WorkFE's Account Talk

Just as a reminder I grabbed a significant portion of this most recent rally and I am grateful for those gains. I expect a short term pull back to the 800 level. By going to the G I have afforded myself a break and possibly when I return a few extra %'s in gains. This move is short term. My job at certain times requires my undivided attention and do to those I serve I would not want to let them down.
I am also following the SS signals that CH post along with some others very valuable input (I surely miss SB, he is my counter balance to Birch)and alot of listening and researching. I believe in a buy and hold stratedgy but I also believe that those who subscribe to this concept, if they new when the market was going to drop significantly, would pull out short term and reenter to maximize their gains. Most choose not to because market timing can be painful and expensive.

I surely hope everyone has a great day and goodluck today:)
 
Pschiffdicpal If you were attempting to make a point I apologize for not getting it.
I some how interprited what you said as having some how offended you?

Any way pleasant surprise today for those who stuck it out. Congrats:)
 
Now Chipdip mind your manners.

Just to clarify, I’m NOT calling anyone on/or this Site a NIZE I’m Call out the handler/Bureaucrats who make the rules (TSP) about our money. Bman its infuriating: mad: to not have the say so with our/your money (hard earned)

For future ref if I m say or writing about (commenting) TSP TALK will refer to site. TSP refers to our handlers:mad: All the people are great here, I enjoy the interaction.:)
 
Troubled trucker YRC to seek $1 bln pension bailout

To think TARP money would actually go towards helping out hard working people is a joke. Sorry YRC the banks used the last of it paying out big bonuses and a couple of CEO vacations.
 
I agree - VIX now reading 31.16 down 1.96. We could be seeing the continuation of the buying stampede - keep your feet on the lily pad and you'll be safe from being trampled by all the hoofs as they charge Dow 9,000. Hesitation can be expensive.
 
Hesitation does not cost me anything if it was not mine to begin with. However I do hate missing out on nice additional gains.
 
hey work!

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bye work!

j/k buddy, today was a good day, it is so hard sometimes to just sit there and watch it go down... up.... down, i figure ill hold on through all of it. just cant move back to G, not with all the room left to make up.
 
Hesitation does not cost me anything if it was not mine to begin with. However I do hate missing out on nice additional gains.

Was'nt todays jump on low volume??? buying over the broad market???

More buying then selling on low volume....mmmm setup for bear claws in the back... short snort....ferdtheturd:rolleyes:
 
Chipdip,

What do you think will happen when the volume does make a show - a couple of 400 point days would be my prediction. I'm staying in front of this train catching the next 2,000 points. You think this is a sucker's rally and safety is your best choice - let me make the money.
 
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA. Keeping me smiling is a good thing. If some investors are profiting from the upswing its a good thing. If M72 can take back top 5 its a good thing. And last but not least if BT continues to have something to tease us with it is absolutely the best thing.
 
Today seemed like the calm before the storm.
Now do those on the Lilly get left behind or do those in risk get swallowed up.
What to do, what to do.
 
Chipdip,

What do you think will happen when the volume does make a show - a couple of 400 point days would be my prediction. I'm staying in front of this train catching the next 2,000 points. You think this is a sucker's rally and safety is your best choice - let me make the money.


DJI 36,000,000 in the last ten mins trading would signal fear...:sick::notrust: Some want to keep there money....................... good luck bman dont stay to long..........bear paws on the shoulders:embarrest: my mommie told me about bears like you..... Im not that kind of trader:worried:
 
He likes the fear, it is absolute adrenalinized motivation. Fear is not always a bad emotion, that and instinctive training served me well for many years.

America hasn't learned its lesson
Sure they have, they just don't stay disciplined over time.

Tomorrows a new day and with it a new opening bell.:)
 
He likes the fear, it is absolute adrenalinized motivation. Fear is not always a bad emotion, that and instinctive training served me well for many years.


Since Bman as lighting up the boards about the VIX heres some counter INFO. from chipdip


America hasn't learned its lesson
Sure they have, they just don't stay disciplined over time.

Tomorrows a new day and with it a new opening bell.

By: Jeff Cox, CNBC.com | 19 May 2009 | 03:18 PM ET
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A sharp decline in the stock volatility gauge has convinced many that fear has left the market, but it's unclear whether investors have gotten the message.




A New York Stock Exchange trader.



Wall Street was abuzz Tuesday that the Chicago Board Options Exchange's Volatility Index [VIX 28.8 --- UNCH (0) ] had dipped below 30, a key psychological barrier whose importance was magnified because the last time the index closed there was prior to the implosion of Lehman Brothers last September. As the VIX has plummeted, stocks have soared from their March lows and many on Wall Street are hoping the trend will continue.
"This is certainly a positive for the market," says Quincy Krosby, chief investment strategist at The Hartford. "It's apparent investors believe this market is headed higher at least in the short term, albeit with days that you're going to see the market sell off with a little bit of profit-taking."
Yet there remained concern that even with the VIX hitting lows, the state of the market remains uncertain.
The 30 percent rally off the March lows has come on mostly low volume. Monday's surge of nearly 3 percent across the board saw barely 1.3 billion shares traded on the New York Stock Exchange, numbers associated more closely with mid-summer than the tail end of earnings season.


Volume is traditionally slow in the summertime, and market pros say this year is unlikely to be any different.
"The oxygen for the bulls is volume," Krosby says. In Monday's rally, "The volume was not heavy enough for the bulls to declare an out-and-out victory. The breadth was very good, but for the bulls to declare victory the volume needs to pick up."
There's also the matter of what constitutes low volatility these days.
A year ago, before the financial crisis hit its peak with the fall of Lehman, the VIX closed just above 17. At that point, 20 on the VIX was considered high and 30 was associated with full-bore panic.
But then the VIX zoomed past 80, at one point hitting an intraday high of 89, and the definition of volatility changed. Now, 30 seems benign, but that too could change.
"Investors are tip-toeing back into risky assets," says Lawrence Creatura, equity market strategist and portfolio manager at Federated Clover Capital Advisers. "It's classic in what has occurred in the sense that volatility and risk aversion tend to spike over very short time periods and are only repaired over longer time periods."



The VIX has managed to repair much of the damage since the manic swings of November and March, when investors were filled with uncertainty over President Obama's plans to fix the banking crisis and whether the new White House would be friendly to Wall Street.
Uncertainty, though, takes many forms, and Creatura believes investors still aren't convinced about the state of affairs.
"What I would describe as uncertainty in the market has increased in the scope of different dimensions," he says. "In the housing market we've seen some increase in uncertainty, in the commodities market I think we've seen some increases in uncertainty, and inflation--people are a little less sure of what occurs next."
At the same time, the move in the VIX itself is being greeted with some suspicion and even disdain.
Traders with a shorter-term view of the market actually like volatility—within reasonable limits. Swings in stock prices present chances for nimble investors to move in and out of positions and make money.
Options traders had been betting heavily against a rise in VIX gains, and Wednesday's futures contract expiration will spell bad news for many of them.
Of the more than 2.1 million VIX contracts expiring tomorrow, more than a third are calls, or bets that the index was going higher. And most of them will expire out of the money, according to an analysis from Interactive Brokers.
With the VIX moving lower, traders could get caught in another trap, the firm said.

"This brief analysis highlights the springboard rally for stocks as overly pessimistic conditions fade," Interactive Brokers said in a note to clients. "As they do, watch for investors to overdo the volatility decline. As we keep noting, we're still not out of the woods yet."
As for the market, though, the lack of volume combined with the air coming out of the VIX could mean good things.
A debate has raged over whether the stock gains have been the product of a bear market rally or if there's something more long-term afoot.
"I almost see (the low volume) as a positive because it shows there's not overwhelming optimism in the market. That means its' not being overdone," says Richard Sparks, senior analyst at Schaeffer's Investment Research in Cincinnati. "Not everyone is buying in yet and not everyone is on the bandwagon. That's part of the reason why (the rally is) so sustainable."
 
The VIX currently has the throttle wide open. Currently at a 12% gain. That is why they call it the Volatility Index.

GM bondholders fight back
(don't take it lying down)

Monopoly Anyone
 
awesome work.. work :)

thanks for that positive piece, you know i love em!

this is the type of thing that will fuel (no pun in intended) the return to optimism in our country...Motivated motivated motivated!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Optimism

or the short version....

Optimism is "an inclination to put the most favorable construction upon actions and events or to anticipate the best possible outcome".[1] It is the philosophical opposite of pessimism. Optimists generally believe that people and events are inherently good, so that most situations work out in the end for the best.

BAM
 
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