Cheesemeister said:NTDOY is down about $5 today.
Railroad earnings reports will kick off with Jacksonville, Fla.-based CSX Corp., Norfolk Southern Corp. and Canadian National Railway, which all report fourth-quarter and full-year results on Jan 22.
Soka said:I'm contemplating selling out on a lot of my stocks that I've made good profits on and just jumping back in later on when the credit crunch or any other such crap stops taking things down so far. I hate to jump ship just because everyone else is, but man, I also hate losing money. Makes the game slightly less fun!
Miroku said:I don't know about you guys but I feel like the world is ending.
Jackl said:World isn't ending, just the end of another credit cycle. Supposed to happen every 60-80 years. Basically consumer spending, speculation, and debt run themselves into the ground. Meanwhile taking a percentage of banks down with them that played with the money too much.
Human nature really.
Jackl said:World isn't ending, just the end of another credit cycle. Supposed to happen every 60-80 years.
Miroku said:Thank you, I can come out of the fetal position now. Question is, when to buy big? When will the S&P bottom out?
I wish I had a crystal ball.
gkrykewy said::lol :lol It's not Haley's comet, and happening 1-2 times does not constitute a never changing aspect of human history.
Dude reads a few bubble blogs and thinks he knows more than financiers around the world.
gkrykewy said:I don't own anything right now except $2500 in one mutual fund (JSVAX), and I regret owning that too.
Screw that . . . I want 1992 to 2000 back.Soka said:To hell with 2008, I want my 2005-2007 back!
speculawyer said:Is there an economic indicator that is not showing bad news?
Trade deficit: massive
Budget deficit: huge
Inflation: up big time
Consumer confidence: lowest value ever recorded(!)
Stock market: down hard
Jobs: lots of lay-offs
Real Estate: Bubble popped
Geo-political-climate: Shitstorm . . . pretty much everyone hates us including our allies.
Credit situation: credit crunch
Wage growth: close to nil
Currency: Dollar has been devalued heavily (First time I've seen Canadian dollar worth more!)
Consumer debt: Massive
*sigh*
Geographic diversification is an extinct animal these days. Markets pretty much all move in sync. My European funds have been declining at identical rates with the S&P.Az987 said:is the japanese stock market in as bad a shape as ours??
Just wondering since my Nintendo stock dropped 9$ in the past 3 days....
If you think this is bad you weren't around for the crash of 1987.speculawyer said:Is there an economic indicator that is not showing bad news?
Trade deficit: massive
Budget deficit: huge
Inflation: up big time
Consumer confidence: lowest value ever recorded(!)
Stock market: down hard
Jobs: lots of lay-offs
Real Estate: Bubble popped
Geo-political-climate: Shitstorm . . . pretty much everyone hates us including our allies.
Credit situation: credit crunch
Wage growth: close to nil
Currency: Dollar has been devalued heavily (First time I've seen Canadian dollar worth more!)
Consumer debt: Massive
*sigh*
The US videogames industry hit an astounding $17.9 billion in sales in 2007, shattering records, as Halo 3 and Wii Play led units sales for the year.
It's probably more due to currency fluctuations than anything else, both the £ and the $ have been seriously devalued against the yen in the past couple of weeks:Az987 said:is the japanese stock market in as bad a shape as ours??
Just wondering since my Nintendo stock dropped 9$ in the past 3 days....
Ether_Snake said:Ok yeah really shitty day and like I said I'm just gonna sleep on my shares really, even that POS of IMMR:lol
Half of all my savings are in stocks, and I have some in my 401k equivalent, but very little (I just contribute on each pay through the company I work for and quite frankly I don't even know what it's invested in). I'm gonna slow down now, I'll probably buy INTC in the next few weeks, and that's it. This market won't heal for some time, probably not for the next 12 months. But at the same time, global growth can always help because many companies (especially in the tech sector) will, IMO, benefit a lot in the near-future from this new globalized-oriented economy. Of course there is going to be a slow down, everyone will be hurt by this, but I believe the economy has developed stronger roots by globalizing itself and hence some companies will make it out fine.
"Every place we went, there's a need for power, there's a need for planes, and there's just no signs that this global infrastructure boom is slowing at all," he said.
However, Immelt said the U.S. consumer is "going to be tough."
GE will have lower gains in 2008, "but we're still seeing great global growth in assets and margins," he said.
sonarrat said:Citibank has fallen 19% since Monday. OUCH.
BTW, The NeoGAF Virtual Stock Exchange game ends Monday the 28th, so if you haven't taken drastic measures to save your portfolio, now is the time to try and pull off something spectacular.
O shit it ends that soon? I actually should start VSEing, I have a feeling it will help A LOT with real money. A lot of times, it takes actual trading in a stock to get used to it. The no delay thing in real trading has spoiled me thoughsonarrat said:Citibank has fallen 19% since Monday. OUCH.
BTW, The NeoGAF Virtual Stock Exchange game ends Monday the 28th, so if you haven't taken drastic measures to save your portfolio, now is the time to try and pull off something spectacular.
It's already been oversold to hell because of this fact though. This is nothing new to investorssonarrat said:AMD doesn't have much of an outlook at this point, because its products just aren't competitive with Intel, so it's losing both consumer sales and institutional business.
Fuzzery said:It's already been oversold to hell because of this fact though. This is nothing new to investors
If you think intel will eventually push AMD completely out of the market. Do remember that they were in opposite positions awhile ago though.ArtG said:Might be priced fairly, but when you're stacking up the two against each other...why would you buy the weaker player in the market. Intel is just the better company--no reason to buy AMD at any price other than for short term gains.
It depends if this is a short term investment or long term. I would stay away from both companies for long term since they are both losing marketshare at an increasing rate.Joe said:i'm itching to get into stocks and i'm looking at AMD and Sprint as my first buys. both are doing pretty bad right now but i can see them bouncing back in big ways this year. what do you guys think?