trump Crashes DOW 1500 Points

Too bad. You missed a rare golden opportunity. I bought about $5,000 worth of shares in RAS, DHX, AGTC, AMAG, and CVX. The first four were some of my biggest losers in the correction and of course CVX is blue chip.
I did quite well.
But it really doesn't matter because I basically do dollar cost averaging so I buy abut $3000 to $5000 most every month (except when on vacation).no matter what the market is doing. Normally I make my purchases on about the 15th of every month but I just made them earlier because of the correction. The economic indicators are just too good for there to be a long term crash. That said I think the market has gone up too fast. I suspect it'll stabilize for a while.

Too bad you got back in too early:

NEW YORK (AP) — Stocks plunged again Thursday, and for the second time in four days the Dow Jones industrial average sank more than 1,000 points.

The two best-known stock market indexes, the Dow and the Standard & Poor's 500, have dropped 10 percent from their all-time highs, set Jan. 26. That means they are in what is known on Wall Street as a "correction," their first in almost two years.

Stocks fell further and further as the day wore on and suffered their fifth loss in the last six days. Many of the companies that led the market's gains over the last year have struggled badly in the last week. Those included technology companies, banks, and retailers and travel companies and homebuilders.

After huge gains in the first weeks of this year, stocks started to tumble last Friday after the Labor Department said workers' wages grew at a fast rate in January. That's good for the economy, but investors worried it will hurt corporate profits and that rising wages are a sign of faster inflation. It could prompt the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates at a faster pace, which would act as a brake on the economy.

"Far and away the most important things are the fear that the Fed is going to make a mistake, and higher wages are going to cut into margins," said Scott Wren, senior global equity strategist for Wells Fargo Investment Institute. The worry, he said, is that the Fed will raise interest rates too quickly.

The Dow Jones industrial average lost 1,032.89 points, or 4.1 percent, to 23,860.46. Boeing, Goldman Sachs and Home Depot took some of the worst losses.

The S&P 500, the benchmark for many index funds, shed 100.66 points, or 3.8 percent, to 2,581. It hasn't been that low since mid-November. The Nasdaq composite fell 274.82 points, or 3.9 percent, to 6,777.16.

Tom Martin, senior portfolio manager with Globalt Investments, said he didn't see anything specific moving the market lower today, just a continuation of a shift in investor mindset from fear of missing out in a rising market to worry of clocking big losses in a market that's turned.

"This is going to take longer to work out than people expect," he said. "In January we talked about fear of missing out. What we have now is what I call fear of getting caught."

The losses were broad. Eight stocks fell for every one that rose on the New York Stock Exchange and 490 of the companies in the S&P 500 took a loss.


I cashed in profits back in early January and have about 800k in cash waiting to get back in but if you got in before today's plunge, you lost a bundle.
 
Too bad you got back in too early:

NEW YORK (AP) — Stocks plunged again Thursday, and for the second time in four days the Dow Jones industrial average sank more than 1,000 points.

The two best-known stock market indexes, the Dow and the Standard & Poor's 500, have dropped 10 percent from their all-time highs, set Jan. 26. That means they are in what is known on Wall Street as a "correction," their first in almost two years.

Stocks fell further and further as the day wore on and suffered their fifth loss in the last six days. Many of the companies that led the market's gains over the last year have struggled badly in the last week. Those included technology companies, banks, and retailers and travel companies and homebuilders.

After huge gains in the first weeks of this year, stocks started to tumble last Friday after the Labor Department said workers' wages grew at a fast rate in January. That's good for the economy, but investors worried it will hurt corporate profits and that rising wages are a sign of faster inflation. It could prompt the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates at a faster pace, which would act as a brake on the economy.

"Far and away the most important things are the fear that the Fed is going to make a mistake, and higher wages are going to cut into margins," said Scott Wren, senior global equity strategist for Wells Fargo Investment Institute. The worry, he said, is that the Fed will raise interest rates too quickly.

The Dow Jones industrial average lost 1,032.89 points, or 4.1 percent, to 23,860.46. Boeing, Goldman Sachs and Home Depot took some of the worst losses.

The S&P 500, the benchmark for many index funds, shed 100.66 points, or 3.8 percent, to 2,581. It hasn't been that low since mid-November. The Nasdaq composite fell 274.82 points, or 3.9 percent, to 6,777.16.

Tom Martin, senior portfolio manager with Globalt Investments, said he didn't see anything specific moving the market lower today, just a continuation of a shift in investor mindset from fear of missing out in a rising market to worry of clocking big losses in a market that's turned.

"This is going to take longer to work out than people expect," he said. "In January we talked about fear of missing out. What we have now is what I call fear of getting caught."

The losses were broad. Eight stocks fell for every one that rose on the New York Stock Exchange and 490 of the companies in the S&P 500 took a loss.


I cashed in profits back in early January and have about 800k in cash waiting to get back in but if you got in before today's plunge, you lost a bundle.
Like I said earlier I buy stocks every month - dollar cost averaging. As I stated earlier I waited until a few minutes before closing to decide if I'd buy more. Had the market stayed a little above what I bought those stocks at, I would've stayed put. Instead I bought more today.
With dollar cost averaging it really doesn't matter when you buy, you just consistently buy and hold (I assume you know that). I started back in '99 and the strategy has never, ever failed.
Another thing that seems to never fail is that after I buy stocks they magically go down in the short run! The avg. investor will not beat the market in the short run. Never. I don't "play the market", just invest. Sure I've had some stocks go bankrupt over the yrs. but overall did great.
A couple of good examples are that I bought Yahoo and Pixar back in '99 or '00 before the dot com bust. After the bust I kept buying but not techs. Well, guess where Pixar and Yahoo are today compared to '99.
The stock market mitigates the shitty investment that Social Security is.
 
Like I said earlier I buy stocks every month - dollar cost averaging. As I stated earlier I waited until a few minutes before closing to decide if I'd buy more. Had the market stayed a little above what I bought those stocks at, I would've stayed put. Instead I bought more today.
With dollar cost averaging it really doesn't matter when you buy, you just consistently buy and hold (I assume you know that). I started back in '99 and the strategy has never, ever failed.
Another thing that seems to never fail is that after I buy stocks they magically go down in the short run! The avg. investor will not beat the market in the short run. Never. I don't "play the market", just invest. Sure I've had some stocks go bankrupt over the yrs. but overall did great.
A couple of good examples are that I bought Yahoo and Pixar back in '99 or '00 before the dot com bust. After the bust I kept buying but not techs. Well, guess where Pixar and Yahoo are today compared to '99.
The stock market mitigates the shitty investment that Social Security is.

Well, you're right about a lot of things. First, congrats on buying Amazon and Pixar. Too bad you didn't buy them AFTER the Internet bubble. I shied away from Amazon because they had such a big market share back then in their eCommerce business, I didn't see how they could continue that. But alas, I was wrong.
Dollar cost averaging is the way to go and what I've been doing since 1990. I bought a lot of my company's stock (a lot more than I should have based on financial guidelines) but my company did well during that time and so did my company stock.
Only recently, since I retired, I haven't had the steady paycheck to invest. I was about 70/30 in stocks/cash about six months ago and have been selling every month to get to 40/60 because I believed the market was overpriced. It'll find a bottom in about a month or two and then I'll get back in. I may put a little in ($100k) next week to get started. People are panicking but I think this correction is healthy for the overall market. It was getting overpriced and prices didn't justify its value. Hopefully, Trump doesn't fuck things up.
 
Русский агент;2207917 said:
I've noticed a pattern, Ms. Stretch.

When there's good economic news (after January 20, 2017), liberals parrot their Messiah and chant "You didn't build that."

When there's bad economic news, they scream that Trump caused it somehow, even if they can't explain why it's his fault.

Have you noticed that, too?
I've noticed that whether it's good news (as far as good news goes for these degenerates) or bad news, liberals always have their fingers pointed at the opposition.
 
I just bought some more of my biggest losers in my portfolio.
Agree. Of course, I put another $5k in two weeks ago, so naturally the market corrected. But the things I've been watching look better now. This is just the whores who drove the market up, taking their profits now that they overinflated prices.

But...with the tax giveaways to corps, dividends are going to increase as the year wanes. I'm sure the market will be fine, albeit without hitting the earlier levels.
 
This happens every time the fed is expected to raise rates. I'm not sure Trump could do anything about this, and if he did, you liberals would be screaming "corruption!"
Historically, yes. But not recently. There have been a couple of hikes, and a govt. shutdown, and the market still climbed. The bond market isn't strong enough yet for me to get in, so I don't see the normal 'excuses' for the drop as valid.
It's crazy, though. Yesterday, the Dow was up 255 one hour before closing, and it finished slightly negative.

The point of the OP, is that trump claimed that he was the reason for the market highs. Ironically, he takes no credit when it falls.
 
Same thing happened under Obama and I don't recall a single liberal blaming him.

Yawn
I don't remember Obama taking credit for the market jumping under his guidance, when the economy was on the brink of depression on inauguration day.
 
https://www.google.com/amp/amp.wash...-obama-former-president-credits-himself-stro/

http://video.foxbusiness.com/v/4002797851001/?#sp=show-clips

....

In an interview with The Economist released over the weekend, Obama made a full-throated argument for his economic legacy that came without the hedges and caveats he has used in past years. "Let's look at the facts," Obama said. "Since I have come into office, there's almost no economic metric by which you couldn't say that the U.S. economy is better and that corporate bottom lines are better. None."

He went on to cite the administration's successes: "a record stock market," "record corporate profits,

https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.cn...s-booming-takes-credit-for-record-growth.html
He wasn't wrong. trump was elected with corps. sitting on record amounts of cash.
 
When Trump came into office, corporation profits were at all time highs. Trump thought they needed a tax cut. All Trump had to do was not fuck it up. The market was on a steady trajectory up.
 
ye subjects of the beast.. HAHAHA. the beast is toying with it's herds of goats. ye have all been warned. ye have consented to the whims of the beast. ye are subjected. since money is "made up" from nothing; then "wealth" is "make believe" too; and "national debt" is a lie; which makes a slave of you, subjects. HAHAHA. ...there cometh a day when men will cast their silver and gold in the streets because it will be worthless. you cannot eat silver or gold. esp. v. 19 http://biblehub.com/kjv/ezekiel/7.htm. ... esp. v. 26 http://biblehub.com/kjv/proverbs/1.htm. I am just a witness.
 
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