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Stocks are heading down! SELL NOW!!
Technical analysis in the stock market reveals a pattern emerging that started a few days ago (part of a larger pattern that has been going on for months) showing there should be a BIG decline in stocks over the next week, starting tomorrow.
The nasdaq will probably decline more than the dow on a percentage basis. The coming decline could last a month, and stocks will likely end up way down by the end of the year. Diversification will not help much, this will be an across-the-board sell off. :( :mad: :2 cents: |
link plz
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picture the ocean as the market
now picture google as a big tsunami tide goes low to feed tsunami here comes a wall of money heh |
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I take market advice from Gfy'ers AND unsolicted email with hot stock tips.
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ok i am frantically selling every share i own cos you said so with no evidence. do you think i should sell my house? should i leave my girlfriend also?
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This is not news link yet since it is still a prediction. Here is a good book on technical analysis:
Technical Analysis of Stock Trends, 8th Edition Here is another excellent book talking about a bigger decline (I'm just predicting a big one month sell-off) Conquer the Crash |
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Real Estate will probably do ok for the short term, but I would sell any investment properties now while the market is near historic highs. I'm not sure about your girlfriend, post a pic? |
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:pimp |
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When everyone is selling is the best time to buy something.
That's the first rule of Warren Buffet's investing strategy. |
I bought 100 AMD stocks at 14.65 about a week ago.
Should I hold or sell? I think in about three months it will be back up to 17 to 18. |
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Just posting here so I can find it later.
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things are trending downward over the next month? I'm willing to bet anyone on this board who does get into stocks, isn't selling day to day or month to month, but rather over years... and over years the market trends upwards... something like 30% profit over 10 years on average? grr this discussion is moot who listens end post now
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quote from a recent article about trend-following:
"Fear is stronger than greed, which is why financial markets fall more rapidly than they climb. Most investors will say the sentence above is common knowledge. But if so, why then do most investors fail to act on what they know? The failure I have in mind is the behavior toward risk, namely: The average investor is risk averse toward a known gain, but is risk seeking toward a certain loss. When a stock goes up in price, individuals will sell too soon, especially when that stock has outperformed the broader market. They avoid risk by locking in the gain. When a stock goes down, individuals won't sell soon enough, especially when that loser has underperformed the market. They are willing to risk even deeper declines, rather than to cut their certain losses. Study after study bears out this truth, both in controlled experiments and in the data reflecting the gains & losses of actual investors. Published results from firms like Dalbar Financial and Vanguard consistently show that over the past 20 years, individual investors and mutual fund shareholders have had average returns that are half (at best) of the annual returns of the broader stock market. What's more, these same studies and surveys also show that most investors are overconfident in the decisions they make. Put another way, they don't even know that they are their own worst enemy." |
Its going to keep falling. Just watch the metals markets gold, silver, and platinum are all way down.
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At betonmarkets.com you can get 12 to 1 returns on long shot bets, so I made some smaller bets there, for example I get 1000% return if the dow hits 9500 anytime between now and June 3rd. |
hope not, I keep most of my money in the market :(
I think everything will be fine though :glugglug |
by low, sell high :glugglug
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I'd also add in a mix of people not wanting to admit to themselves that their choices might be wrong. I came across a sort of contest (I believe I read it on Motley Fool, but it was a long time ago and the memory is fuzzy) where a group of people was given (as I recall) $500,000 to invest and a year to maximize return. As it turned out, the people who invested a great deal of time researching their stocks and became convinced that the companies they invested in were the right places to put their money all ended up earning less... it turns out that by convincing themselves of how RIGHT they were by choosing the stocks they did blinded them somewhat to the reality when their choices underperformed, leading to bad returns (or losses) compared to others who had less conviction and therefore more mobility in their investment strategy. |
Well despite the positive unemployment numbers stocks were mostly down today (friday), although the semicounductors did well and propped up the nasdaq, the dow and S&P were both down more than 1%, russell 2000 was down 2.5%
I still think we will see bigger declines early next week on monday and tuesday, with stocks being a lot lower by the end of the month. |
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