he says. “There can be a rebound in housing starts or exports.”
That would bring bulls out of the woodwork, saying the economy has bottomed out, and we could get quite a rally, according to Faber. Global easing by central banks also will help.
“We are now more or less in an area where the market, after a final selloff, can have a reasonably good rally,” he says.
Others don’t expect a fast rebound.
“Sell the recent rally,” Morgan Stanley strategist Jason Todd wrote to clients.
“A turnaround in profitability will not come quickly.”
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601080&sid=aa4KTmib46Uw&refer=asiaquote:Faber Says Financial Industry to Contract ‘Much More’
Feb. 27 (Bloomberg) -- The financial services industry, hammered by job cuts and record losses, is in for an even bigger contraction as the global recession deepens, said Marc Faber, publisher of the Gloom, Boom & Doom Report.
“The financial sector will contract and it will contract much more than we’ve seen so far,” said Faber, who was in Tokyo to speak at an event hosted by CLSA Ltd. Financial professionals have “been in paradise for the past 25 years.”
More than 275,000 jobs in the financial industry have been lost in the last two years, according to Bloomberg data, while losses and writedowns at global companies exceeded $1 trillion in the past year. Faber said the contraction could rival declines seen in the 1970s following the collapse of Bernard Cornfeld’s Investors Overseas Services that shook confidence in the industry for a decade.
“The financial sector has been occupying themselves with trading against each other all day and it’s totally unproductive,” said Faber, 62, who told investors to abandon U.S. stocks a week before 1987’s so-called Black Monday crash, according to his Web site. “It’s like a huge casino and that will come to an end.”
Faber said gold was currently expensive relative to other commodities, and the bearish sentiment that’s driven investors from equities to the precious metal is likely to reverse soon. He had recommended investors buy gold since the start of an eight-year rally that this month saw the metal top $1,000 per ounce as skittish investors sought safe-haven assets.
‘Substantial’ Stock Rally
“I’m a little bit careful about the outlook for gold for the rest of the year,” he said. “A countertrend rally could occur soon where stocks would suddenly rise quite substantially.”
Faber today recommended investors short U.S. Treasuries, as a 27-year bull market likely ended in December, starting the beginning of a long bear market. Faber also recommends selling the Japanese yen, though the nation’s stocks may outperform global equities in the next one or two years because they have been depressed for so long, he said.
The yield on the 10-year U.S. government bond fell to a record low of 2.04 percent on Dec. 18, compared with a peak of 15.8 percent in September 1981. The yen has gained against every other currency in the world, except one, in the last 12 months even as the economy contracted at the fastest pace in 35 years. The Nikkei 225 Stock Average fell to the lowest in 26 years this week.
Head for the Farm
The best bet for investors may be to buy a farm and escape from the cities, as a prolonged recession could lead to war, as the Great Depression did, said the Swiss national, who now lives in Thailand.
“Buy a farm and let your girlfriend work on the farm,” he said, to the applause of investors. “If the global economy doesn’t recover, usually people go to war.”
quote:TomTom onbetwiste topper
De keuze voor het beste aandeel 2009 is duidelijk: TomTom. Het aandeel wordt 22 keer als topper genoemd en slechts 3 experts denken dat dit het slechtste aandeel gaat worden. De meeste experts wijzen wel op de slechte gang van zaken in de eindmarkten, maar ook op het feit dat de koers al met 90% is gedaald dit jaar.
quote:
Opzich geen slechte tekst, had zo van RTL of het ANP kunnen komen. Maar die zullen wel geen woorden als "door het putje gebruiken". Jammer dat je het PPT niet even noemt ergens, mooie manier om zo'n term bekend te maken bij de gewone man op de frontpagequote:Op vrijdag 27 februari 2009 18:46 schreef pberends het volgende:
AEX even door het putje
Helemaal zelf geschreven zonder bron.
Hou op, ppt noemen en we zitten zo met heel AEX in TRU. En we zitten al op het randje want het lijkt af en toe wel R&P hier.quote:Op vrijdag 27 februari 2009 19:33 schreef Zero2Nine het volgende:
Opzich geen slechte tekst, had zo van RTL of het ANP kunnen komen. Maar die zullen wel geen woorden als "door het putje gebruiken". Jammer dat je het PPT niet even noemt ergens, mooie manier om zo'n term bekend te maken bij de gewone man op de frontpage
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