Home › Forums › Financial Markets/Economics › Insider Selling Peaks
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December 6, 2006 at 5:05 AM #8012December 6, 2006 at 2:18 PM #41266poorgradstudentParticipant
Yep, the market is overbought right now, by roughly 1-2%, but the specific companies listed are much more so. Google is WAY overvalued (classic great company, bad investment situation), Microsoft is coming off of a hot run, and by my valuations Kohls is also overpriced relative to the market as whole.
December 6, 2006 at 3:05 PM #41269sdrealtorParticipantBack in the mid-80’s, I was hanging out with my two best college friends doing things our parents wouldn’t approve of. On of my friends had inherited great wealth from his parents who bought IBM and never sold. To this day he still has it all and basically travels the world writing. I was lamenting my envy of his good fortune and wistfully hoping that someday I would find my IBM. The other friend, a comp sci major said there’s a little company that is going to change the world. It just went public, so buy their stock and never sell it. Fortunately I bought it. I did sell some several years ago but can’t imagine selling anymore anytime soon. Gotta love that MSFT!
December 7, 2006 at 3:04 PM #41309santeemanParticipantMaybe not for long, did you see this today…….
Stocks close lower ahead of November jobs report
By Tim Paradis
ASSOCIATED PRESS2:11 p.m. December 7, 2006
NEW YORK – Stocks declined for a second straight session Thursday as Wall Street grew nervous ahead of the government’s November jobs creation report and its implications for the health of the overall economy.
The skittishness came despite upbeat news from the Labor Department, which said, as expected, that the number of newly laid off workers seeking unemployment benefits fell last week by the largest amount in six months. A spike in jobless claims last week stirred concern among investors that perhaps the economy was losing steam too quickly. Fluctuations tend to be wider around the holidays and Friday’s Labor Department report should provide some clarity about the labor market.December 7, 2006 at 4:39 PM #41312powaysellerParticipantThe insiders are selling because they know this market is ready to take a nose dive. There are other indicators too. The Big Picture has some commentary lately about their leading indicators, which show that the market is ready to go down. Also something about the Dow Transports not going up with the Dow, and the bond market pricing in a recession. But there has been talk of manipulation too.
“There is no doubt that there is major manipulation going on holding this market up this high, so we are really fighting the house shorting this market.” – Chris Johnston’s blog, Monday.
Once the market starts to dive, I’m going to move more money into bear funds. My husband is going to put some into the inverse NASDAQ. In the short term, I think I can earn a better return on shorting the index funds, than on rising gold.
This market is a big fat bloated pig, as Don Harrold likes to say. I’m ready for the big drop – got my inverse index funds in place.
December 8, 2006 at 7:56 PM #41377powaysellerParticipantEconomic Storm Brewing in America
Insider selling is highest since records were kept 20 years ago. Ratio is 60:1
Eric Janszen:
“So perhaps we get a rapid “Ka” event after another quarter or two of the slow motion housing bubble meltdown. There will be a crisis soon. It is imminent. It will likely occur no later than the end of Q1 2007 but perhaps as soon as the end of the current quarter. Whatever USIPs and private equity firms are into, I’m getting out of. They will soon all be selling at the same time.”
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