Author

Topic: In or out? (Read 677 times)

hero member
Activity: 546
Merit: 500
August 26, 2015, 04:53:39 PM
#6
If you in now you will out with crying ...........
legendary
Activity: 1946
Merit: 1007
August 26, 2015, 04:27:25 PM
#5
Money will start to flow in to gold.

It already has started to.  Oil is hitting near decade lows, stocks are hitting 52 week lows, and gold, still down from a few years ago, seems like its hit the floor at the perfect time.  Strange how the drop in gold price seems to have ended just as the stock market is getting worse for investors.

If everybody starts moving their money into gold, it isn't so strange that the dip is ending right? I mean, all this money flowing in perfectly explains this.
vip
Activity: 1428
Merit: 1145
August 26, 2015, 02:24:12 PM
#4
Money will start to flow in to gold.

It already has started to.  Oil is hitting near decade lows, stocks are hitting 52 week lows, and gold, still down from a few years ago, seems like its hit the floor at the perfect time.  Strange how the drop in gold price seems to have ended just as the stock market is getting worse for investors.


"There... are... ma... nip... u... la... tions!"
hero member
Activity: 560
Merit: 500
August 26, 2015, 06:51:57 AM
#3
Money will start to flow in to gold.

It already has started to.  Oil is hitting near decade lows, stocks are hitting 52 week lows, and gold, still down from a few years ago, seems like its hit the floor at the perfect time.  Strange how the drop in gold price seems to have ended just as the stock market is getting worse for investors.
legendary
Activity: 2254
Merit: 1043
August 26, 2015, 05:58:19 AM
#2
Money will start to flow in to gold.
vip
Activity: 1428
Merit: 1145
August 26, 2015, 05:35:43 AM
#1
Stock Slide Wipes Out $1.4 Trillion,  Big Money Investors in ‘No Man’s Land’

Quote
With the Dow Jones Industrial Average in freefall Friday, ending the session 530.94 points lower,  JJ Kinahan, chief strategist, at TD Ameritrade (AMTD) described the carnage to FOXBusiness.com like this, “big money investors are in no man’s land.” Those investors, large institutions, are moving away from risk and putting more assets into cash or protection because there are just too many unknowns. The biggest risk being China, which is one big cloud of uncertainty, and the newest risk being a confused FOMC. The July FOMC minutes showed policymakers were divided over job growth and low inflation which raised questions about the timing of a rate hike. Adding to growth fears, 2Q earnings are on pace to be flat at best.

Best advice during the stock storm: Ride it out

Quote
It’s difficult for investors to sit on their hands and do nothing as their stock portfolios are being chain-sawed, but that’s precisely what they should do.

The time to sell is not in the midst of a dramatic sell-off like we had Friday and Monday. Prudent stock investors should stay the course and allow this downturn to run its course.

For starters, market corrections of 5 percent or even 10 percent — where this one now stands — are a normal, healthy part of a bull market. But the last 10 percent correction in the Standard & Poor’s 500 index occurred almost four years ago.
Jump to: