More like a breath of hot air.Adam1226 wrote: Ann Coulter is always such a breath of fresh air : )
Who knows...maybe it's true, but I wouldn't make that conclusion based on the data presented in the article.

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More like a breath of hot air.Adam1226 wrote: Ann Coulter is always such a breath of fresh air : )
Who knows...maybe it's true, but I wouldn't make that conclusion based on the data presented in the article.
You might want to buy some EWJ puts to hedge your bets... They shouldn't cost too much (maybe 1% of your purchase price) and give you a lot of downside protection.murphy_p_t wrote: just bought ewj
+1000!!MediumTex wrote:More like a breath of hot air.Adam1226 wrote: Ann Coulter is always such a breath of fresh air : )
Who knows...maybe it's true, but I wouldn't make that conclusion based on the data presented in the article.
It could be that the machines doing all that HF trading don't care--and the people who care, like us, are a small part of the financial markets.MediumTex wrote: On the subject of our unpredictable world, it seems as if the Japanese nuclear disaster just keeps getting worse and worse, but for some reason the markets have simply stopped reacting to it.
That would have been very hard to predict.
I am shocked that the stock market has bounced back so much. The middle east is in chaos (more than the usual amount) and the third largest economy in the world is suffering a nuclear disaster, and it all seems to have been shrugged off as no big deal. That could of course change as these events play out.MediumTex wrote: On the subject of our unpredictable world, it seems as if the Japanese nuclear disaster just keeps getting worse and worse, but for some reason the markets have simply stopped reacting to it.
That would have been very hard to predict.
Back in the spring of 2008 when everyone was warning about trouble in the banking sector, the market dipped and then recovered, only to free fall later in the year. For those who had been listening to the talk about bad loans, housing bubbles, etc., the spring recovery provided some reassurance, but of a very deceptive kind. I checked back to 1929 and found that the same thing happened then.Pkg Man wrote:I am shocked that the stock market has bounced back so much. The middle east is in chaos (more than the usual amount) and the third largest economy in the world is suffering a nuclear disaster, and it all seems to have been shrugged off as no big deal. That could of course change as these events play out.MediumTex wrote: On the subject of our unpredictable world, it seems as if the Japanese nuclear disaster just keeps getting worse and worse, but for some reason the markets have simply stopped reacting to it.
That would have been very hard to predict.
Until they don't. I guess that's the purpose of the PP. We don't really know what's going to happen in the future, despite our hunches.MediumTex wrote: These cyclical bull markets within secular bears always end in tears.
To clarify what I mean, a cyclical bull market by definition ends in tears. If it doesn't end in tears it is the beginning of a new secular bull.clacy wrote:Until they don't. I guess that's the purpose of the PP. We don't really know what's going to happen in the future, despite our hunches.MediumTex wrote: These cyclical bull markets within secular bears always end in tears.
The media covered the BP Gulf Oil Spill story with much more vigor, and with more experts, than the Japan Nuclear Reactor Meltdown story. They're doing this even though the latter is potentially much, much worse in terms of local, regional, and planetary effect--and across many sectors/disciplines of human knowledge and awareness. It's as close to Armageddon as we humans have come, short of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki during WWII. Much more important to talk about right now, IMO, than Libya or anything else happening in the Middle East. (To be clear, all are important.)MediumTex wrote: I wish I could figure out why the media has basically stopped covering the Japanese nuclear story. It's like they are following the day to day developments (some outlets more than others), but they aren't drawing any larger conclusions about where this is headed. Maybe they just don't want to scare people (which is sort of weird, because normally that is exactly what the media wants to do).
You're almost making the contrarian argument as to why Japan is a buy.MediumTex wrote:
Japan has been in a secular bear market for stocks since 1989. When will it end? Once the Nikkei gains another 400% it will be within striking distance of the 1989 highs. I think that this miserable performance is part of why people are suspicious of the ability of quantitative easing to actually accomplish anything productive. Bad demographics don't help. Bad demographics and bad central bank policies can create incredibly bad outcomes.
Japan is old news, the media is always looking for the next big thing.smurff wrote:The media covered the BP Gulf Oil Spill story with much more vigor, and with more experts, than the Japan Nuclear Reactor Meltdown story. They're doing this even though the latter is potentially much, much worse in terms of local, regional, and planetary effect--and across many sectors/disciplines of human knowledge and awareness. It's as close to Armageddon as we humans have come, short of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki during WWII. Much more important to talk about right now, IMO, than Libya or anything else happening in the Middle East. (To be clear, all are important.)
this further proves the genius of the PP.Pkg Man wrote:I am shocked that the stock market has bounced back so much. The middle east is in chaos (more than the usual amount) and the third largest economy in the world is suffering a nuclear disaster, and it all seems to have been shrugged off as no big deal. That could of course change as these events play out.MediumTex wrote: On the subject of our unpredictable world, it seems as if the Japanese nuclear disaster just keeps getting worse and worse, but for some reason the markets have simply stopped reacting to it.
That would have been very hard to predict.