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January 22, 2008 at 1:34 PM in reply to: My prediction: DOW -500 tomorrow Tuesday Jan 22, 08…. #140843January 22, 2008 at 1:34 PM in reply to: My prediction: DOW -500 tomorrow Tuesday Jan 22, 08…. #141067
robson
Participantlooks like apple sees a recession too
January 22, 2008 at 1:34 PM in reply to: My prediction: DOW -500 tomorrow Tuesday Jan 22, 08…. #141082robson
Participantlooks like apple sees a recession too
January 22, 2008 at 1:34 PM in reply to: My prediction: DOW -500 tomorrow Tuesday Jan 22, 08…. #141110robson
Participantlooks like apple sees a recession too
January 22, 2008 at 1:34 PM in reply to: My prediction: DOW -500 tomorrow Tuesday Jan 22, 08…. #141165robson
Participantlooks like apple sees a recession too
January 22, 2008 at 12:36 AM in reply to: My prediction: DOW -500 tomorrow Tuesday Jan 22, 08…. #140500robson
Participantwell futures now at -650 Dow and -70 SP. With European markets on their way to another -3 to 4%, I am at the point of asking not how ours can fall this much, but how it could fall this little. This is 2 days of pent up world wide crashing. Right now the main index that seems to have faired the BEST during that time is London, which has fallen about 7.5%, not 5.5% like the futures are showing. A lot of people are gonna be waking up in about 6 hours not knowing what is waiting for them.
January 22, 2008 at 12:36 AM in reply to: My prediction: DOW -500 tomorrow Tuesday Jan 22, 08…. #140722robson
Participantwell futures now at -650 Dow and -70 SP. With European markets on their way to another -3 to 4%, I am at the point of asking not how ours can fall this much, but how it could fall this little. This is 2 days of pent up world wide crashing. Right now the main index that seems to have faired the BEST during that time is London, which has fallen about 7.5%, not 5.5% like the futures are showing. A lot of people are gonna be waking up in about 6 hours not knowing what is waiting for them.
January 22, 2008 at 12:36 AM in reply to: My prediction: DOW -500 tomorrow Tuesday Jan 22, 08…. #140740robson
Participantwell futures now at -650 Dow and -70 SP. With European markets on their way to another -3 to 4%, I am at the point of asking not how ours can fall this much, but how it could fall this little. This is 2 days of pent up world wide crashing. Right now the main index that seems to have faired the BEST during that time is London, which has fallen about 7.5%, not 5.5% like the futures are showing. A lot of people are gonna be waking up in about 6 hours not knowing what is waiting for them.
January 22, 2008 at 12:36 AM in reply to: My prediction: DOW -500 tomorrow Tuesday Jan 22, 08…. #140765robson
Participantwell futures now at -650 Dow and -70 SP. With European markets on their way to another -3 to 4%, I am at the point of asking not how ours can fall this much, but how it could fall this little. This is 2 days of pent up world wide crashing. Right now the main index that seems to have faired the BEST during that time is London, which has fallen about 7.5%, not 5.5% like the futures are showing. A lot of people are gonna be waking up in about 6 hours not knowing what is waiting for them.
January 22, 2008 at 12:36 AM in reply to: My prediction: DOW -500 tomorrow Tuesday Jan 22, 08…. #140816robson
Participantwell futures now at -650 Dow and -70 SP. With European markets on their way to another -3 to 4%, I am at the point of asking not how ours can fall this much, but how it could fall this little. This is 2 days of pent up world wide crashing. Right now the main index that seems to have faired the BEST during that time is London, which has fallen about 7.5%, not 5.5% like the futures are showing. A lot of people are gonna be waking up in about 6 hours not knowing what is waiting for them.
January 18, 2008 at 12:39 PM in reply to: Hillary’s modest proposal (to wreck the housing market) #138170robson
ParticipantAre you suggesting that running an additional one-time deficit of 1% of GDP is worse than a recession?
If you wanna speak in absolutes, I would suggest a one-time deficit of 1% of GDP coupled with a recession is worse than a recession.
Personally, I doubt it will stave off recession, but I believe it might make it a slightly weaker recession. My question is whether the benefit outweighs the cost, which I doubt.
January 18, 2008 at 12:39 PM in reply to: Hillary’s modest proposal (to wreck the housing market) #138381robson
ParticipantAre you suggesting that running an additional one-time deficit of 1% of GDP is worse than a recession?
If you wanna speak in absolutes, I would suggest a one-time deficit of 1% of GDP coupled with a recession is worse than a recession.
Personally, I doubt it will stave off recession, but I believe it might make it a slightly weaker recession. My question is whether the benefit outweighs the cost, which I doubt.
January 18, 2008 at 12:39 PM in reply to: Hillary’s modest proposal (to wreck the housing market) #138406robson
ParticipantAre you suggesting that running an additional one-time deficit of 1% of GDP is worse than a recession?
If you wanna speak in absolutes, I would suggest a one-time deficit of 1% of GDP coupled with a recession is worse than a recession.
Personally, I doubt it will stave off recession, but I believe it might make it a slightly weaker recession. My question is whether the benefit outweighs the cost, which I doubt.
January 18, 2008 at 12:39 PM in reply to: Hillary’s modest proposal (to wreck the housing market) #138429robson
ParticipantAre you suggesting that running an additional one-time deficit of 1% of GDP is worse than a recession?
If you wanna speak in absolutes, I would suggest a one-time deficit of 1% of GDP coupled with a recession is worse than a recession.
Personally, I doubt it will stave off recession, but I believe it might make it a slightly weaker recession. My question is whether the benefit outweighs the cost, which I doubt.
January 18, 2008 at 12:39 PM in reply to: Hillary’s modest proposal (to wreck the housing market) #138478robson
ParticipantAre you suggesting that running an additional one-time deficit of 1% of GDP is worse than a recession?
If you wanna speak in absolutes, I would suggest a one-time deficit of 1% of GDP coupled with a recession is worse than a recession.
Personally, I doubt it will stave off recession, but I believe it might make it a slightly weaker recession. My question is whether the benefit outweighs the cost, which I doubt.
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