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billywows
    27-Mar-2007 21:53  
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Dow down 40 points and Nasdaq down 8 points now due to renewed subprime woes .... Consumer confidence data to be out soon at 2200hrs!
 
 
iPunter
    27-Mar-2007 08:50  
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But no problem at all if the Dow doesn't fall again...

Since higher and higher is 'juicier and juicier'... :)
 
 
iPunter
    27-Mar-2007 08:48  
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Cashier... we belong to the "Superleague of Dow Diviners" in Sharejunction... :)
 

 
tanglinboy
    27-Mar-2007 07:21  
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Drop very little only... -12 points nia.....
 
 
cashiertan
    27-Mar-2007 01:27  
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well i guess newmoon, ipunter and me is expecting dow to drop today. anybody else is getting it? i sense there is more to meets the eye. the market may head for another dip before we can see the sunshine again..
 
 
billywows
    26-Mar-2007 23:50  
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Weak new home sales pushing US market down ... But recovering only a bit now maybe due to below.
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Odds of rate cut up slightly after weak new home sales data
 

 
teeth53
    26-Mar-2007 23:30  
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DOWn opening, seem DOW is slowly climbing back..Flat for the day.

 
 
bsiong
    26-Mar-2007 22:38  
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Robert
    26-Mar-2007 22:37  
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Time to buy low sell high. Yeah! Dows -100
 
 
iPunter
    26-Mar-2007 08:04  
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The moon quarter also may trigger a fall at the same time... :(

Let's see if it's true...
 

 
cashiertan
    26-Mar-2007 06:09  
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Dow may dip on monday as the rally has been overbought slightly.
 
 
goldcarps
    25-Mar-2007 22:24  
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Not sure where the rate hike story come from? From the Taipei Times Frederic Mishkin is quoted saying inflation will slide,

http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/biz/archives/2007/03/25/2003353825

Mishkin says inflation will slide to 2 percent


BLOOMBERG
Sunday, Mar 25, 2007, Page 11

US Federal Reserve Governor Frederic Mishkin, the newest member of the central bank's board, said US inflation was poised to recede only "gradually" given the recent rise in fuel and energy prices.

The Fed's most closely watched measure of inflation should slow to about 2 percent from the current 2.25 percent, Mishkin said during a speech in San Francisco. Moving it below that would be difficult without a shift in monetary policy, he added.

"This process may take a while in light of the recent rebound in prices for gasoline and other petroleum products," Mishkin said in a speech Friday at a conference organized by the San Francisco Fed.

"A substantial further decline in inflation would require a shift in expectations, and such a shift could be difficult and time-consuming to bring about," he said.

The Fed has been successful in anchoring consumers and companies' outlook for prices, which means the central bank doesn't have to respond as aggressively as it did in the late 1970s, Mishkin said. His speech, which was a largely academic study of inflation over the past four decades, didn't mention current prospects for economic growth or this week's interest-rate decision.

Inflation -- as determined by the personal consumption expenditures price index, minus food and energy has been at or above the top of the 1 percent to 2 percent comfort zone identified by Chairman Ben Bernanke for more than two years.

Mishkin said higher fuel charges will seep through to core prices because companies will gradually pass increased energy costs on to their customers.

Mishkin said 2 percent is a reasonable estimate of current long-run expectations for inflation.

Policy makers voted unanimously on March 21 to keep their benchmark interest rate at 5.25 percent, the level it's been at since June. In the accompanying statement, the Fed dropped its tilt toward higher borrowing costs, while strengthening its language on inflation, calling it the "predominant concern."

Central bankers should be careful not to be lulled into a false sense of comfort by contained inflation expectations, Mishkin said in his speech.

"If the monetary authorities were to become complacent and to think that they could get away with not reacting to shocks that, in their mistaken view, no longer have the potential to cause inflation to rise persistently, then inflation expectations would surely become unhinged again," he said.

"Inflation has become less persistent over the past two decades, but the underlying trend may not yet be perfectly stable," Mishkin said.
This story has been viewed 132 times.

 
 
tanglinboy
    25-Mar-2007 21:43  
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Rate hikes again??!.... Are they playing mind games with the world or what... I thought I remember them saying something opposite a few weeks ago.
 
 
elfinchilde
    25-Mar-2007 16:53  
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cmi. market's too volatile for TA trades; not unless you're an excellent sprinter. elf moving all into FA plays for now (and using TA to call entry/exit points). enough profit from technical liao. shift strategy.
 
 
domlim88
    25-Mar-2007 08:10  
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Fed governor warns against rate hikes

Federal Reserve Governor Frederic Mishkin says keeping inflation in check may require rate increases.

 

 
domlim88
    25-Mar-2007 08:01  
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Fed governor warns against rate hikes

Federal Reserve Governor Frederic Mishkin says keeping inflation in check may require rate increases.

 
 
domlim88
    25-Mar-2007 03:05  
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please consider the geopolitical risk
 
 
billywows
    24-Mar-2007 22:23  
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MARKET SNAPSHOT
Stocks likely to gain next week; Bernanke in focus
 
 
iPunter
    24-Mar-2007 20:50  
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At this juncture, the 2-year Dow Chart is a valuable and revealing chart.

... especially for comparing the May-July 2006 correction with the present one.


After looking at this chart, and considering that the last correction lasted 2 months, the question most likely to be asked is :-

Is the current market 'dicier' than the last correction? (since the correction only started this month).
Any views?
 
 
macdhighprob
    24-Mar-2007 20:35  
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Updates on S&P500 and critical price levels to take note for next week trading

If S&P 500 manages to close above 1440.5 , it is bullish to maintain a positive look towards the index with target at 1450. 

More information can be found here



 
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