Investors got back to doing what they do best on Monday: buying stocks.
Most US indices were up right after the opening bell and remained positive throughout the session. Meanwhile, comments by President Bush, Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, and Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke gave more reason for applause and exhilaration, as the government seems intent on another round of handouts to people who really don't need them, this time, American consumers.
The entire credit crunch, recession, global slowdown argument is becoming somewhat laughable or ludicrous. Surely, the US and global economies have hit a serious speed bump, but the extravagant measures taken to stave off what amounts to a little bit of pocketbook pain has been political overkill.
My understanding of the issues gives rise to a great deal of skepticism. As an empiricist, I study what is seen and I haven't seen rampant unemployment, business failures, bankruptcies, food lines or any related real-world evidence that we are in a anything worse than a somewhat mild recessionary pullback, which is a direct result of decades of easy credit.
Once again, the solution to a problem caused by too many dollars in circulation should not be solved by giving away more money. It's like stopping a cut from bleeding by cutting the victim somewhere else. The whole idea is simply beyond ridiculous.
In any case, the government is bound and determined to hand out more money they don't have, a concept with which Wall Street is apparently in favor.
Dow 9,265.43 +413.21; NASDAQ 1,770.03 +58.74; S&P 500 985.40 +44.85; NYSE Composite 6,287.60 +338.80
On the day, advancing issues once again finished well ahead of decliners, 5073-1325. New lows beat new highs, 210-13. Volume was moderate, though strong on the NASDAQ, the index which gained the least on a percentage basis.
NYSE Volume 1,226,914,000
NASDAQ Volume 2,062,091,000
For a change, commodity prices were all higher, with oil gaining $2.26, to $74.65, on widely-circulated reports that OPEC would impose an output cut at their next meeting. Gold rose $2.30, to $790.00 and silver was higher by 36 cents, to $9.69. Both of the precious metals took a serious drubbing last week.
In the short term, volatility is still quite high and will probably remain that way until after the elections on November 4. In the long run, we'll all survive - hooray! - and probably see a recovery in the latter part of 2009. Overall, however, most of us haven't changed a great deal about our daily routines, except for maybe being a little bit more frugal and cost-conscious... a pretty good idea, no matter what the economic conditions.
Blog Archive
-
►
2011
(2135)
- October (60)
- August (110)
- July (446)
- June (377)
- May (580)
- April (282)
- March (134)
- February (120)
- January (26)
-
►
2010
(261)
- December (24)
- November (21)
- October (22)
- September (23)
- August (21)
- July (20)
- June (23)
- May (22)
- April (20)
- March (24)
- February (20)
- January (21)
-
►
2009
(254)
- December (22)
- November (25)
- October (21)
- September (19)
- August (17)
- July (19)
- June (22)
- May (20)
- April (21)
- March (22)
- February (23)
- January (23)
-
▼
2008
(533)
- December (22)
- November (18)
- October (22)
- September (26)
- August (21)
- July (24)
- June (21)
- May (50)
- April (22)
- March (98)
- February (187)
- January (22)
Labels
Forex Trading
Forex Indicators
Forex
Forex Candlestick Chart Patterns
gold
silver
Economy
Finance and Investment
oil
Ben Bernanke
Business Opportunities
Custom Indicators
Bank of America
RSI
Goldman Sachs
Relative Strength Index
Moving Average
non-farm payroll
Forex Analysis
JP Morgan Chase
BAC
banks
Greece
foreclosures
Bollinger Bands
GDP
Plunge Protection Team
Google
Nasdaq
Obama
President Obama
interest rates
employment
housing
JPM
MACD
Moving Average Convergence Divergence
Real Estate
retail sales
Bernanke
INTC
Insurance
Intel
Treasury
European Union
Ireland
inflation
jobs
oil futures
Forex Education
GM
Linear Regression Channel
Mortgage
Pivot Support Resistance
Stock to buy
Stocks Alerts
existing home sales
Dow Jones
Durable Orders
General Motors
Oil Gas
eBay
mortgage defaults
Forex News
IBM
TA analysis
bonds
cash
central banks
earnings
liquidity
recession
Biggest Losers
Biggest Gainers
John Boehner
Market Future
Market Updates
housing starts
Exxon-Mobil
ISM
Internet Marketing
Loan
Penny Stock
Bailout
Big Oil
Fannie Mae
Freddie Mac
Great Depression
JNJ
Microsoft
US stocks
bank failures
budget
credit cards
median home prices
mortgages
Ben Bernake
Caterpillar
Earning date
George Orwell
Santa Claus Rally
Technology
bank regulations
bull market
penny stocks
stock market
Barack Obama
Berkshire Hathaway
Black Friday
Cerberus
Facebook
Fool's Gold
Money Talk
Mortgage news
Nikkei
Secured loans
bargain stocks
foreign currencies trading
forex market trading
free credit report
graduate loans
investment
mortgage payments
real estate tools
retest
retirement
No comments:
Post a Comment