Home › Forums › Financial Markets/Economics › Opinions : Stay greedy or take my gains ?
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May 7, 2009 at 11:35 AM #394981May 7, 2009 at 2:55 PM #395277sdduuuudeParticipant
FLU – call it the “middle of the ‘W’ recovery.”
The gov is basically borrowing money to get out of debt and putting lipstick on lots of pigs (banks). In the short term, it fees up credit and makes for the appearance of a recovery, but we are still in deep doo-doo so the second hammer must fall eventually.
Also, it seems that the housing crash was really a bubble pop based on inflated asset prices. The effects of this have hit employment, but it seems the effects of reduced employment haven’t hit the economy yet.
The slowness with which economies move is always amazing to me.
May 7, 2009 at 2:55 PM #395135sdduuuudeParticipantFLU – call it the “middle of the ‘W’ recovery.”
The gov is basically borrowing money to get out of debt and putting lipstick on lots of pigs (banks). In the short term, it fees up credit and makes for the appearance of a recovery, but we are still in deep doo-doo so the second hammer must fall eventually.
Also, it seems that the housing crash was really a bubble pop based on inflated asset prices. The effects of this have hit employment, but it seems the effects of reduced employment haven’t hit the economy yet.
The slowness with which economies move is always amazing to me.
May 7, 2009 at 2:55 PM #394865sdduuuudeParticipantFLU – call it the “middle of the ‘W’ recovery.”
The gov is basically borrowing money to get out of debt and putting lipstick on lots of pigs (banks). In the short term, it fees up credit and makes for the appearance of a recovery, but we are still in deep doo-doo so the second hammer must fall eventually.
Also, it seems that the housing crash was really a bubble pop based on inflated asset prices. The effects of this have hit employment, but it seems the effects of reduced employment haven’t hit the economy yet.
The slowness with which economies move is always amazing to me.
May 7, 2009 at 2:55 PM #395082sdduuuudeParticipantFLU – call it the “middle of the ‘W’ recovery.”
The gov is basically borrowing money to get out of debt and putting lipstick on lots of pigs (banks). In the short term, it fees up credit and makes for the appearance of a recovery, but we are still in deep doo-doo so the second hammer must fall eventually.
Also, it seems that the housing crash was really a bubble pop based on inflated asset prices. The effects of this have hit employment, but it seems the effects of reduced employment haven’t hit the economy yet.
The slowness with which economies move is always amazing to me.
May 7, 2009 at 2:55 PM #394610sdduuuudeParticipantFLU – call it the “middle of the ‘W’ recovery.”
The gov is basically borrowing money to get out of debt and putting lipstick on lots of pigs (banks). In the short term, it fees up credit and makes for the appearance of a recovery, but we are still in deep doo-doo so the second hammer must fall eventually.
Also, it seems that the housing crash was really a bubble pop based on inflated asset prices. The effects of this have hit employment, but it seems the effects of reduced employment haven’t hit the economy yet.
The slowness with which economies move is always amazing to me.
May 7, 2009 at 8:00 PM #395005Chris Scoreboard JohnstonParticipantYou should always have your exit strategy before any investment or trade. This stops you from getting into an emotional decision once in an investment.
Whatever your original exit strategy was should be followed, if you did not have one you should exit now and feel lucky that an investment that was spot on but had no exit plan made a gain.
I tell people who are learning to trade this all the time and it never sinks in until they get into this dilemma.
May 7, 2009 at 8:00 PM #395278Chris Scoreboard JohnstonParticipantYou should always have your exit strategy before any investment or trade. This stops you from getting into an emotional decision once in an investment.
Whatever your original exit strategy was should be followed, if you did not have one you should exit now and feel lucky that an investment that was spot on but had no exit plan made a gain.
I tell people who are learning to trade this all the time and it never sinks in until they get into this dilemma.
May 7, 2009 at 8:00 PM #395418Chris Scoreboard JohnstonParticipantYou should always have your exit strategy before any investment or trade. This stops you from getting into an emotional decision once in an investment.
Whatever your original exit strategy was should be followed, if you did not have one you should exit now and feel lucky that an investment that was spot on but had no exit plan made a gain.
I tell people who are learning to trade this all the time and it never sinks in until they get into this dilemma.
May 7, 2009 at 8:00 PM #394751Chris Scoreboard JohnstonParticipantYou should always have your exit strategy before any investment or trade. This stops you from getting into an emotional decision once in an investment.
Whatever your original exit strategy was should be followed, if you did not have one you should exit now and feel lucky that an investment that was spot on but had no exit plan made a gain.
I tell people who are learning to trade this all the time and it never sinks in until they get into this dilemma.
May 7, 2009 at 8:00 PM #395224Chris Scoreboard JohnstonParticipantYou should always have your exit strategy before any investment or trade. This stops you from getting into an emotional decision once in an investment.
Whatever your original exit strategy was should be followed, if you did not have one you should exit now and feel lucky that an investment that was spot on but had no exit plan made a gain.
I tell people who are learning to trade this all the time and it never sinks in until they get into this dilemma.
May 7, 2009 at 10:37 PM #395328paramountParticipantForget your financial strategy – what people need is a spiritual strategy!
May 7, 2009 at 10:37 PM #395056paramountParticipantForget your financial strategy – what people need is a spiritual strategy!
May 7, 2009 at 10:37 PM #395470paramountParticipantForget your financial strategy – what people need is a spiritual strategy!
May 7, 2009 at 10:37 PM #395275paramountParticipantForget your financial strategy – what people need is a spiritual strategy!
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