Re: Financial topics
Posted: Fri Jan 06, 2012 11:50 am
AAII reports bearish investor sentiment near record lows.
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/bearish-i ... ecord-lows
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/bearish-i ... ecord-lows
Generational theory, international history and current events
https://www.gdxforum.com/forum/
I coded the previous post to confuse the bots.aedens wrote: For now on the bots are on there own.
Sentiment numbers can sometimes stay low for a long time but overall I am getting that April 1930 feeling. Like everyone is thinking the worst is over, only to be disappointed. The pessimists at this point seem to be worn out from being too pessimistic, while the optimists seem vindicated. Being a pessimist myself, saying the same thing over and over and being wrong does get old (as in the market is going to make a new low in November or the market is going to crash in November - both of which I did say). Once saying that gets old and I feel really stupid, that's when I might finally be right. That seems to be the pattern. Though it's also interesting to note that even though the stock market has made very little progress in over 2 months, somehow that has made people more optimistic.ohmeohmy wrote:AAII reports bearish investor sentiment near record lows.
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/bearish-i ... ecord-lows
For the first time since the financial crisis, positions in over-the-counter (OTC)Higgenbotham wrote:Sentiment numbers can sometimes stay low for a long time but overall I am getting that April 1930 feeling. Like everyone is thinking the worst is over, only to be disappointed. The pessimists at this point seem to be worn out from being too pessimistic, while the optimists seem vindicated. Being a pessimist myself, saying the same thing over and over and being wrong does get old (as in the market is going to make a new low in November or the market is going to crash in November - both of which I did say). Once saying that gets old and I feel really stupid, that's when I might finally be right. That seems to be the pattern. Though it's also interesting to note that even though the stock market has made very little progress in over 2 months, somehow that has made people more optimistic.ohmeohmy wrote:AAII reports bearish investor sentiment near record lows.
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/bearish-i ... ecord-lows
Oh, I've been hearing "the worst is over" for 3 years now. The unemployment rate dropped to 8.5 percent and many people are celebrating. I happen to be a rather pessimistic person, meaning that I don't expect this to continue much longer. One European country after another is collapsing. The United States is staying stagnant... for now.Higgenbotham wrote:Sentiment numbers can sometimes stay low for a long time but overall I am getting that April 1930 feeling. Like everyone is thinking the worst is over, only to be disappointed. The pessimists at this point seem to be worn out from being too pessimistic, while the optimists seem vindicated. Being a pessimist myself, saying the same thing over and over and being wrong does get old (as in the market is going to make a new low in November or the market is going to crash in November - both of which I did say). Once saying that gets old and I feel really stupid, that's when I might finally be right. That seems to be the pattern. Though it's also interesting to note that even though the stock market has made very little progress in over 2 months, somehow that has made people more optimistic.ohmeohmy wrote:AAII reports bearish investor sentiment near record lows.
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/bearish-i ... ecord-lows
Collapse? Not this quarter. http://fofoa.blogspot.com/search?update ... -results=1Trevor wrote:Oh, I've been hearing "the worst is over" for 3 years now. The unemployment rate dropped to 8.5 percent and many people are celebrating. I happen to be a rather pessimistic person, meaning that I don't expect this to continue much longer. One European country after another is collapsing. The United States is staying stagnant... for now.Higgenbotham wrote:Sentiment numbers can sometimes stay low for a long time but overall I am getting that April 1930 feeling. Like everyone is thinking the worst is over, only to be disappointed. The pessimists at this point seem to be worn out from being too pessimistic, while the optimists seem vindicated. Being a pessimist myself, saying the same thing over and over and being wrong does get old (as in the market is going to make a new low in November or the market is going to crash in November - both of which I did say). Once saying that gets old and I feel really stupid, that's when I might finally be right. That seems to be the pattern. Though it's also interesting to note that even though the stock market has made very little progress in over 2 months, somehow that has made people more optimistic.ohmeohmy wrote:AAII reports bearish investor sentiment near record lows.
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/bearish-i ... ecord-lows