
Bailout Rejected
- ToonaRockGuy
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Wall Street Bailout = Karl Marx Proposal Number 5.
http://network.nationalpost.com/np/blog ... eback.aspx
http://network.nationalpost.com/np/blog ... eback.aspx
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I wasn't sticking my fingers in my ears and singing. I was simply stating what happen. I said yesterday that it will not stay down, and a smart person would have got in at that time. It going up today just proves my point. What happen made some investor rich and made another file for bankruptcy.JackANSI wrote:Care to speculate why? Could it be that your president is pushing hard for the bailout?f.sciarrillo wrote:The dow went back up 480 points today and oil went up 2.00 a barrel today.
I hate when people suddenly stick their fingers in their ears and sing.
Also, Bush is not my President. I didn't vote for him

Music Rocks!
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- lonewolf
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This is a fool's market right now. Volume is lowest I have seen in months. I am 70% cash, 20% bonds and 10% in a few stocks I bought at super-low prices on July 15. They are up significantly and I will probably sell them into any super-rally.
Pro traders who specialize in financials are not trading as long as the ban on shorting financials is in effect. This ban is scheduled to lift on Thursday (tomorrow). I think it will have more of an effect on financial stocks that this short-sighted "bail-out".
After last Monday's bloodbath, select financial stocks were still up to 50% higher than they were on the July 15 lows. Now they are at ridiculous levels and will probably be squashed by short selling as soon as the ban is lifted. Since financials are considered the leaders out of bear markets, they will drag the market down with them.
That might signal a buying opportunity.
I am glad that they raised the FDIC insurance limit to $250K...now there are enough different banks around here.
Pro traders who specialize in financials are not trading as long as the ban on shorting financials is in effect. This ban is scheduled to lift on Thursday (tomorrow). I think it will have more of an effect on financial stocks that this short-sighted "bail-out".
After last Monday's bloodbath, select financial stocks were still up to 50% higher than they were on the July 15 lows. Now they are at ridiculous levels and will probably be squashed by short selling as soon as the ban is lifted. Since financials are considered the leaders out of bear markets, they will drag the market down with them.
That might signal a buying opportunity.
I am glad that they raised the FDIC insurance limit to $250K...now there are enough different banks around here.
...Oh, the freedom of the day that yielded to no rule or time...
- ToonaRockGuy
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The only money that I have in stocks is my employee purchase plan at work. WalMart stock is amazingly stable. I contribute from each paycheck, and I can cash it in whenever I want. Right now, it's trading at $60.08 per share. It normally ranges anywhere from $58-$64. Some days it's lower, some days it's higher, but I've been watching it carefully, and like I said, it's amazingly stable.
Dood...
- DirtySanchez
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Best post in the whole thread.JackANSI wrote:And I say good.... Shows the people actually have some power once every few years...Hawk wrote:About 33% of all the house Republicans voted for it.
About 60% of all the house Democrats voted for it.
Mostly - they are afraid to vote for it and then go home and campaign for reelection. If this comes up after the election is over - they would vote for it. It's not their collective morality that stopped the bailout - It's a fear of losing their elections.
"You are now either a clueless inbred brownshirt Teabagger, or a babykilling hippie Marxist on welfare."-Songsmith
- lonewolf
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I can't think of a better defensive stock right now, Kevin. Even if they don't pass the previously $700 billion bill (compromise=spend more money) and the bottom drops out of the market, WalMart is positioned to benefit from the downturn. Hell, they could end up the last store standing.ToonaRockGuy wrote:The only money that I have in stocks is my employee purchase plan at work. WalMart stock is amazingly stable. I contribute from each paycheck, and I can cash it in whenever I want. Right now, it's trading at $60.08 per share. It normally ranges anywhere from $58-$64. Some days it's lower, some days it's higher, but I've been watching it carefully, and like I said, it's amazingly stable.

...Oh, the freedom of the day that yielded to no rule or time...
Much as I hate to admit, I have to agree. As prices go up on our utilities (and therefore, everything else), we can afford less and less material stuff. This is America, and material stuff is muy importante, so we don't stop buying stuff, we buy cheaper stuff. Wallyworld has cheap stuff.
It's kind of sad and pathetic... when we made stuff here, we prided ourselves on buying our own stuff. When those manufacturing jobs went to the lowest bidder/totalitarian regime overseas, we went to work in the retail sector... at WalMart, selling the stuff from the people who got our jobs. Now the only stuff we can afford to buy is at... WalMart. If an entrepreneur invents a widget, he has to sell it where people can afford to shop... at WalMart. WalMart says, "Here's what we're going to pay for this widget. If you want to manufacture it, your only choice is to have it made by the lowest bidder/totalitarian regime, because if you don't, they'll copy your widget and make it for us, anyway. If it doesn't work out for you, you always have a job waiting here... at WalMart."
And stuff.
----->JMS
It's kind of sad and pathetic... when we made stuff here, we prided ourselves on buying our own stuff. When those manufacturing jobs went to the lowest bidder/totalitarian regime overseas, we went to work in the retail sector... at WalMart, selling the stuff from the people who got our jobs. Now the only stuff we can afford to buy is at... WalMart. If an entrepreneur invents a widget, he has to sell it where people can afford to shop... at WalMart. WalMart says, "Here's what we're going to pay for this widget. If you want to manufacture it, your only choice is to have it made by the lowest bidder/totalitarian regime, because if you don't, they'll copy your widget and make it for us, anyway. If it doesn't work out for you, you always have a job waiting here... at WalMart."
And stuff.

- whitedevilone
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- bassist_25
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Sad, but true.songsmith wrote:Much as I hate to admit, I have to agree. As prices go up on our utilities (and therefore, everything else), we can afford less and less material stuff. This is America, and material stuff is muy importante, so we don't stop buying stuff, we buy cheaper stuff. Wallyworld has cheap stuff.
It's kind of sad and pathetic... when we made stuff here, we prided ourselves on buying our own stuff. When those manufacturing jobs went to the lowest bidder/totalitarian regime overseas, we went to work in the retail sector... at WalMart, selling the stuff from the people who got our jobs. Now the only stuff we can afford to buy is at... WalMart. If an entrepreneur invents a widget, he has to sell it where people can afford to shop... at WalMart. WalMart says, "Here's what we're going to pay for this widget. If you want to manufacture it, your only choice is to have it made by the lowest bidder/totalitarian regime, because if you don't, they'll copy your widget and make it for us, anyway. If it doesn't work out for you, you always have a job waiting here... at WalMart."
And stuff.----->JMS
I don't know if The American Dream is dead, but it's sure as hell been downsized.
"He's the electric horseman, you better back off!" - old sKool making a reference to the culturally relevant 1979 film.