Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

2008 Financial Thread

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Originally posted by the_idle_threat
    Originally posted by mraynrand
    Originally posted by Freak Out
    Originally posted by mraynrand
    Originally posted by Freak Out
    Gold paying off big today.
    You're selling your gold?
    Hell no.
    So when exactly will gold pay off big? If you exchange it now, you just get devalued dollars, right? When are you planning to sell your gold and what do you think it will be worth then?
    Now is the time for people who are holding gold to hype the shit out of it to entice late-to-the-party buyers. Pump and dump.
    I sold some at $960.
    C.H.U.D.

    Comment


    • Originally posted by bobblehead
      I didn't even read any of the topic ongoing in this thread, but if anyone wants a rock solid play for a shakey market right now IBM ordinary shares should have a very solid year with minimal risk. I don't generally get into recommending single stocks, but IBM is making some really strong moves.
      I feel the same way about Microsoft.
      C.H.U.D.

      Comment


      • Originally posted by Freak Out
        Originally posted by bobblehead
        I didn't even read any of the topic ongoing in this thread, but if anyone wants a rock solid play for a shakey market right now IBM ordinary shares should have a very solid year with minimal risk. I don't generally get into recommending single stocks, but IBM is making some really strong moves.
        I feel the same way about Microsoft.
        Could be, gates wasn't an interested CEO for about a year, now they can get back to good business
        The only time success comes before work is in the dictionary -- Vince Lombardi

        Comment


        • Originally posted by Freak Out
          Originally posted by the_idle_threat
          Originally posted by mraynrand
          Originally posted by Freak Out
          Originally posted by mraynrand
          Originally posted by Freak Out
          Gold paying off big today.
          You're selling your gold?
          Hell no.
          So when exactly will gold pay off big? If you exchange it now, you just get devalued dollars, right? When are you planning to sell your gold and what do you think it will be worth then?
          Now is the time for people who are holding gold to hype the shit out of it to entice late-to-the-party buyers. Pump and dump.
          I sold some at $960.
          Well done.

          Comment


          • Originally posted by bobblehead
            I didn't even read any of the topic ongoing in this thread, but if anyone wants a rock solid play for a shakey market right now IBM ordinary shares should have a very solid year with minimal risk. I don't generally get into recommending single stocks, but IBM is making some really strong moves.
            While I have watched my stocks fall a nice exception, ARBA (Ariba), has been doing very well. $8 to $16 in just a few weeks. Check out the 3 month chart.

            Comment


            • FINALLY..........

              Like the merger or hate the merger of XMSR and SIRI, there is no way that it should have taken 16 MONTHS for this deal to be approved or rejected by the Justice Department and the FCC. It's a crystal clear example that there is way too much special interest lobbying and political interference going on inside government circles. That sound clichéd but it's accurate.

              M and A business deals should be decided on the merits alone. Either it benefits the consumer or it doesn't. This one had some legal complexities given their unique industry and charters but still......16 months to make a decision!

              I'm no big fan of Howard Stern but I admire his business savvy and have to almost agree with his opinion on this one.

              "Sirius Satellite Radio host Howard Stern supports the merger of his network with XM Satelitte Radio and is fuming at Democratic opposition on the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) panel.

              After FCC commissioners announced they have reached a deal to approve the merger of Sirius (NASDAQ:SIRI) and XM (NASDAQ:XMSR), Stern ranted about Democrats’ ‘gangsterism’ and ‘communism’ and the obstacles to the merger.

              Stern described a phone conversation he had with his agent, who he described as a “liberal Democrat kind of guy.”

              “I go, ‘That’s it!’” Stern said. “[I] go, ‘You know what Don, I’ve voted Republican and I’ve voted Democrat. I have vowed I will never vote for a Democrat again. I don’t give a [expletive] – no matter who they are. I don’t care if God becomes a Democrat.’ I said, ‘I backed Hillary Clinton, I backed Al Gore, I backed John Kerry. I am done with them.’”

              Stern took it a step even further and called Democrats on the FCC “communists” and referred to their tactics as “gangsterism.”

              “The fact that these Democrats on the FCC are communists,” Stern said. “They’re for communism. They don’t want to see companies – this is gangsterism. I said, ‘This is crazy.’”

              .................................................. ........................

              Feds OK satellite radio merger

              WASHINGTON (AP) — Federal regulators have formally approved the merger of the nation's only two satellite radio operators, ending a 16-month-long drama closely watched by Washington and Wall Street.

              Sirius Satellite Radio Inc.'s $3.6 billion buyout of rival XM Satellite Radio Holdings Inc. will mean 18 million-plus subscribers will be able to receive programming from both services. Executives say it will mean huge cost savings that will lead to a first-ever profit for the relatively nascent industry.

              The Federal Communications Commission voted 3-2 to approve the buyout with the tie-breaking vote coming when the companies agreed to pay $19.7 million to the U.S. Treasury to settle FCC rule violations.

              Comment


              • Just another peachy day on Wall Street. Another 9% knocked off the portfolio.

                Thank you Washington cowards for more housing mortage bailouts.

                Rule Number #1 in Washington, pay back the special interests and lobbyists before you do the right thing for the average American taxpayer.

                Comment


                • Originally posted by Kiwon
                  Just another peachy day on Wall Street. Another 9% knocked off the portfolio.

                  Thank you Washington cowards for more housing mortage bailouts.

                  Rule Number #1 in Washington, pay back the special interests and lobbyists before you do the right thing for the average American taxpayer.
                  SOP for those suckers.
                  C.H.U.D.

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by Freak Out
                    Originally posted by Kiwon
                    Just another peachy day on Wall Street. Another 9% knocked off the portfolio.

                    Thank you Washington cowards for more housing mortage bailouts.

                    Rule Number #1 in Washington, pay back the special interests and lobbyists before you do the right thing for the average American taxpayer.
                    SOP for those suckers.
                    Yeah, Standard Operating Procedure. Whatever happened to all this "change" and "reform" supposedly coming to DC?

                    Insanity.

                    Taxpayers may be on the hook for up to $1 Trillion because 95% of people can pay their mortages and 5% can't. And the foxes running the hen house just put themselves in a private suite with A/C and all the trappings of power, including (GULP), even MORE gov't authority to meddle.

                    Representative democracy, yeah, right.

                    Comment


                    • Classic.



                      The Extreme Reality Makeover Show

                      By Hank Stuever
                      Washington Post Staff Writer
                      Tuesday, July 29, 2008; C01

                      Symbolic to our era like a sledgehammer to drywall, the biggest house that ABC's "Extreme Makeover: Home Edition" ever made over -- a sprawling, four-bedroom starter castle, a three-car garage with a turret and all -- has gone into foreclosure, in the 'burbs south of Atlanta.

                      In that particular episode of the hyper-benevolent reality show, which first aired in February 2005, it took 1,800 volunteers a week to demolish the house with the overflowing septic tank that belonged to Milton and Patricia Harper of Lake City, Ga., and then entirely rebuild a new, larger house, while the Harpers and their three children went away to Disneyland. When they returned, they had the biggest house on Ahyoka Drive, with all the appliances and furnishings, plus enough money to pay taxes on it for decades, plus a fund to send their children to college.

                      The house will be auctioned off, according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, next Tuesday on the steps of the Clayton County Courthouse.

                      The Harpers had used their home as collateral on a $450,000 loan from JPMorgan Chase and fell in arrears, the newspaper reported. He ran a home security business; she mommed at home. Happy to be on television back then, they declined to be interviewed last week, when a news crew showed up from local station WSB, wanting to know what happened.

                      The mayor of Lake City, Willie Oswalt, who said he'd helped lift a beam into place in the Harpers living room, told the press that "it's aggravating. It just makes you mad. You do that much work, and they just squander it."

                      You could (and will) say the Harpers had it coming, but really, we all had this coming. One thing we'll always remember about this decade was the constant home do-over fetish, in real life and in the reality of reality TV -- the constant warping of the consumer's sense of entitlement, the fairy-dust economics, the MasterCard reminder that the experience is priceless. We'll look back and think of all the time we spent watching shows where people flipped houses for easy profit, or traded spaces, or designed it to sell, or were led into rooms blindfolded to experience the paroxysms that came with new paint, new furniture, new life.

                      All the crying people did for the camera: They cried when television's magic wand touched them, and the hosts always cried, too, while telling the camera how good they felt making the dreams of the sick and wretched owners of substandard tract houses come true. Think of the many tears that were shed on American television over organized closets and new kitchen countertops.

                      Now comes a long period of tsk-tsk, and tut-tut. The schadenfreude potential is everywhere now in these newly sobered times, and it would be something if the Harpers would make themselves available for an entirely other kind of documented extreme makeover, penny by penny.

                      Every day, we are greeted with fresh evidence of the great American fire sale. If it was wrong to think the economy could go on forever subsisting on money that no one actually had, then it was wrong to think there was something wonderful about watching shows where people got houses for nothing, and then expect them to live happily ever after. Last week, the new numbers came out: Foreclosures were filed against some 740,000 U.S. homes between March and June alone.

                      There should be shows on every cable channel about that, hosted by people who don't cry, and who don't have megaphones and plastered-on smiles.

                      These shows should air only on analog television, after Feb. 17, 2009. A certain kind of television viewer wouldn't mind watching some more of this, please, if certain kinds of television producers are listening.

                      It's hard to explain, comeuppance. But surely it's as fascinating as installing laminate-wood floors.

                      Bring on Extreme Failure.
                      C.H.U.D.

                      Comment


                      • Bank stocks seem to be beaten down to the point where they are near a bottom

                        Anybody got some favorites to throw out for some research ? I'd like to identify a couple to add to the long term portfolio
                        TERD Buckley over Troy Vincent, Robert Ferguson over Chris Chambers, Kevn King instead of TJ Watt, and now, RICH GANNON, over JIMMY JIMMY JIMMY LEONARD. Thank you FLOWER

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by Kiwon
                          Originally posted by Freak Out
                          Originally posted by Kiwon
                          Just another peachy day on Wall Street. Another 9% knocked off the portfolio.

                          Thank you Washington cowards for more housing mortage bailouts.

                          Rule Number #1 in Washington, pay back the special interests and lobbyists before you do the right thing for the average American taxpayer.
                          SOP for those suckers.
                          Yeah, Standard Operating Procedure. Whatever happened to all this "change" and "reform" supposedly coming to DC?

                          Insanity.

                          Taxpayers may be on the hook for up to $1 Trillion because 95% of people can pay their mortages and 5% can't. And the foxes running the hen house just put themselves in a private suite with A/C and all the trappings of power, including (GULP), even MORE gov't authority to meddle.

                          Representative democracy, yeah, right.
                          How about 48 Bil for African AIDS errr....pharmaceutical companies...
                          "Never, never ever support a punk like mraynrand. Rather be as I am and feel real sympathy for his sickness." - Woodbuck

                          Comment


                          • I bet yahoo shareholders are happy that they didn't take MSs offer now!

                            DOW just getting hammered again.
                            C.H.U.D.

                            Comment


                            • I'd be pissed if I was a Yahoo shareholder. I call for Mr ying Yang to be fired!

                              Comment


                              • Yep, my stock values hit their all-time lows today.

                                Very ugly.

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X