
Oo, now yr Boss long.
handon ( Date: 30-Sep-2009 21:52) Posted:
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If Dow doesn't close above 9630 tonight, confirmed wave 3 down already started. Intraday waves down already look very impulsive.
Dollar index resumes way up to the detriment of all markets!
thulasiappan ( Date: 30-Sep-2009 22:26) Posted:
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Agreed, sifus r farsighted n mind sharp.
Howerver, d 2 str earthquake in d Indian Ocean region today may sound an alarm of detonating another destructive under water volcano eruption n subsequently sending d deadly tsunami ard d region. Thats wat everybody dun want to see that happen again, but experts giving warning after d incidences.
Aceh, Indon, had not recovered fr d last calamity tsunami yet. God bless loh.
DOW down 119 points. Preparing for the rough ride tomorrow.
Good luck guys :) Already warned End Sept till Early Oct will be deadly
risktaker ( Date: 28-Sep-2009 22:18) Posted:
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ur boss/u dun wanna go with d flow.
handon ( Date: 30-Sep-2009 21:52) Posted:
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Dow down lah due to PMI 46.1(lower than expected 52), jialar STI tomorrow.
long now.... sure swee swee... hehe...

All is but betting...
Only hindsight will prove us right or wrong...
Because no one knows tomorrow...

today cannot get guthries, but got guocoleisre and a little metro.....in fact i buy with fear a little also to be honest...
it is always good to be right...but what so wrong to be wrong???
the fact that we are here is itself a wrong, right???..
Looks like tomorrow will be a Cheong Aaarrrhhh!!! day for the STI...
Those who bought at the lows today will be smiling to the ATM...

pre-empting market correction may result in losing money or make less money in bull-run.....best to stay calm if you have confidence in your long stock...
Continued Cheong Aaarrrhhh!!! by the Dow portends good strong situation...
But it must close strong to be reliable...

final push before correction :)
Today Mr Dow looks strong.
Cheers.
cheers !!! If cannot stay at 9900 in Sep, it will bypass it in Oct to go 10000...
my boss salted fish said can swim.... hehe...

NEW THAT MAY AFECT DOW AND STI 2Molo
Payrolls Probably Declined at Slower Pace: U.S. Economy Preview Share | Email | Print | A A A By Bob Willis Sept. 27 (Bloomberg) -- Employers probably cut fewer jobs in September and manufacturing expanded for a second month as the U.S. embarked on a tenuous recovery, economists said before reports this week. Payrolls fell by 180,000 workers, the smallest drop in a year, according to the median of 58 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey ahead of an Oct. 2 Labor Department report. Figures from a private group of purchasing managers may show factories advanced at the fastest pace in more than three years. The mixed figures explain why Federal Reserve policy makers last week said they will keep interest rates low for the foreseeable future. Another report may show household purchases jumped last month by the most in six years as the now-expired government’s “cash-for- clunkers” plan helped prop up consumers shaken by rising joblessness and stagnant wages. “The initial stages of the recovery will be gradual and uneven,” said Ryan Sweet, a senior economist at Moody’s Economy.com in West Chester, Pennsylvania. “The labor market holds the key. We need to see further moderation in payroll declines or risk unwinding the improvement in consumer spending.” The jobless rate this month probably climbed to 9.8 percent, the highest level since 1983, from 9.7 percent in August, according to economists surveyed by Bloomberg. Unemployment will reach 10 percent by the last quarter of 2009, a Bloomberg poll this month showed. Job Losses Payroll losses peaked at 741,000 in January, the most for a single month since 1949. The U.S. has lost 6.9 million jobs since the recession began in December 2007. While acknowledging that “economic activity has picked up,” the Fed last week said household spending “remains constrained by ongoing job losses, sluggish income growth, lower housing wealth, and tight credit.” The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index fell 2.2 percent last week, the biggest weekly drop since early July, as figures on home sales and business spending came in weaker than analysts anticipated. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg this month forecast the economy will grow at a 2.5 percent pace in the second half of the year after shrinking 3.9 percent in the 12 months to June, the biggest slump since quarterly records began in 1947. Revised figures from the Commerce Department on Sept. 30 may show the economy contracted at a 1.2 percent annual rate in the second quarter, more than the 1 percent pace previously estimated.
Jialah!
with so many good news, Dow continue to fall down!is it a correction?
don't know how STI will response.
my boss go home... bring some new $$$ to long DOW..... hehe...
