It took more than a month, but the major indices dove back to where they were on January 22-23, when the first signs of the economy in crisis really were becoming apparent.
Dow 12,040.39 -214.60; NASDAQ 2,220.50 -52.31; S&P 500 1,304.34 -29.36; NYSE Composite 8,765.41 -197.01
The Dow managed to close above the previous low of 11,971.19, though not by much, and the indication is that the intraday lows - in the 11,500 range - are certain to be tested.
On the S&P it was worse. That index closed below the Jan. 22 low of 1310.50. The NASDAQ, which had already cracked its low of 2292 on February 29, fell to a level not seen in 17 months.
The broad-based NYSE composite has fared the best of all, still, it is only 100 points above its prior closing low.
The declines were caused by the usual, persistent problems: housing, credit, inflation. There was a major mortgage financier default, but that's getting to be old news. The plunge toward total darkness continues.
There was no avoiding the cascade of stocks. Declining issues outnumbered advancers, 5327-976. Obviously, this is a tough market in which to pick winners. New lows surpassed new highs, 644-77.
Artificially high crude closed at another new high of $105.47, up 95 cents. Oil and gas prices are seriously out of control, though the higher the price goes, the more serious becomes the search and deployment of alternative energy supplies.
Gold dropped $14.20 to 974.30 and silver lost 56 cents to $20.23.
In one small smidgen of good news, Wal-Mart boosted its annual dividend. America apparently will keep shopping.
Tomorrow, the government's February employment report is released prior to the market open. It's difficult to envision a condition in which cooler heads will prevail if the labor situation is even better than anticipated, a paltry 35,000 new jobs created, and that's optimistic.
Look out below.
NYSE Volume 4,323,458,500
NASDAQ Volume 2,246,466,500
Thursday, March 6, 2008
Wednesday, March 5, 2008
Stocks on Roller Skates
US equities were buffeted around on Wednesday amid another flurry of generally disheartening news, finishing the day with modest gains.
According to the ADP National Employment Report (a privately-run survey of more than 500,000 businesses), private sector employment declined by 23,000 in February, with the majority of the losses occurring in businesses with more than 500 employees.
The report detailed that small businesses with less than 50 employees added 15,000 jobs in February, while those with over 500 employees lost 34,000. The difference was made up by medium-sized businesses which lost 4,000 jobs during the month.
According to Joel Prakken, Chairman of Macroeconomic Advisers, LLC, "employment among small-size businesses, defined as those with fewer than 50 workers, advanced just 15,000 during the month. While this employment growth contrasts with employment declines among medium- and large-size businesses, it is the smallest gain in employment among small-size businesses since November 2002."
An average of 3,960 bankruptcy petitions were filed per day nationally in February, up 18% from January and up 28% from the same period in 2007, according to Automated Access to Court Electronic Records, a bankruptcy data and management company.
At noon, shares of Ambac Financial were halted on reports that a deal to salvage the failing monoline insurer were imminent. An hour later, AP reported: "A group of banks was close to sewing together a rescue plan to keep Ambac from faltering under a weight of bad debt. However, an official announcement might be postponed as to not disrupt the markets, according to a person close to the talks who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the deal wasn't final." [emphasis mine]
So much for that idea. At 1:45, the AP reported that Ambac would issue up to $1 billion in new stock to raise funds to cover losses associated with their subprime mortgage exposure. Stocks tanked immediately on the news, turning all indices from positive to negative in a matter of minutes.
Ambac, which was trading around 11.30 when it was halted at noon, reopened at 9.54 around 1:35 pm.
Stocks wavered around the break-even line until just before 4:00 pm, when a late buying surge boosted all indices at the close.
Dow 12,254.99 +41.19; NASDAQ 2,272.81 +12.53; S&P 500 1,333.70 +6.95; NYSE Composite 8,962.42 +70.97
Advancing issues actually chalked up a win over losers, 3535-2699. New lows prevailed once again over new highs, however, 335-92.
Oil took another great leap forward, gaining a full $5.00 to close at yet another record high of $104.52. Gold blasted ahead $21.40 to $988.50 (record) and silver set another record at $20.79, gaining 95 cents (5%) on the day.
Wall Street and whomever is pulling the very long strings in the markets seem content to remain in denial about the state of the US economy, inflation and the wisdom of investing in stocks while all the evidence points to a crumbling, systemic failure.
Of course, like everything else the government has its fingers in, the markets are completely corrupted and have lost the confidence of many serious investors. Too bad, because the party in charge used to stand for free, open and trustworthy markets.
Friday's "official" non-farms payroll report from the Labor Dept. is likely to be fudged and massaged to show something positive, as opposed to the "unofficial" private ADP figures released today. Since the experts are only looking for gains of 25-35,000 jobs, anything better than that can be hailed as victory by the malignant financial press and prevent stocks from falling into a black hole.
Remember, keeping the economy on an even keel or at least presenting the case in a positive manner despite the facts is paramount to the designs of the fascist power regime in this election year. A new president will be elected and it must be either Hillary Clinton or John McCain, either of whom will keep the country "safe."
That's the plan and the world is being royally screwed by the process.
NYSE Volume 3,808,456,750
NASDAQ Volume 2,208,738,000
According to the ADP National Employment Report (a privately-run survey of more than 500,000 businesses), private sector employment declined by 23,000 in February, with the majority of the losses occurring in businesses with more than 500 employees.
The report detailed that small businesses with less than 50 employees added 15,000 jobs in February, while those with over 500 employees lost 34,000. The difference was made up by medium-sized businesses which lost 4,000 jobs during the month.
According to Joel Prakken, Chairman of Macroeconomic Advisers, LLC, "employment among small-size businesses, defined as those with fewer than 50 workers, advanced just 15,000 during the month. While this employment growth contrasts with employment declines among medium- and large-size businesses, it is the smallest gain in employment among small-size businesses since November 2002."
An average of 3,960 bankruptcy petitions were filed per day nationally in February, up 18% from January and up 28% from the same period in 2007, according to Automated Access to Court Electronic Records, a bankruptcy data and management company.
At noon, shares of Ambac Financial were halted on reports that a deal to salvage the failing monoline insurer were imminent. An hour later, AP reported: "A group of banks was close to sewing together a rescue plan to keep Ambac from faltering under a weight of bad debt. However, an official announcement might be postponed as to not disrupt the markets, according to a person close to the talks who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the deal wasn't final." [emphasis mine]
So much for that idea. At 1:45, the AP reported that Ambac would issue up to $1 billion in new stock to raise funds to cover losses associated with their subprime mortgage exposure. Stocks tanked immediately on the news, turning all indices from positive to negative in a matter of minutes.
Ambac, which was trading around 11.30 when it was halted at noon, reopened at 9.54 around 1:35 pm.
Stocks wavered around the break-even line until just before 4:00 pm, when a late buying surge boosted all indices at the close.
Dow 12,254.99 +41.19; NASDAQ 2,272.81 +12.53; S&P 500 1,333.70 +6.95; NYSE Composite 8,962.42 +70.97
Advancing issues actually chalked up a win over losers, 3535-2699. New lows prevailed once again over new highs, however, 335-92.
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Oil took another great leap forward, gaining a full $5.00 to close at yet another record high of $104.52. Gold blasted ahead $21.40 to $988.50 (record) and silver set another record at $20.79, gaining 95 cents (5%) on the day.
Wall Street and whomever is pulling the very long strings in the markets seem content to remain in denial about the state of the US economy, inflation and the wisdom of investing in stocks while all the evidence points to a crumbling, systemic failure.
Of course, like everything else the government has its fingers in, the markets are completely corrupted and have lost the confidence of many serious investors. Too bad, because the party in charge used to stand for free, open and trustworthy markets.
Friday's "official" non-farms payroll report from the Labor Dept. is likely to be fudged and massaged to show something positive, as opposed to the "unofficial" private ADP figures released today. Since the experts are only looking for gains of 25-35,000 jobs, anything better than that can be hailed as victory by the malignant financial press and prevent stocks from falling into a black hole.
Remember, keeping the economy on an even keel or at least presenting the case in a positive manner despite the facts is paramount to the designs of the fascist power regime in this election year. A new president will be elected and it must be either Hillary Clinton or John McCain, either of whom will keep the country "safe."
That's the plan and the world is being royally screwed by the process.
NYSE Volume 3,808,456,750
NASDAQ Volume 2,208,738,000
Tuesday, March 4, 2008
Market Dips Disguising Systemic Woes
For the second straight day, US equity markets mostly erased earlier losses and avoided facing the reality everyone owning stocks already knows: we're doomed.
High oil and gas prices continue to fuel unrelenting inflationary pressure which is putting pricing pressure on all manner of finished goods. From flooring to pastries, everything produced requires energy and transportation, and costs are spiraling out of control.
At the root of the dilemma is a stubborn Federal Reserve, which adamantly refuses to hold the line on interest rates in the face of screaming, double-digit inflation, instead focusing on "restoring growth" or "preventing recession" as its main objective.
Speaking before a banking group in Florida today, the Chairman expressed a need for banks to do more to prevent foreclosures. "Reducing the rate of preventable foreclosures would promote economic stability for households, neighborhoods and the nation as a whole," he said.
Bernanke went on to provide a solution that would be seemingly unpalatable to bankers in particular, saying, "Principal reductions that restore some equity for the homeowner may be a relatively more effective means of avoiding delinquency and foreclosure.''
In other words, Bernanke is asking the banks to forgive a portion (principal) of loans made to shaky buyers in the first place. Considering the sheer naivete of making such a remark to an audience of bankers, it's amazing that the chairman wasn't laughed out of the room.
One would imagine the normal response from any banker worth his salt would fall somewhere between "fat chance" and uncontrollable laughter.
On the other side of the ledger are responsible Americans who view such a bailout for delinquent homeowners a reward for bad behavior.
Underscoring the Chairman's remarks is the growing understanding that the housing predicament is not going to resolve itself and that it remains a considerable drain on the economy.
Meanwhile, the dollar continues to sink against other currencies, and especially against the price of oil, which oil ministers say is not their fault, but due more to the shaky US economy. It's a viscous cycle, and the evidence suggests Bernanke - and his henchman at Treasury, Hank Paulson - has no viable solution.
Dow 12,213.80 -45.10; NASDAQ 2,260.28 +1.68; S&P 500 1,326.75 -4.59; NYSE Composite 8,891.45 -78.94
Stocks sank on the news, then miraculously regained 3/4 of their losses by day's end. The continuing cycle of trimming losses late in the session has just about run its course. Not even the most adroit trader can fight the headwinds blowing against US stocks right now. Another significant downturn is currently more certain than ever.
While the headline closing prices may not be startling at all, the internals are eroding at a quickening pace. Declining issues thumped advancers again, 4058-2227. New lows New lows expanded the gap over new highs, 592-79.
Commodity traders took profits, sending oil lower by $2.93 to $99.52. Gold dropped $17.90 to $966.30. Silver shed 34 cents to $19.84.
The Dow, down more than 200 points at 2:00 pm, touched an intraday low of 12,032, its lowest point since January 23, another sign that capitulation is not far removed from the minds of burdened investors.
Those same investors will have plenty of data from which to extract any fragment of hope. ADP Employment, revised 4th quarter productivity numbers, factory orders, ISM Services Index and crude inventories are all on Wednesday's economic calendar. At 2:00 pm, the Fed's Beige Book, with minutes from the February meeting, is released.
And the week isn't even half over!
Hint: Friday prior to market open is the release of the monthly US labor report.
NYSE Volume 4,757,187,000
NASDAQ Volume 2,692,600,500
High oil and gas prices continue to fuel unrelenting inflationary pressure which is putting pricing pressure on all manner of finished goods. From flooring to pastries, everything produced requires energy and transportation, and costs are spiraling out of control.
At the root of the dilemma is a stubborn Federal Reserve, which adamantly refuses to hold the line on interest rates in the face of screaming, double-digit inflation, instead focusing on "restoring growth" or "preventing recession" as its main objective.
Speaking before a banking group in Florida today, the Chairman expressed a need for banks to do more to prevent foreclosures. "Reducing the rate of preventable foreclosures would promote economic stability for households, neighborhoods and the nation as a whole," he said.
Bernanke went on to provide a solution that would be seemingly unpalatable to bankers in particular, saying, "Principal reductions that restore some equity for the homeowner may be a relatively more effective means of avoiding delinquency and foreclosure.''
In other words, Bernanke is asking the banks to forgive a portion (principal) of loans made to shaky buyers in the first place. Considering the sheer naivete of making such a remark to an audience of bankers, it's amazing that the chairman wasn't laughed out of the room.
One would imagine the normal response from any banker worth his salt would fall somewhere between "fat chance" and uncontrollable laughter.
On the other side of the ledger are responsible Americans who view such a bailout for delinquent homeowners a reward for bad behavior.
Underscoring the Chairman's remarks is the growing understanding that the housing predicament is not going to resolve itself and that it remains a considerable drain on the economy.
Meanwhile, the dollar continues to sink against other currencies, and especially against the price of oil, which oil ministers say is not their fault, but due more to the shaky US economy. It's a viscous cycle, and the evidence suggests Bernanke - and his henchman at Treasury, Hank Paulson - has no viable solution.
Dow 12,213.80 -45.10; NASDAQ 2,260.28 +1.68; S&P 500 1,326.75 -4.59; NYSE Composite 8,891.45 -78.94
Stocks sank on the news, then miraculously regained 3/4 of their losses by day's end. The continuing cycle of trimming losses late in the session has just about run its course. Not even the most adroit trader can fight the headwinds blowing against US stocks right now. Another significant downturn is currently more certain than ever.
While the headline closing prices may not be startling at all, the internals are eroding at a quickening pace. Declining issues thumped advancers again, 4058-2227. New lows New lows expanded the gap over new highs, 592-79.
Commodity traders took profits, sending oil lower by $2.93 to $99.52. Gold dropped $17.90 to $966.30. Silver shed 34 cents to $19.84.
The Dow, down more than 200 points at 2:00 pm, touched an intraday low of 12,032, its lowest point since January 23, another sign that capitulation is not far removed from the minds of burdened investors.
Those same investors will have plenty of data from which to extract any fragment of hope. ADP Employment, revised 4th quarter productivity numbers, factory orders, ISM Services Index and crude inventories are all on Wednesday's economic calendar. At 2:00 pm, the Fed's Beige Book, with minutes from the February meeting, is released.
And the week isn't even half over!
Hint: Friday prior to market open is the release of the monthly US labor report.
NYSE Volume 4,757,187,000
NASDAQ Volume 2,692,600,500
Monday, March 3, 2008
Begging for Losses
A grizzled, experienced veteran of the trading floor once mentioned never to buy or sell stocks before ten o'clock or after three o'clock.
The reasoning, he explained, "that's when the big money is at work - the brokerages are placing heavy bets and once the momentum gets going, it takes a lot of money to move it in the other direction."
I've heeded this sage advice through many sessions of market-watching, trading and analysis, but the prescience of this wisdom has never been more prevalent than over the past two months, especially on the Dow.
Today was a perfect example of the volatility that often overwhelms inexperienced or fearful traders who are looking for safe entry points. Just before 10:00 am, stocks hit a low of 12,175. Everybody, it seemed was selling.
Of course, we all know what happened next. Stocks continued to climb, erasing most of the losses and leaving everyone with the impression that stocks were going down, but not much. No worries, people.
Dow 12,258.90 -7.49; NASDAQ 2,258.60 -12.88; S&P 500 1,331.34 +0.71; NYSE Composite 8,970.39 +7.93
Meanwhile, commodities continued their ceaseless march to record highs. Oil closed up 61 cents to $102.45. Gold was up another $9.20 to $984.20. Silver added 27 cents to $20.18. Just a week ago, silver could be had for $18 and change. Inflation has arrived in a very, very big way.
The internals, of course, tell a slightly different story than the nightly news. Declining issues once again sped ahead of advancers, 3750-2588. New lows carried the day again over new highs, 526-87. That spread continues to grow, indicating further price deterioration for stocks is in the offing.
To get an idea of the flavor in this ridiculous market, consider the running commentary from briefing.com, at 3:05. "Sellers now outpace buyers by 2-to-1 on the NYSE. Pessimism is broad based." Just to underscore the monstrosity of the market, the NYSE advance-decline line ended with losers ahead by a 6-5 margin. One would suppose that the pessimism, so "broad based" at 3:00, was washed completely away in the final hour of trading.
I reiterate. The US stock markets are rigged, to prevent stocks from falling too much, too fast. The money the Fed continues to supply the banks in terms of overnight, 14-day and clandestine, exotic, never-to-see-the-light-of-day loans over the discount window through auctions and other sinister devices, is going to eventually collapse the entire system.
Please, please, please, examine the chart at the right. It makes no sense in any way, unless you understand that the market is, has been and will be manipulated to avoid showing losses. The it all becomes crystal clear. Might as well not trade before 10:00 or after 3:00, just like the old guy said.
Banks are already unwilling to lend unless your credit record is perfect, so why must they continue to borrow from the Fed? They aren't loaning any out, so they must be... ah, there's the answer, shoring up their own feeble, nearly-penniless balance sheets which are fraught with accounting black holes.
We're sitting on top of a pile of bad checks that have been written by the major money center banks and Wall Street, the Fed and the high reaches of government continue to act like there's nothing going on. Business as usual. Ho-hum.
What an evil, bad joke is being played on the American public - investors or otherwise. While many cannot afford gas for their cars, heat for their homes or food for the hungry mouths of families, the slick Wall Street pitchmen are still touting equities over commodities, and they all know, some day, like it or not, there will be a reckoning, and it won't be a happy occasion. Until then, the phoniest party on the planet carries on.
NYSE Volume 3,933,841,000
NASDAQ Volume 2,128,272,500
The reasoning, he explained, "that's when the big money is at work - the brokerages are placing heavy bets and once the momentum gets going, it takes a lot of money to move it in the other direction."
I've heeded this sage advice through many sessions of market-watching, trading and analysis, but the prescience of this wisdom has never been more prevalent than over the past two months, especially on the Dow.
Today was a perfect example of the volatility that often overwhelms inexperienced or fearful traders who are looking for safe entry points. Just before 10:00 am, stocks hit a low of 12,175. Everybody, it seemed was selling.
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By 10:30, however, the Dow was nearly unchanged. It traded in a narrow range, staying just slightly to the downside all day... until just before 3:00. It made the low of the day, at 12,161, a loss of just more than 100 points, right before the clock struck three.The Path of Substantial Wealth and Riches: Your Parents' Influence on Your Finances
substantialincomes.com
Of course, we all know what happened next. Stocks continued to climb, erasing most of the losses and leaving everyone with the impression that stocks were going down, but not much. No worries, people.
Dow 12,258.90 -7.49; NASDAQ 2,258.60 -12.88; S&P 500 1,331.34 +0.71; NYSE Composite 8,970.39 +7.93
Meanwhile, commodities continued their ceaseless march to record highs. Oil closed up 61 cents to $102.45. Gold was up another $9.20 to $984.20. Silver added 27 cents to $20.18. Just a week ago, silver could be had for $18 and change. Inflation has arrived in a very, very big way.
The internals, of course, tell a slightly different story than the nightly news. Declining issues once again sped ahead of advancers, 3750-2588. New lows carried the day again over new highs, 526-87. That spread continues to grow, indicating further price deterioration for stocks is in the offing.
To get an idea of the flavor in this ridiculous market, consider the running commentary from briefing.com, at 3:05. "Sellers now outpace buyers by 2-to-1 on the NYSE. Pessimism is broad based." Just to underscore the monstrosity of the market, the NYSE advance-decline line ended with losers ahead by a 6-5 margin. One would suppose that the pessimism, so "broad based" at 3:00, was washed completely away in the final hour of trading.
I reiterate. The US stock markets are rigged, to prevent stocks from falling too much, too fast. The money the Fed continues to supply the banks in terms of overnight, 14-day and clandestine, exotic, never-to-see-the-light-of-day loans over the discount window through auctions and other sinister devices, is going to eventually collapse the entire system.
Please, please, please, examine the chart at the right. It makes no sense in any way, unless you understand that the market is, has been and will be manipulated to avoid showing losses. The it all becomes crystal clear. Might as well not trade before 10:00 or after 3:00, just like the old guy said.
Banks are already unwilling to lend unless your credit record is perfect, so why must they continue to borrow from the Fed? They aren't loaning any out, so they must be... ah, there's the answer, shoring up their own feeble, nearly-penniless balance sheets which are fraught with accounting black holes.
We're sitting on top of a pile of bad checks that have been written by the major money center banks and Wall Street, the Fed and the high reaches of government continue to act like there's nothing going on. Business as usual. Ho-hum.
What an evil, bad joke is being played on the American public - investors or otherwise. While many cannot afford gas for their cars, heat for their homes or food for the hungry mouths of families, the slick Wall Street pitchmen are still touting equities over commodities, and they all know, some day, like it or not, there will be a reckoning, and it won't be a happy occasion. Until then, the phoniest party on the planet carries on.
NYSE Volume 3,933,841,000
NASDAQ Volume 2,128,272,500
Friday, February 29, 2008
Stocks Back in the Tank; Investors Throwing in the Towels
Investors didn't need any more news to tell them to sell. They should have been selling all along. Some just got the memo today that, a) the economy is faltering, b) the US dollar continues to lose value in comparison to other currencies, c) gas prices are through the roof, d) food prices are following gas prices, e) the economy is headed for a deep recession, f) the Fed rate cuts don't matter, g) corporate profits have been slowing for the past six months, etc., etc.
Why go on? The news has been nothing but bad. In fact, it's worse. The news has been horrible with mentions of worst since 1981, largest drop in two decades, and the like.
Dow 12,266.39 -315.79; NASDAQ 2,271.48 -60.09; S&P 500 1,330.63 -37.05; NYSE Composite 8,962.46 -259.42
The decline today was not limited to any particular niche. All kinds of stocks were hit across all sectors. Declining issues beat advancers, 5206-1103, that's nearly a 5-to-1 ratio. New lows continued their dominance over new highs, 420-77, completing four straight months with new lows winning every day (except for two days in November).
There has not been a single day in 2008 in which there were more new highs than new lows. Get used to it, because things aren't going to get any better any time soon.
Oil priced a bit lower today, down a whole 71 cents to close the week at $101.84. Gold and silver hit new record highs again, at $975.00 and $19.92, respectively.
With the markets having taken another downturn, the next move should be to plumb the depths of January 22-23. The Dow closed today less than 300 points above the most recent closing low, though it is still 800 points above the intraday lows. Both could, and probably will, be tested within the next two weeks.
And by the way, did anyone see the rescue plan for Ambac Financial, the announcement of which sparked a 225-point rally on Friday? No? Really! I said previously that the announcement was bogus as is the supposed plan, along with S&P continuing to rate the company's debt at AAA. It was nothing but a sleazy, insider trick and the jig is up. The phony rally is over.
Wise words to follow: Gambling is the act of creating risk where there is none; investing is managing risk that exists. There's certainly plenty of downside risk to go around. Anybody buying now is engaging in gambling.
NYSE Volume 4,354,759,000
NASDAQ Volume 2,516,537,500
Why go on? The news has been nothing but bad. In fact, it's worse. The news has been horrible with mentions of worst since 1981, largest drop in two decades, and the like.
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So it should come as no surprise to anyone that stocks dropped like rocks over the past two days. We have thieves running Wall Street and imbeciles running the government.Forex Foreign Currency Exchange Trading Beginner's Resource Center.
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Dow 12,266.39 -315.79; NASDAQ 2,271.48 -60.09; S&P 500 1,330.63 -37.05; NYSE Composite 8,962.46 -259.42
The decline today was not limited to any particular niche. All kinds of stocks were hit across all sectors. Declining issues beat advancers, 5206-1103, that's nearly a 5-to-1 ratio. New lows continued their dominance over new highs, 420-77, completing four straight months with new lows winning every day (except for two days in November).
There has not been a single day in 2008 in which there were more new highs than new lows. Get used to it, because things aren't going to get any better any time soon.
Oil priced a bit lower today, down a whole 71 cents to close the week at $101.84. Gold and silver hit new record highs again, at $975.00 and $19.92, respectively.
With the markets having taken another downturn, the next move should be to plumb the depths of January 22-23. The Dow closed today less than 300 points above the most recent closing low, though it is still 800 points above the intraday lows. Both could, and probably will, be tested within the next two weeks.
And by the way, did anyone see the rescue plan for Ambac Financial, the announcement of which sparked a 225-point rally on Friday? No? Really! I said previously that the announcement was bogus as is the supposed plan, along with S&P continuing to rate the company's debt at AAA. It was nothing but a sleazy, insider trick and the jig is up. The phony rally is over.
Wise words to follow: Gambling is the act of creating risk where there is none; investing is managing risk that exists. There's certainly plenty of downside risk to go around. Anybody buying now is engaging in gambling.
NYSE Volume 4,354,759,000
NASDAQ Volume 2,516,537,500
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