Re: Financial topics
Posted: Fri May 08, 2015 10:34 pm
aedens, , the reason why I posted such a ha ha link to a video is that there is a lot of bogus "information", lies, shills, and manipulators in the financial world. He appears to be playing a game, or as he says an "experiment", and implies he has something up his sleeve, which reminds me of the Rothschild, Waterloo and London exchange myth. https://mises.ca/posts/articles/the-end ... hild-myth/ --- It will be interesting to see if it is ( most likely ) a joke, or something else.
------------------------------------------
http://www.businessinsider.com/markets- ... -24-2015-5
The big disconnect in the US stock market just keeps getting bigger.
A new Bank of America Merrill Lynch survey published Thursday finds that US investors have pulled $99 billion out of equities year-to-date — including net outflows in 11 of the past 12 weeks — despite stock prices continuing to break record highs.
This week also saw the biggest outflows from equity ($17.2 billion) and high-yield bond funds ($2.6 billion) this year. This data follows a similar report from BAML last month that showed investors pulled $79 billion from the stock market this year and nine of 10 weeks to that point.
As this imbalance grows, Bank of America writes, so does the risk of something we haven't seen in the market in years: a correction.
-----------------------------------------
cheers
------------------------------------------
http://www.businessinsider.com/markets- ... -24-2015-5
The big disconnect in the US stock market just keeps getting bigger.
A new Bank of America Merrill Lynch survey published Thursday finds that US investors have pulled $99 billion out of equities year-to-date — including net outflows in 11 of the past 12 weeks — despite stock prices continuing to break record highs.
This week also saw the biggest outflows from equity ($17.2 billion) and high-yield bond funds ($2.6 billion) this year. This data follows a similar report from BAML last month that showed investors pulled $79 billion from the stock market this year and nine of 10 weeks to that point.
As this imbalance grows, Bank of America writes, so does the risk of something we haven't seen in the market in years: a correction.
-----------------------------------------
cheers