
lausk22...
Would you kindly touch on the pitfalls of playing penny stocks too?
The bull is old, tired and vulnerable. There is a debt pyramid in the financial markets that makes credit contraction and a liquidity shock inevitable. Sometime next year, American housing will cause the global ATM machine to spew leprosy, not cash. Stock markets will crash. The next big emerging markets blow-up will be intercontinental and far reaching, with almost no place to hide.
In this scenario, sell everything, sit on cash and go to the beach.
The writer is director with the Asian Bond Market Forum and can be reached at: Michael@michaelpreiss.net
ehhhhhh.....well u can have a share of their profits through these:
Be positive. Be pennywise. And make monies picking up pennies....
Suppose, for example, a minute is worth one penny. You spot a penny lying on the street but pass it by because it's hardly worth the effort of leaning over to pick it up. But suppose you began to double that penny each day for a month. At the end of a week, you would only have 64 pennies. That's not much maybe, but at the end of a month you would have 536,870,912 pennies. Translated into dollars, that's $5,368,709.12.
You need not go on holiday....
You can simply... "huan huan kou wei" and play they penny stocks for a change. who knows..
your TA skills may be adaptable to these things too?
I may have to go on a trading holiday this year.... ZZZzzz
yes billywows, Stats, Chartered, Creative, Utac, Venture may follow Nasdad. my guess is 2 % fall.
There are alot of hot money flowing around the world.
But these money could be borrowed money.So when crash ,it will really crash.
Just look at the private equity.
There have been many reports on the global economy going forward. The comments are diverse. Do read this latest report by Michael Preiss (director of Asian Bond Market Forum) very carefully. It is in stark contrast to reports which paint a rosy outlook for the global economy in 2008 and beyond.
Business Times 17 January 2007, Buy fear, Sell Greed
Liquidity is flooding the markets, but as every easy money boom in history has shown, nothing lasts forever.
Winston Churchill?s tribute to the RAF pilot who dissed the Luftwaffe in the Battle of Britain could be an apt metaphor for the liquidity tsunami that has swept the global financial markets. Never have so many junk assets owed so much to the epic money pump of so few central bankers, who have now managed to re-price risk down to zero.
The best and brightest in finance are all optimists for 2007. And why not? The VIX index ? the CBOE Volatility Index or greed-fear gauge ? is at a decade low at 11. Goldilocks (it means
is alive and kicking. The entire world has gone ballistic for risk : Chinese banks at six times book value, Third World debt risk spreads the narrowest in history, 150% returns in
In Dubai, for example, there is 95% financing on speculative real estate deals, 120 brokers on the Dubai Financial Market to trade 30 shares (of which 5 actually trade) and extravagant, unreal projects full of hot air (US$50 billion cities in the Sinai desert).
Inflation in our times is not the CPI but the exponential rise in credit, monetary aggregates and asset prices. When the US Fed responded to the
What could derail the global business cycle in 2007? The household borrowing binge and property bubble have now ended. Like internet shares in the 1990s, trillions of dollars invested in speculative real estate all over the world are now at grave risk as
My recommended anti-dollar money hedges? Norwegian kroners, Russian roubles,
If all is hunky-dory in the
The smart money and hedge funds who are already strongly positioned on the short side know that credit booms built on leverage and property speculation are destined to end in liquidity shocks and recession. The contagion in
The Fed cannot ease (cut interest rate) as Wall Street naively expects, amid such monetary madness. Watch the Treasury bond yield hit 5%, gold and oil fall below US$400 and US$35 respectively.
The bull is tired and vulnerable. There is debt pyramid in the financial markets that makes credit contraction and a liquidity shock inevitable. Sometime next year, American housing will cause the global ATM machine to spew leprosy, not cash. Stock markets will crash. The next big emerging markets blow-up will be intercontinental and far reaching, with almost no place to hide.
In this scenario, sell everything, sit on cash and go to the beach
People are getting used to having bird flu around, that's my guess. The very first year, panic? Yes. 2nd year? Yes... but getting aquainted to it. 3rd year? A little jittery. OK. Getting by ok... year after year, it's like a recurring illness. I heard it on CNN yesterday and they even called in BirdFlu season! Just like the Flu Season in north America.
Seriously, besides the 3rd world countries where you have a few casualities each year (sorry to sound a little too indifferent to it), not much impact on 1st world countries.
And I hope I am right about it. In that way, stock markets do not get rocked by it too much.