JSnowWinterfell
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- 64
Have you got a link to any reliable source that agrees with your opinion here? Because it flies in the face of what the regulators are saying, and statements made over the weekend.Ultimately we are going to see bailouts similar to those provided to the banks during the crisis.
The DB element is not mine. But the key to a 100% equity strategy is conviction; if times like now make you nervous and have you questioning the plan, then perhaps the plan’s not for you.
The “maybe this storm is different” narrative is a dangerous one. Different to what? 9/11, the Global Financial Crisis, the Cubam Missile Crisis, World War II? Markets will recover.
Have you got a link to any reliable source that agrees with your opinion here? Because it flies in the face of what the regulators are saying, and statements made over the weekend.
Forgive my ignorance, but what exactly does this post mean? Or more, what are you trying to say?Outside of WWII, none of these crises were both demand and supply side.
my gut feeling is that until we see the cases in the US stop increasing the markets will not calm.
Have you got a link to any reliable source that agrees with your opinion here? Because it flies in the face of what the regulators are saying, and statements made over the weekend.
Forgive my ignorance, but what exactly does this post mean? Or more, what are you trying to say?
I can fully understand the sentence in the context of oil prices, but in terms of the overall stock market conversation, I'm at a loss.
A bit late - the poster had already clarified what they meant.What did regulators say pre 2008?
Yes, makes perfect sense...Supply side - dried up companies can't produce
Demand side - dried up, no demand
Supply side - dried up companies can't produce
When did the truth start to matter?...Is this the case?
I saw your post yesterday asking if banks were lending 10 times what they have in deposits, so I've a good understanding of your knowledge of banking.
Yes, but even if you invested exclusively in European stocks, you're still up. Significantly.
You need to look at total return indexes, not just price. Large Cap European stocks pay higher dividends than US stocks.
You're still talking about price, not total return. I'll help you along and point you to an article to read:Yes but the point is
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