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February 10, 2008 at 11:06 AM #151068February 10, 2008 at 11:06 AM #151086NewtoSanDiegoGuest
Bubblesitter, you sound like you might have your act together.
There are other dudes on this site that are suggesting a total financial collapse. I guess that would put us in a great depression.
There’s always a nut job holding up the sign “The END is Near”, even if times are great.
What do you guys think of % likelihood of a systemic financial collapse? Equivalent to the great depression.
February 10, 2008 at 11:06 AM #151159NewtoSanDiegoGuestBubblesitter, you sound like you might have your act together.
There are other dudes on this site that are suggesting a total financial collapse. I guess that would put us in a great depression.
There’s always a nut job holding up the sign “The END is Near”, even if times are great.
What do you guys think of % likelihood of a systemic financial collapse? Equivalent to the great depression.
March 13, 2008 at 6:19 AM #168483BubblesitterParticipantDow futures this morning are sharply lower. It has certainly been another roller coaster this week on Wall street. The credit crunch seems to be intensifing.
Looks like many investors have become very risk averse.
I’m still a gold bull, looks likely it will very shortly surpass the $1000 threshold. Still much lower than the $2000+ inflation adjusted gold prices during the 70s stagflation period. It has progressively become a larger and larger percentage of my portfolio in the past couple years.
Bubblesitter
March 13, 2008 at 6:19 AM #168810BubblesitterParticipantDow futures this morning are sharply lower. It has certainly been another roller coaster this week on Wall street. The credit crunch seems to be intensifing.
Looks like many investors have become very risk averse.
I’m still a gold bull, looks likely it will very shortly surpass the $1000 threshold. Still much lower than the $2000+ inflation adjusted gold prices during the 70s stagflation period. It has progressively become a larger and larger percentage of my portfolio in the past couple years.
Bubblesitter
March 13, 2008 at 6:19 AM #168816BubblesitterParticipantDow futures this morning are sharply lower. It has certainly been another roller coaster this week on Wall street. The credit crunch seems to be intensifing.
Looks like many investors have become very risk averse.
I’m still a gold bull, looks likely it will very shortly surpass the $1000 threshold. Still much lower than the $2000+ inflation adjusted gold prices during the 70s stagflation period. It has progressively become a larger and larger percentage of my portfolio in the past couple years.
Bubblesitter
March 13, 2008 at 6:19 AM #168842BubblesitterParticipantDow futures this morning are sharply lower. It has certainly been another roller coaster this week on Wall street. The credit crunch seems to be intensifing.
Looks like many investors have become very risk averse.
I’m still a gold bull, looks likely it will very shortly surpass the $1000 threshold. Still much lower than the $2000+ inflation adjusted gold prices during the 70s stagflation period. It has progressively become a larger and larger percentage of my portfolio in the past couple years.
Bubblesitter
March 13, 2008 at 6:19 AM #168917BubblesitterParticipantDow futures this morning are sharply lower. It has certainly been another roller coaster this week on Wall street. The credit crunch seems to be intensifing.
Looks like many investors have become very risk averse.
I’m still a gold bull, looks likely it will very shortly surpass the $1000 threshold. Still much lower than the $2000+ inflation adjusted gold prices during the 70s stagflation period. It has progressively become a larger and larger percentage of my portfolio in the past couple years.
Bubblesitter
April 5, 2008 at 7:34 AM #181402BubblesitterParticipantHey NewtoSanDiego,
There seems to be a higher risk of systemic financial collapse, the recent Bear Stearns fiasco strongly point out how fragile the system really is.
There is a separate thread on this topic
http://piggington.com/world_turned_upside_downBubblesitter
April 5, 2008 at 7:34 AM #181413BubblesitterParticipantHey NewtoSanDiego,
There seems to be a higher risk of systemic financial collapse, the recent Bear Stearns fiasco strongly point out how fragile the system really is.
There is a separate thread on this topic
http://piggington.com/world_turned_upside_downBubblesitter
April 5, 2008 at 7:34 AM #181443BubblesitterParticipantHey NewtoSanDiego,
There seems to be a higher risk of systemic financial collapse, the recent Bear Stearns fiasco strongly point out how fragile the system really is.
There is a separate thread on this topic
http://piggington.com/world_turned_upside_downBubblesitter
April 5, 2008 at 7:34 AM #181450BubblesitterParticipantHey NewtoSanDiego,
There seems to be a higher risk of systemic financial collapse, the recent Bear Stearns fiasco strongly point out how fragile the system really is.
There is a separate thread on this topic
http://piggington.com/world_turned_upside_downBubblesitter
April 5, 2008 at 7:34 AM #181455BubblesitterParticipantHey NewtoSanDiego,
There seems to be a higher risk of systemic financial collapse, the recent Bear Stearns fiasco strongly point out how fragile the system really is.
There is a separate thread on this topic
http://piggington.com/world_turned_upside_downBubblesitter
June 26, 2008 at 12:23 PM #228895BubblesitterParticipantI’m still holding to my original strategy.
Dow is getting hammered today due to Oil.
Credit crunch is intensifing.
Banks are downgrading each other.
This is getting increasingly ugly.
Bubblesitter
June 26, 2008 at 12:23 PM #229015BubblesitterParticipantI’m still holding to my original strategy.
Dow is getting hammered today due to Oil.
Credit crunch is intensifing.
Banks are downgrading each other.
This is getting increasingly ugly.
Bubblesitter
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