kaitlinsnana
Member
Great move, Griffin. Wish I'd tagged seen it to tag along.
Good man.
Gail
Good man.
Gail
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The I-fund came in at 1.49% compared to the EFA's 1.51% so that means, the above graphic is accurate.
Australia is making some decent gains but Japan is really lagging. I'm suprised that the OSM's don't seem to be following suite behind the US. With a .72% FV waiting to correct tomorrow, if the OSMs all lag, it could make for an opportunity to buy back into the I-fund while the market pauses. Just a thought - the Eurozone is still very likely to pop.
Griffin,
I know you know this, but watch out for the dollar. It has taken a beating and a relief rally will dilute and gains. IMO, it is due some relief.
Reuters:
"The dollar slid to a fresh all-time low against the euro and a basket of currencies after comments from senior Chinese officials stirred concerns the central bank might shift reserves away from the U.S. currency. At 1200 GMT, the euro <EUR=> was at $1.4677."
"The main problem is not really the impact on European companies' earnings, even though some sectors such as aerospace and autos are suffering. It's more that the dollar's slump is a sign that, behind the crisis in the banking sector, there is a crisis looming in the financing of the U.S. deficit," said Romain Boscher, head of equity management at Groupama Asset Management, in Paris.
"The U.S. already faces problems to absorb losses in the subprime mortgage market, and now they might face problems related to the financing of their deficit. The question is: how long will the rest of the world agree to finance the U.S. deficit?"
They just figured this out?:toung:![]()
I am NOT going to move back into the I-fund, instead I am going to stay with the domestics in the S-fund. There is too much of a chance of picking up another FV in the I-fund to risk the move back in that direction.
The problem is they are borrowing to pay for it,I agree that the dollar will not turn around as long as this administration continues to throw away our national treasure on a losing proposition in the mideast rather than on improving things at home.
Ruh ro :blink:
It's not time to hit the panic button, but it is time for a systems check to make sure it's working, just in case.![]()
Griffin,
If we should go into recession, what's the strategy? Lay low? I'm NOT going to panic. I have several friends who are developing land and building and they're eternally optimistic, but I'm not. If I have a little or a lot, I'll be ok, but I have two sons and a granddaughter, and I worry about the United States they will live in.
It seems to me that as a country, we're doing too many things wrong. I keep thinking, there MUST be a master plan, surely we're not just drifting.
So, back to my original question, what would you do? I'm asking you because of your BIG brain. ...and you know I'm not kidding. I appreciate your analysis and comments.
Gail
I thought he said PICNIC. Now would be a good time to PICNIC. lol I made fried chicken last night.
I'm just goof'n with ya.The end of the world is always near, just not today.
And, good morning and good luck today.
CNBC is feverishly spinning again. They have some politician calling for big rate cuts and for the Fed to quit messing around. Also, the normal rhetoric about committee's, transparency, blah, blah, blah.
Ford hit a home run today. Come on DCB.
B52 Ben in on the hill today. Stand by.