What heck going on
Now 2000 seems a bridge too far
Only another bad day to 1900 .......jez hope 1900 holds
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At least the S&P has a green arrow today
Least it didn't go below 1900 ..good sign
Friday morning before market Open: iquidity inflows had improved considerably by Thursday end of trading. Some positive fund inflows from large depositors signalled commitment to stop the market rout.
While positive Fed inflows Thursday were taken out by sheer force of selling, Fridays Fed inflows together with the large fund deposits pushed markets back into positive territory
kind regards
Hi. I came across this article today, and thought it might be of interest to others.
It talks about one of Buffets ways of measuring where the market is at, and has a few interesting graphs.
Also enjoyed the name of the author, Doug Short.
http://www.advisorperspectives.com/d...Cap-to-GDP.php
... large fund deposits confirmed by Al Cashing.
Further, 7,2b junk funds redeemed, some of which gone into government bonds = caution
... but bulk of Cash into the equity markets - small caps outperform currently
... anyway, in front of *1940_*1950 resistance, better be patient
kind regards
There's an old saying in the USA - race riots in the summer; stock market crashes in the fall
History repeating?
S&P500 to reach the magical 2,000 overnight?
Whoopee ....long may the merry go round keep going round and round
Good work Janet et al
19th July...6th August...History repeating?... or... Is it following a script being played out from the writings "There and Back Again" - A Hobbit's Tale by Bilbo Baggins ??
S&P500 closed at 1992...
2000 tomorrow you reckon Winner
Beware of the Dragon ????:mellow:
Probability of a crash is getting higher by the day using this methodology ....about 70% now
An arbitrary crash increment “C” say 25-30% of market value, a finite horizon h (in years), and the non-cyclical trajectory of the log-periodic bubble B (excluding the cosine term). Then p(crash) is the solution to the no-arbitrage condition p(crash)*C + (1-p(crash))*h*dB/dt = 0.