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Strategies & Market Trends : Waiting for the big Kahuna -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ayn rand who wrote (89563)8/8/2009 8:03:48 PM
From: Real Man  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 94695
 
Yeah, but he is exaggerating. I don't see
Zimbabwe yet.

One thing is clear, the global derivative
pyramid that blew up last Fall, causing
the crash, has been reliquified. Computers
will rule these markets even more now.

So, one has to go with that force that
will likely cause a meltup in stocks.

The dollar will likely go higher if US
economy recovers and rates move up.



To: ayn rand who wrote (89563)8/9/2009 5:42:11 PM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 94695
 
Aug. 10 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. economy may be on the cusp of a recovery and the impact of the nation’s stimulus plan should increase this quarter, said Laura Tyson, an adviser to President Barack Obama.

“We may have hit stability, we may be in the beginning of an upturn” based on the latest economic data, Tyson, a member of the White House’s Economic Recovery Advisory Board, said yesterday during an interview in Kuala Lumpur. Nobel Prize- winning economist Paul Krugman said the deepest slump since the Great Depression may be ending.

“It’s quite possible, though not certain, that retrospectively, we’ll say that the recession ended in July or August, maybe September,” Krugman said in a separate interview in the Malaysian capital. “My guess is that we’ve bottomed out now, that August was probably the trough month.”

Krugman, 56, cited last week’s government report showing that the pace of U.S. job losses slowed more than forecast in July and the unemployment rate dropped for the first time in 15 months. He also pointed to reports by the Institute of Supply Management that manufacturing, while still contracting, is on the mend.

Tyson, 62, cautioned that declining housing values and an overhang of unsold homes pose threats to a recovery, and it’s too early to say the jobs report is the beginning of a trend.

“We’ve had one number that’s been slightly stronger than expected,” she said. “It’s pretty hard to read a single month as creating a trend. Most of the forecasts are still that the unemployment rate rises through till the end of the year.”