Home › Forums › Financial Markets/Economics › How high will it go?
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March 16, 2009 at 12:36 PM #367693March 16, 2009 at 3:59 PM #367507SD RealtorParticipant
Damn you FLU!!!!
You gotta tell OB to shut his piehole up!!
Nostra I am doing exactly EXACTLY what you said about tracking the 29 crash. It is happening alot faster right?
October 9th 2007 Dow was at 14164.
March 9 2009 Dow was at 6457So essentially we have had about a 55% decline in a matter of 17 months.
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August 26 1928 Dow was at 380.
Dec 1930 Dow hit around the 170 mark which is the equivalent of the 55% decline. The timeframes are pretty darn close are they not?March 16, 2009 at 3:59 PM #367710SD RealtorParticipantDamn you FLU!!!!
You gotta tell OB to shut his piehole up!!
Nostra I am doing exactly EXACTLY what you said about tracking the 29 crash. It is happening alot faster right?
October 9th 2007 Dow was at 14164.
March 9 2009 Dow was at 6457So essentially we have had about a 55% decline in a matter of 17 months.
*********
August 26 1928 Dow was at 380.
Dec 1930 Dow hit around the 170 mark which is the equivalent of the 55% decline. The timeframes are pretty darn close are they not?March 16, 2009 at 3:59 PM #367823SD RealtorParticipantDamn you FLU!!!!
You gotta tell OB to shut his piehole up!!
Nostra I am doing exactly EXACTLY what you said about tracking the 29 crash. It is happening alot faster right?
October 9th 2007 Dow was at 14164.
March 9 2009 Dow was at 6457So essentially we have had about a 55% decline in a matter of 17 months.
*********
August 26 1928 Dow was at 380.
Dec 1930 Dow hit around the 170 mark which is the equivalent of the 55% decline. The timeframes are pretty darn close are they not?March 16, 2009 at 3:59 PM #367220SD RealtorParticipantDamn you FLU!!!!
You gotta tell OB to shut his piehole up!!
Nostra I am doing exactly EXACTLY what you said about tracking the 29 crash. It is happening alot faster right?
October 9th 2007 Dow was at 14164.
March 9 2009 Dow was at 6457So essentially we have had about a 55% decline in a matter of 17 months.
*********
August 26 1928 Dow was at 380.
Dec 1930 Dow hit around the 170 mark which is the equivalent of the 55% decline. The timeframes are pretty darn close are they not?March 16, 2009 at 3:59 PM #367674SD RealtorParticipantDamn you FLU!!!!
You gotta tell OB to shut his piehole up!!
Nostra I am doing exactly EXACTLY what you said about tracking the 29 crash. It is happening alot faster right?
October 9th 2007 Dow was at 14164.
March 9 2009 Dow was at 6457So essentially we have had about a 55% decline in a matter of 17 months.
*********
August 26 1928 Dow was at 380.
Dec 1930 Dow hit around the 170 mark which is the equivalent of the 55% decline. The timeframes are pretty darn close are they not?March 16, 2009 at 6:24 PM #367911Diego MamaniParticipantWow Nostra and SD-R, are you saying that we should get out of stocks ASAP?
History is a wonderful teacher, and people ignore it at their peril. Thanks for sharing the graph.
In addition to crash periods depicted (Great Depression, 1973 oil shock, dot-com), would you consider a period such as 1965-1982?
The Dow fluctuated around 1000 all those 17 years. Only in 1982 we passed that level for good. Could we have another 15-20 years where the Dow dances up and down the 6500 or 7000 mark without making much progress?
We could buy dividend-paying stocks every time the market dips (or appears to dip). History also shows that dividends dropped far less than stock prices during the Great Depression. Of course, there’s no guarantee that dividends won’t be decimated this time around (witness GE dividend cut from $1.24 to $0.40 in Feb 2009).
Diego “Threadkiller” Mamani
March 16, 2009 at 6:24 PM #367304Diego MamaniParticipantWow Nostra and SD-R, are you saying that we should get out of stocks ASAP?
History is a wonderful teacher, and people ignore it at their peril. Thanks for sharing the graph.
In addition to crash periods depicted (Great Depression, 1973 oil shock, dot-com), would you consider a period such as 1965-1982?
The Dow fluctuated around 1000 all those 17 years. Only in 1982 we passed that level for good. Could we have another 15-20 years where the Dow dances up and down the 6500 or 7000 mark without making much progress?
We could buy dividend-paying stocks every time the market dips (or appears to dip). History also shows that dividends dropped far less than stock prices during the Great Depression. Of course, there’s no guarantee that dividends won’t be decimated this time around (witness GE dividend cut from $1.24 to $0.40 in Feb 2009).
Diego “Threadkiller” Mamani
March 16, 2009 at 6:24 PM #367592Diego MamaniParticipantWow Nostra and SD-R, are you saying that we should get out of stocks ASAP?
History is a wonderful teacher, and people ignore it at their peril. Thanks for sharing the graph.
In addition to crash periods depicted (Great Depression, 1973 oil shock, dot-com), would you consider a period such as 1965-1982?
The Dow fluctuated around 1000 all those 17 years. Only in 1982 we passed that level for good. Could we have another 15-20 years where the Dow dances up and down the 6500 or 7000 mark without making much progress?
We could buy dividend-paying stocks every time the market dips (or appears to dip). History also shows that dividends dropped far less than stock prices during the Great Depression. Of course, there’s no guarantee that dividends won’t be decimated this time around (witness GE dividend cut from $1.24 to $0.40 in Feb 2009).
Diego “Threadkiller” Mamani
March 16, 2009 at 6:24 PM #367795Diego MamaniParticipantWow Nostra and SD-R, are you saying that we should get out of stocks ASAP?
History is a wonderful teacher, and people ignore it at their peril. Thanks for sharing the graph.
In addition to crash periods depicted (Great Depression, 1973 oil shock, dot-com), would you consider a period such as 1965-1982?
The Dow fluctuated around 1000 all those 17 years. Only in 1982 we passed that level for good. Could we have another 15-20 years where the Dow dances up and down the 6500 or 7000 mark without making much progress?
We could buy dividend-paying stocks every time the market dips (or appears to dip). History also shows that dividends dropped far less than stock prices during the Great Depression. Of course, there’s no guarantee that dividends won’t be decimated this time around (witness GE dividend cut from $1.24 to $0.40 in Feb 2009).
Diego “Threadkiller” Mamani
March 16, 2009 at 6:24 PM #367759Diego MamaniParticipantWow Nostra and SD-R, are you saying that we should get out of stocks ASAP?
History is a wonderful teacher, and people ignore it at their peril. Thanks for sharing the graph.
In addition to crash periods depicted (Great Depression, 1973 oil shock, dot-com), would you consider a period such as 1965-1982?
The Dow fluctuated around 1000 all those 17 years. Only in 1982 we passed that level for good. Could we have another 15-20 years where the Dow dances up and down the 6500 or 7000 mark without making much progress?
We could buy dividend-paying stocks every time the market dips (or appears to dip). History also shows that dividends dropped far less than stock prices during the Great Depression. Of course, there’s no guarantee that dividends won’t be decimated this time around (witness GE dividend cut from $1.24 to $0.40 in Feb 2009).
Diego “Threadkiller” Mamani
March 16, 2009 at 6:56 PM #367779MayerParticipant^You can add another DOW component, Alcoa, to the list. 82% dividend reduction.
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Alcoa-unveils-plan-to-cut-apf-14657710.html
March 16, 2009 at 6:56 PM #367612MayerParticipant^You can add another DOW component, Alcoa, to the list. 82% dividend reduction.
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Alcoa-unveils-plan-to-cut-apf-14657710.html
March 16, 2009 at 6:56 PM #367816MayerParticipant^You can add another DOW component, Alcoa, to the list. 82% dividend reduction.
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Alcoa-unveils-plan-to-cut-apf-14657710.html
March 16, 2009 at 6:56 PM #367323MayerParticipant^You can add another DOW component, Alcoa, to the list. 82% dividend reduction.
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Alcoa-unveils-plan-to-cut-apf-14657710.html
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