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$13 trillion debt . I am DCA into the I fund, planning for three years down the road.
100% G presently and there I will stay for at least the next 5 months. You can buy the dips but with two trades/month if you miss the trade window you are right back where you started, not worth the effort.
Gov freeze is on its way, its shock n' awh time folks. 51% of Americans will soon pay no taxes. The Dems are on the ropes and the Rep are pulling out the smoke and mirrors.
Drill baby drill. How soon we forget.
Thats my two cents
 
Hello Chinese exports, good-bye U.S. jobs:mad:

By Aaron Smith, CNNMoney.com staff writerJune 9, 2010: 2:40 PM ET

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- For millions of unemployed Americans, the news about China's surging export market isn't necessarily cause for celebration, even if it might be a harbinger for global recovery.
Chinese exports surged 50% in May from a year earlier, easily trouncing expectations for a 32% increase, according to a Reuters report citing a leaked statement from a Chinese official.

This information is an unconfirmed sneak peak of China's official trade report, which is expected to be released Thursday.
"The Chinese exports are still growing briskly and that implies that the world economy has thus weathered the financial instability in Europe," said Moody's chief economist John Lonski.
But Lonski also pointed out a negative side.
"The very high rates in [U.S.] unemployment are, in part, a consequence of the loss of jobs to less expensive manufacturing operations in countries such as China," he said.
0:00 /3:35Suicides plague a China factory
Lonski said the furniture manufacturing industry in the South has lost jobs in direct competition with China, contributing to the relatively high unemployment rates of 10.3% in Tennessee, 10% in North Carolina and 10.4% in South Carolina.
Peter Morici, an economist at the University of Maryland, said this dynamic is being fueled, in part, by China's system of currency fixing, which keeps the yuan undervalued.
"By not letting their currency appreciate, it keeps their products artificially cheap at the WalMart (WMT, Fortune 500) and makes U.S. products artificially expensive in China," he said. "So that keeps out our exports and drives their sales here."
But Morici said that this system won't last forever and it could actually undermine China in the future just as it undermines the U.S. today.
"With currency being the way it is, Chinese exports are going to grow like gangbusters until there's no market left in the U.S., until there's so much unemployment in the U.S. we stop buying [their products,]" he said.
But investors seemed to take the news at face value sending Shanghai's SSE Composite Index Stocks 2.78% higher on the in response. The exuberance spread to Wall Street: The Dow Jones industrial average, the Nasdaq and the S&P 500 all rallied by about 1%.
Not everyone shared in this exuberance. There's reason to doubt the leaked news on the Chinese export report, according to Marc Chandler, chief foreign exchange strategist for Brown Brothers Harriman: it might not be true.
"In my experience, I say that China doesn't leak," he said. "There's no doubt that the Chinese official said it - three different people heard him say it - but that doesn't mean that it's a genuine leak, and I wouldn't say it's a legitimate driver of the markets."
http://money.cnn.com/2010/06/09/news/international/china_export/index.htm
 
Crude futures cruise higher as Trichet comments lift euro Oil also gets lift as pressure on BP raises doubts about offshore drilling
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By Carla Mozee, MarketWatch & Nick Godt, MarketWatch

LOS ANGELES (MarketWatch) -- Crude-oil futures rose more than 1% Thursday as supportive comments from the European Central Bank eased concerns about the euro and growth in the region, and pressured the dollar.
The shared currency gained after ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet said the bank will keep in place its bond-buying efforts to boost liquidity.
Crude for July delivery recently rose $1.13 to stand at $75.50 a barrel.
Given mounting concerns about the impact of Europe's debt crisis on the region and global growth, the comments "saved the day" and brought back "appetite for risk," said Phil Flynn, vice president at futures trading and research firm PFGBest Research.
Investors also embraced risk again, and sold dollars, after the U.S. government said jobless claims fell by 3,000 to 456,000 in the latest week.
The dollar index [DXY] , which tracks the U.S. unit against a basket of six major currencies, recently fell 0.8% to 87.23. The euro [CUR_EURUSD] climbed above $1.21 in Thursday's session.
On Wednesday, crude rallied 3.3% after news that China's exports surged, the Energy Department reported a drop in U.S. inventories, and the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries maintained expectations for higher global oil demand for 2010. [more]
http://markets.usatoday.com/custom/...S&guid={FB3F6992-C2A7-4829-8048-B50524D10079}
 
SELL!!!!

That's great news for a vulture like myself - looking for value in all the existing pain.


But you can't act on it since you have no dry powder (G/F fund). 1,050 is a real gamble now - if we're lucky - 900 will hold for the rest of the year. I say there are NO takers when the weekly job claims and Q2 GDP report come in, and I am expecting both to MISS BIG. This is what happens when the market is propped up by stimuli and they end. As will the cap gains/divident tax cuts, which expire this year.

I still have some skin in the game (15%) and hoping against hope to be able to dump it like roadkill on the first up day. SELL
 
New home sales for July fell 12.4% month-over-month to an annualized rate of 276,000 units, which is well below the rate of 334,000 units that had been expected, on average
 
Interesting commentary by David Tepper, Hedge Fund guru. Avg. return 40% the last ten years. Heavy into financials starting March 2009. Gist of commentary is that equities are a good bet because a. the economy will get stronger on its own or b. the government will pour money in which will cause the economy to get stronger. Either way is good for the equities market. Good read! Usual disclaimers.

http://blogs.wsj.com/marketbeat/2010/09/24/david-tepper-his-top-10-stocks-in-the-second-quarter/
 
Bill Miller, Legg Mason, gave a very bullish interview on CNBC this am. Said market could be up 20% in next twelve months. Video will probably be posted on CNBC site.
 
Just think about all the poor slobs sitting in nowhere bonds - will they deserve to miss this bull market. What ever makes the bull happy is fine with me.
 
Maybe the stimulus isn't over?????:mad:

Fannie and Freddie may need another $215 billion
On Thursday October 21, 2010, 11:18 am
By Al Yoon
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Fannie Mae (OTC BB:FNMA.OB - News) and Freddie Mac (OTC BB:FMCC.OB - News) may need as much as $215 billion in additional capital from the Treasury through 2013 to offset losses and maintain a positive net worth, their federal regulator said on Thursday.

News
 
Wow, strong possibility for a red candlestick. I almost forgot it was possible to lose money in the stock market!
 
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