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Strategies & Market Trends : Anthony @ Equity Investigations, Dear Anthony, -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: 10K a day who wrote (76379)5/23/2002 10:23:50 PM
From: 10K a day  Respond to of 122087
 
It's kind of like if you have a BUTTLOAD of toilet paper that you have to move out the door...BUT instead you just decide to throw it in the swimming pool....and first you just do it by the REAM....and you get tired of that so you throw it in by the BOX...then maybe by the FREAKIN' BACKHOE...and you keep fillin' up the swimming pool with the toilet paper for as long as there ARE STUPID SUCKERS TO BUY THE SHIT....you just keep sellin' them TOILET PAPER<you may even have to make a PHONE CALL>...BUT don't ever worry 'cause you can get more...YOU CAN always find more toilet paper to SELL TO THE SUCKERS>...and all the while the price just goes up and down depending on the story and who is stupid enough to buy today...You know what i'm sayin' ...if the buyers ever go on strike...WELL I THINK you just find the GUYS who puked on the demand...YOU JUST throw them in the swimming pool....or put them in solitary freakin' confinement if you can't throw a tantrum in public...YOU KNOW WHAT i'm sayin'....HEY DID anybody notice...OH NEVER MIND>...And all the while you keep playin' those SILLY commercials ABOUT NASDAQ stock BUCKIN' exchange for the 21'ST freakin' century....



To: 10K a day who wrote (76379)5/23/2002 10:28:38 PM
From: Don Pueblo  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 122087
 
Quiet! Mr. Goldman, Mr. Sachs, Mr. Morgan, Mr. Stanley, and the rest of the Boys might hear you.



To: 10K a day who wrote (76379)5/24/2002 12:13:11 AM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 122087
 
Nice rant, dude. Haven't seen one like that from you since the dotcommies crahed 2 years ago, LOL.



To: 10K a day who wrote (76379)5/24/2002 12:25:19 AM
From: Maurice Winn  Respond to of 122087
 
<I don't understand the judgmental pricks around here.
I hate to be the one to break this to you but the markets are a CROCK. They are fabricated and manipulated. Price movements are relative to where the MM's move it.
>

Impristine, do you think the charges reflect okay behaviour? Well, it takes all sorts. Paying off FBI agents doesn't sound like idealistic conduct to me. Extortion seems dodgy too. Fraud isn't playing nice either.

Prices are NOT decided by market makers. I decide at which price I will buy and at which I will sell. People can collude all they like and if I don't like the price, I'll not make the deal. If market makers want to be in business, they have to sit between where the buyers and sellers are positioned.

If people were more judgmental and discriminating, things would go better.

I am pleased when crooks, criminals and vicious thugs get their comeuppance. Judgment is good.

Mqurice



To: 10K a day who wrote (76379)5/24/2002 12:54:14 AM
From: Karen Lawrence  Respond to of 122087
 
The markets are a crock? Go on... Here's a part of a post I lifted from Devil's Adv. at Raging Bull... (aside: What do you think of the possibility A@P might be a victim of profiling post 9/11)
FROM DEVIL's ADV:
Stock-market trading was rife with fraud then; it is rife with fraud now. The process could not continue otherwise. Yesterday, the winners were selling short (selling high and buying low); today they, probably the same people, will be winners by buying low this morning and selling higher this afternoon.

Who were the "losers" yesterday? And who will be the "losers" today? Whoever makes a market in the manipulated stocks will be the losers insofar as the manipulators "take profits" in the short-term. Although the millions of individual investors may suffer from market collapse in the long-term, they are losers on a day-to-day basis if they just sit on the sidelines. There has to be another explanation as to the identity of the immediate "losers", those who supply the immediate gains for the manipulators.

Who can they be? Are they wealthy village idiots that have unlimited funds to draw on to support their habitual losses? Probably not. They are more likely money-center banks that can cover their losses by simply debiting the accounts of the "winners" that successfully manipulate stock (or bond) prices. (Some of the "winners" are probably their own "trading departments." Clever, no?)



To: 10K a day who wrote (76379)5/24/2002 8:56:16 AM
From: Boplicity  Respond to of 122087
 
All lot people don't understand that market is a game, it's. Players have always stretching the rules, if they break them and get caught they get what they deserve.

b