350Z's 2007 I Fund Thread

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The last CPI report ,I think it was, the forex traders bought the dollar a day early in anticipation of a hot number then gave it back after the report. Thats maybe part of it. Seems like it was only the Euro though. They claimed something about a economic report in Germany.
 
G 11.91 even
F 11.39 +.01 (+0.09%)
C 16.78 -.02 (-0.12%)
S 20.37 -.03 (-0.15%)
I 24.31 -.27 (-1.10%)

That's all she wrote folks! There's no FV for the I-fund today. The F-fund is the big winner for the day. :)
 
Glad we don't have an FV correction hanging over our heads. I like how the market pared down early losses. Good potential energy building up all through the day. Hope it carries over to the OSMs. :)
 
11:40 EDT estimate: +.458% or +11 cents.

Thanks Jayhawker.


To move into the I fund or stay in the I fund for tomorrow is suicide, IMO. The markets have been trending up since this morning's gap down. There is a strong possibility of a +FV because of the upcoming Fed announcement. The smart choice would be to take profit today, but the gambler in me thinks we might see more upside tomorrow in the C fund.
 
Thanks Jayhawker.


To move into the I fund or stay in the I fund for tomorrow is suicide, IMO. The markets have been trending up since this morning's gap down. There is a strong possibility of a +FV because of the upcoming Fed announcement. The smart choice would be to take profit today, but the gambler in me thinks we might see more upside tomorrow in the C fund.
disagree..no sense, makes sense going into the I Fund. we will see ..gl
 
disagree..no sense, makes sense going into the I Fund. we will see ..gl

Im not tracking you at all here 12%.

I think what 350z was saying that there is all the makings of a big +FV today. If that pans out, then tomorrow's share price will also be adjusted accordingly. So if you buy in today, that means you are buying-in in spite of the +FV risk. And if you are planning on leaving tomorrow, then you are going to cash out against the -FV.

Of course this is all based on strong market moves this afternoon, so we will see shortly. But based on what I see so far, I agree with 350z completely here.
 
Im not tracking you at all here 12%.

I think what 350z was saying that there is all the makings of a big +FV today. If that pans out, then tomorrow's share price will also be adjusted accordingly. So if you buy in today, that means you are buying-in in spite of the +FV risk. And if you are planning on leaving tomorrow, then you are going to cash out against the -FV.

Of course this is all based on strong market moves this afternoon, so we will see shortly. But based on what I see so far, I agree with 350z completely here.
I understood his point. gl:)
 
Fwiw

The Bank of England and European Central Bank 's rate decisions are also due tomorrow. I do not know if you guys/gals know that!!!
 
Re: Fwiw

The Bank of England and European Central Bank 's rate decisions are also due tomorrow. I do not know if you guys/gals know that!!!

No. I did not know that. But they are not expected to raise rates until June or later, correct? If they don't raise tomorrow, the dollar might rise.
 
Re: Fwiw

No. I did not know that. But they are not expected to raise rates until June or later, correct? If they don't raise tomorrow, the dollar might rise.
http://www.thestreet.com/_tscs/markets/marketfeatures/10355333_3.html

"The combination of Wednesday's Federal Reserve Open Market Committee meeting, and European Central Bank and Bank of England meetings on Thursday stand to threaten more tightening.

"Only the Bank of England is expected to hike its borrowing rate to 5.5%, but the ECB is expected to be hawkish about a possible upcoming rate hike. The FOMC is expected to retain its light tightening bias despite a couple of recently benign inflation readings.

"All that adds up to potentially more downside for the U.S. dollar, which (guess what?) is bullish for large cap multinational stocks. And, around we go."
 
Re: Fwiw

http://www.thestreet.com/_tscs/markets/marketfeatures/10355333_3.html

"The combination of Wednesday's Federal Reserve Open Market Committee meeting, and European Central Bank and Bank of England meetings on Thursday stand to threaten more tightening.

"Only the Bank of England is expected to hike its borrowing rate to 5.5%, but the ECB is expected to be hawkish about a possible upcoming rate hike. The FOMC is expected to retain its light tightening bias despite a couple of recently benign inflation readings.

"All that adds up to potentially more downside for the U.S. dollar, which (guess what?) is bullish for large cap multinational stocks. And, around we go."
thank you, you beat me to it....US DOLLAR might tank on that
 
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