Oakair wrote:Im betting on a more protracted decline...We wont see 10,000 for a few weeks at the least...Slow and steady decline, but a decline nonetheless
68Camaro wrote:Oakair wrote:Im betting on a more protracted decline...We wont see 10,000 for a few weeks at the least...Slow and steady decline, but a decline nonetheless
Lemmee guess. You're young, right? 1000 points (10%) in a day ain't nuthin when the selling pressure is on.
Oakair wrote:68Camaro wrote:Oakair wrote:Im betting on a more protracted decline...We wont see 10,000 for a few weeks at the least...Slow and steady decline, but a decline nonetheless
Lemmee guess. You're young, right? 1000 points (10%) in a day ain't nuthin when the selling pressure is on.
Yep, only 20...Id be pretty impressed with a 10% drop...I play the pennies and am used to high volatility, but not in something as established as the DJI
TXBullion wrote:It will be interesting to see how it continues
68Camaro wrote:The Dow Jones Industrials Index may be less relevant than it used to be (which in and of itself is sadly indicative of the loss of our ability as an economy to actually do useful things, since these are the major industrials in this country, and as you've just noted, it is composed of a bunch of companies that aren't moving forward - except in their overseas divisions), but it does provide a useful measure of the overall market. There are actually many Dow measures, as I'm sure you know - the Industrials being just one of them. And there is the S&P 500, etc.
There will always be stocks that go up, even in a down market. Trick is finding them, and pricing them correctly. Easier said than done, IMHO.
barrytrot wrote:68Camaro wrote:The Dow Jones Industrials Index may be less relevant than it used to be (which in and of itself is sadly indicative of the loss of our ability as an economy to actually do useful things, since these are the major industrials in this country, and as you've just noted, it is composed of a bunch of companies that aren't moving forward - except in their overseas divisions), but it does provide a useful measure of the overall market. There are actually many Dow measures, as I'm sure you know - the Industrials being just one of them. And there is the S&P 500, etc.
There will always be stocks that go up, even in a down market. Trick is finding them, and pricing them correctly. Easier said than done, IMHO.
It's useful to measure to the overall, i.e. "average", but it doesn't take a lot to look at it and say, hm it includes several companies that lost money last year and also these companies that made a ton, why don't I just invest in those companies? Something as simple as that and you (over time) will beat the market.
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