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From: | "Lindley Smith" <lindleysmith@bigfoot.com> |
Date: | Fri, 14 Jun 2002 16:27:38 +0100 |
Where's the analysis/reasoning/logic to back up those statements? I'll agree that the NASDAQ was a bubble. Here's one for you to think about and comment on. As I see it, gold like all the other metals/minerals has a falling cost of production. In the long term the price of gold will tend to track the cost of production. Any 'variation' from that trend could losely be termed a 'bubble'. Therefore gold IS in a bubble. Has it just started, how long will it continue for, has it popped already? Now back to the DOW, and where it is going. Has anyone got a graph of the DOW going back . . . forever? I'd be interested to see a long term technical analysis of it showing what it's level could be if it had followed long term historical patterns in the last 10-20 yrs. I was looking at the FTSE the other day, and the few companies that I glanced at all had reasonable PEs (10-15), so maybe it is at a reasonable level. Here's another one. Why do all indices weight their components based on the size of the company? Personally I'd prefer indicies that weren't weighted. > Just watched the opening bell on Wall Street, we are in freefall. Hope > everybody dumped their international share based mutual funds this week. > The US market > will continue to fall and 4000 - 6000 on the DOW is very likely. > > > Gold is about to explode, is gold in a bubble ? after 20 years in a bear > market it has risen form $ 255 to $320. This is not a bubble, the NASDAQ at > 5000 was a bubble. > > Unhedged Gold and Silver producers will expode, its only a matter of time. > The gold bullion banks are fighting the trend, they can only manipulate for > so long. > When gold hits $354 an ounce, the derivatives market will implode. > > > > > > > > > > Steven Tong wrote; > > > > > > "There will BE NO RECOVERY IN US EQUITIES THIS YEAR" > > > > > > I recall another stumble of the U S economy. I refer to the savings & > loan > > > fiasco. > > > > > > A rash of unwise lending by small community banks called savings & loan > > banks > > > had threatened a bust the amounting to what looked like several > telephone > > > numbers strung together. > > > > > > The U S congress took over these banks and ruthlessly liquidated them. > > Thanks > > > to an economic recovery they were able to sell off these assets. I > cannot > > > recall exactly, but the net result was a small gain or loss for the U S > > > taxpayer. > > > > > > My point is that the U S was able to take decisive corrective action to > > > ensure stability and recover. > > > > > > If there is a melt down on Wall Street I guess we will see the same > thing. > > > > > > The DOW @ 20,000 in 2006? > > > > > > Boop-doop-de-do Marilyn > > > > > > Short on diamonds, long on optimism > > > > > > > > > > -------------------------------------------------------------------------- > > -- > > > To remove yourself from this list, please use the form at > > > http://www.sharechat.co.nz/chat/forum/ > > > > > > > > > > > > > > -------------------------------------------------------------------------- -- > To remove yourself from this list, please use the form at > http://www.sharechat.co.nz/chat/forum/ > ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- To remove yourself from this list, please use the form at http://www.sharechat.co.nz/chat/forum/
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