Birchtree's Account Talk

I've been told I'm being recommended for a time out - so I'll see you all when I return. I'm being timed out for insinuating that Tiger Woods is a fornicator. That wouldn't be so terribly bad if it weren't for the fact he is married. Why else would a wife cause him injury.
 
To remain politically correct I should have used the term - adulterer. What disturbs me most is that the minority at risk population needs to have a prominent figure that can set an example of responsible behavior. There is a reason that 75% of the children born to the minority at risk population are illegitimate. Some body is providing that extra service of the seminal kind. Pastor Manning will have a few words on this topic I'm sure.
 
I've been told I'm being recommended for a time out - so I'll see you all when I return. I'm being timed out for insinuating that Tiger Woods is a fornicator. That wouldn't be so terribly bad if it weren't for the fact he is married. Why else would a wife cause him injury.

That is a lie, I clearly told you why. You insinuated that he was unfaithful because he is "another black man". Shall I re-post your comment? Here it is.


No, he's just another black man that can't keep it in his pants.

How is that even necessary?
 
The "less than half full" quote from the article would be: "So far, the small cap stocks are signaling that our thesis that this rally is taking its last few breaths will be proven correct."

But, the article's premise that small stocks have risen much greater than large stocks is based on the "bottom". If one discounts the bottom point and instead uses the trend before and after to set a higher "bottom" value for comparison purposes, it looks like both small and large stocks have risen about the same from that trough, about 40%. As usual the article concludes one should subscribe to an upcoming report to find out what to buy. :rolleyes:
 
"According to Bespoke, last week's sentiment survey from Investors Intelligence showed bullish sentiment among newsletter writers was near its highest levels since the March lows (50.6%), while bearish sentiment is at a five year low (17.6%). This puts the spread between bulls and bear at 33, which is the highest level since December 2007. High levels of bullish sentiment are typically considered contrarian, but we would note that sentiment can remain bullish for extended periods of time with little impact on the market. While it is true that markets typically peak when bullish sentiment is high, however, high levels of bullish sentiment don't necessarily mean an imminent decline." See graph.

http://safehaven.com/article-15140.htm
 
Welcome back Birchtree,

some of us pitched in and got you a little present, we need more bullish sentiment around here, you have friends on the mb.
 
I've been told I'm being recommended for a time out - so I'll see you all when I return. I'm being timed out for insinuating that Tiger Woods is a fornicator. That wouldn't be so terribly bad if it weren't for the fact he is married. Why else would a wife cause him injury.

Oh I dunno.... ex-wife chased me out of the house with a butcher knife
once - and we were just arguing over something trivial. I wasnt injured, I could run much faster than her! :D
 
Oh I dunno.... ex-wife chased me out of the house with a butcher knife
once - and we were just arguing over something trivial. I wasnt injured, I could run much faster than her! :D


Fab
good thing you did not trip, could have had a different outcome !!! :D:confused:
 
"We could be embarking on a new era of virtuous trends - a stronger dollar, a stronger economy, and a stronger equity market. It would go almost completely against the prevailing wisdom, and that is when exciting things happen from the perspective of contrarians like me."

http://www.scottgrannis.blogspot.com/

"I believe the recovery is well underway and it's V-shaped, says Brian Wesbury. The trend is very clear, it's up, not down and I don't thinkl we're about to level off or anything like that. I think we're floating on a sea of liquidity and it's going to continue. So much capital flooding in so fast drives verticle price gains, a parabolic ascent. The utility index has had an ascending or right angle triangle break out."

From Mark Hulbert - "And November turned out to be yet another in an incredible series of months in which in the face of a rising stock market, mutual fund investors on balance pulled money out of their stock mutual funds. What does recent fund investor behavior mean for the broad market? For the shorter term, it is a net plus for the market, it suggests that we are not seeing anything like the optimism and irrational exuberance that is typically seen at market tops."
 
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