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October 12, 2008 at 3:35 PM in reply to: Cramer predicts DOW 4700 by Tuesday (1995ish levels) #286418October 12, 2008 at 3:35 PM in reply to: Cramer predicts DOW 4700 by Tuesday (1995ish levels) #286712
HereWeGo
ParticipantThe futures must be paying attention to Craaamuh … they’re up like gangbusters right now.
Of course, that can change in the blink of an eye. It’s strange seeing the Dow futures down triple digits or up triple digits and thinking “Yeah, what’s new?”
Actually, the big news is probably that the Lehman Bros CDS swap auction only produced 6B in losses, when losses were projected as high as 400B.
October 12, 2008 at 3:35 PM in reply to: Cramer predicts DOW 4700 by Tuesday (1995ish levels) #286729HereWeGo
ParticipantThe futures must be paying attention to Craaamuh … they’re up like gangbusters right now.
Of course, that can change in the blink of an eye. It’s strange seeing the Dow futures down triple digits or up triple digits and thinking “Yeah, what’s new?”
Actually, the big news is probably that the Lehman Bros CDS swap auction only produced 6B in losses, when losses were projected as high as 400B.
October 12, 2008 at 3:35 PM in reply to: Cramer predicts DOW 4700 by Tuesday (1995ish levels) #286757HereWeGo
ParticipantThe futures must be paying attention to Craaamuh … they’re up like gangbusters right now.
Of course, that can change in the blink of an eye. It’s strange seeing the Dow futures down triple digits or up triple digits and thinking “Yeah, what’s new?”
Actually, the big news is probably that the Lehman Bros CDS swap auction only produced 6B in losses, when losses were projected as high as 400B.
October 12, 2008 at 3:35 PM in reply to: Cramer predicts DOW 4700 by Tuesday (1995ish levels) #286760HereWeGo
ParticipantThe futures must be paying attention to Craaamuh … they’re up like gangbusters right now.
Of course, that can change in the blink of an eye. It’s strange seeing the Dow futures down triple digits or up triple digits and thinking “Yeah, what’s new?”
Actually, the big news is probably that the Lehman Bros CDS swap auction only produced 6B in losses, when losses were projected as high as 400B.
HereWeGo
ParticipantI agree with you as well, patient. Defaulters are defaulters, perhaps with the exception of those who are driven to BK by medical bills or the like.
Too many Americans are defaulting on student loans, credit cards, auto loans, and of course mortgages. Perhaps they think they’re sticking it to “the man.” I wonder if they’ll still think that once their standard of living crashes.
The thing that’s really unfortunate is that everyone is being dragged down into the profligates’ abyss.
HereWeGo
ParticipantI agree with you as well, patient. Defaulters are defaulters, perhaps with the exception of those who are driven to BK by medical bills or the like.
Too many Americans are defaulting on student loans, credit cards, auto loans, and of course mortgages. Perhaps they think they’re sticking it to “the man.” I wonder if they’ll still think that once their standard of living crashes.
The thing that’s really unfortunate is that everyone is being dragged down into the profligates’ abyss.
HereWeGo
ParticipantI agree with you as well, patient. Defaulters are defaulters, perhaps with the exception of those who are driven to BK by medical bills or the like.
Too many Americans are defaulting on student loans, credit cards, auto loans, and of course mortgages. Perhaps they think they’re sticking it to “the man.” I wonder if they’ll still think that once their standard of living crashes.
The thing that’s really unfortunate is that everyone is being dragged down into the profligates’ abyss.
HereWeGo
ParticipantI agree with you as well, patient. Defaulters are defaulters, perhaps with the exception of those who are driven to BK by medical bills or the like.
Too many Americans are defaulting on student loans, credit cards, auto loans, and of course mortgages. Perhaps they think they’re sticking it to “the man.” I wonder if they’ll still think that once their standard of living crashes.
The thing that’s really unfortunate is that everyone is being dragged down into the profligates’ abyss.
HereWeGo
ParticipantI agree with you as well, patient. Defaulters are defaulters, perhaps with the exception of those who are driven to BK by medical bills or the like.
Too many Americans are defaulting on student loans, credit cards, auto loans, and of course mortgages. Perhaps they think they’re sticking it to “the man.” I wonder if they’ll still think that once their standard of living crashes.
The thing that’s really unfortunate is that everyone is being dragged down into the profligates’ abyss.
HereWeGo
ParticipantI like the synergies of this merger … one bankruptcy is much more efficient than two bankruptcies.
HereWeGo
ParticipantI like the synergies of this merger … one bankruptcy is much more efficient than two bankruptcies.
HereWeGo
ParticipantI like the synergies of this merger … one bankruptcy is much more efficient than two bankruptcies.
HereWeGo
ParticipantI like the synergies of this merger … one bankruptcy is much more efficient than two bankruptcies.
HereWeGo
ParticipantI like the synergies of this merger … one bankruptcy is much more efficient than two bankruptcies.
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