DJIA, NYSE, S&P = CRASH!!!

Monday 8/24/15 = Worst day since 2011
Wednesday 8/26/15 = Best day since 2011

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Biggest one day upward bounce since....November 2008, according to CNBC puppet. Yay?

I think everyone knew a bounce was coming this week sometime but trying to predict it is foolish. Just enjoying watching the drama...
 
If I am reading your chart correctly Germans who held equities during the Weimar inflation and the global depression broke even after 15 years. Did I miss something?
Nope, you got it, that's pretty much it. Of course, that's glossing over all the years of -80%, then -20%, then +50%, -60% again, etc. I have a book with more exact figures; just making those up, but it gives you the idea. Stocks were actually a pretty good thing to have during the Weimer hyperinflation, relatively speaking. At least they didn't lose all value. Farmers were the ones who really made out well. But stocks were OK... for those few who had the stomach to ride the roller coaster.

The reality is, though, that very few did -- that's why it was so volatile! If everyone were just buy-and-hold investors, the lines would just chug along fairly horizontally and smoothly. Instead, what really happened in Germany is people would panic, pull everything out, then maybe a couple years later realize that all other investments were even worse and put it in again, then the price drops 25% and they pull out again before they lose more... etc., etc. Very few actually have the discipline and midset to "buy the dips" as angelatc recommended. Our human nature and psychology works against us. So the real life on-the-ground reality in Germany 1920-1944 was that the average stock investor did not do very well. Plus you have to subtract broker's fees, which back then were much higher. Plus, consider that index funds did not exist back then either, and so there was no way to get the actual performance of the blue line. You would buy several stocks, maybe many but then the brokerage fees add up, and then depending on your luck you'd either do better or worse, and just cross your fingers that none of the companies you own go bankrupt!

But even with all those disclaimers, it really is, as you say, not bad performance at all for a country that experienced a total currency collapse. Not bad at all.

The problem is you never know what it will be like next time, what it will be like if it happens to your country. That was my main point. Be prepared for anything, that's my motto. And it's possible to be prepared and get good returns, too, in my opinion.
 
Biggest one day upward bounce since....November 2008, according to CNBC puppet. Yay?

I think everyone knew a bounce was coming this week sometime but trying to predict it is foolish. Just enjoying watching the drama...

It was funny, after todays close saw an article how the major point gain was a "sign of stability" and that "market fundamentals outweigh investor jitters". LOL. I think it's only wise to assume that talk is propaganda. It's like saying that a guy who kills his entire family in rage is crazy, but then when he breaks down and cries, "Oh, that's a sign of stability". No. That's an EVEN GREATER SIGN of instability. "Down or up" would indicate a fundamental based market. Jerking around like a drowning man is not a sign of stability.

Anyway, don't be fooled.

http://theeconomiccollapseblog.com/...big-ups-big-downs-and-giant-waves-of-momentum

This is exactly the type of market behavior that we would expect to see during the early stages of a major financial crisis. In every major market downturn throughout history there were big ups, big downs and giant waves of momentum, and this time around will not be any different.

...

At one point on Tuesday, the Dow was up over 400 points, and many of the talking heads on television were proclaiming that the stock market had “recovered”. This is something that I predicted would happen yesterday…

And if stocks go up tomorrow (which they probably should), all of those same “experts” will be proclaiming that the “correction” is over and that everything is now fine.

...

But all along, there are going to be days when stocks fly higher. As I mentioned above, many of the “best days” in stock market history occurred right in the middle of the financial crisis of 2008 and 2009. This is a point that Jim Quinn has made very eloquently…

Six of the ten largest point gains in the history of the stock market occurred between September 2008 and March 2009. That’s right. During one of the greatest market collapses in history, the market soared by 5% to 11% in one day, six times. Here are the data points:

2008-10-13: +936.42

2008-10-28: +889.35

2008-11-13: +552.59

2009-03-23: +497.48

2008-11-21: +494.13

2008-09-30: +485.21

Do you think these factoids will be shared with the public today on the stock bubble networks? Not a chance.

...

What we can’t account for are “black swan events” which could greatly accelerate this financial crisis.

A war in the Middle East, a major natural disaster or a terror attack involving weapons of mass destruction are all examples of the kinds of things that could turn this market crash into full-blown market implosion.

As we move into the critical month of September 2015, I think that it is safe to say that we should all be ready to expect the unexpected. Our world is becoming increasingly unstable, and I am extremely concerned about the period of time that we are heading into.

The nice, comfortable period of relative stability that we have been experiencing for the past few years has come to an end. I hope that you have enjoyed the good times while you still had them.
 
Not exactly. You have an asset worth exactly as much as somebody is actually willing to pay you for it on the day you need to sell it. There are an awful lot of people walking around today that would counsel you from their own hard experience against counting those chickens before they hatch. And just remember, the State of California is going to get revenue from SOMEWHERE. Just might be from you!

You are making excuses for why you haven't purchased anything. What benefits have you gotten for the years and hundreds of thousands of dollars paying rent you have spent? Other than a roof over your head? Maybe you aren't comfortable with the idea. That is fine. It has worked out extremely well for me. I got a roof over my head and a significant pay raise (equivalent- or you could call it an 80% rent reduction).
 
An inverse exchange-traded fund is an exchange-traded fund (ETF), traded on a public stock market, which is designed to perform as the inverse of whatever index or benchmark it is designed to track.


If you have access to stocks... you should have access to inverse ETF's. You would buy something like SPXU (3x leveraged short ETF of S&P small cap 600) the same way you would buy AMZN (Amazon.com).


do not require the investor to hold a margin account as would be the case for investors looking to enter into short positions.



Taking Control

In some cases, employers choose 401(k) plans for their employees that offer the option of choosing individual stocks. However, this may only apply to a set percentage of the funds in the plan. The plan may still require employees to diversify or invest in more than one stock, thus limiting how much they can put into a single company's stock. If your employer offers a 401(k) with this high degree of employee control, you will take on added responsibility for your retirement income if you choose to exercise it.

Alternatives for Retirement

Even if you don't have a 401(k) that allows you to invest in individual stocks of your choosing, you can still put money into a company as a means of saving for retirement. IRAs, or individual retirement accounts, are personal retirement plans that offer more control, including the choice of stocks. You can fund an IRA with pre-tax income, up to a set annual limit that depends on your age. You can also buy shares of stock that you earmark for retirement, eliminating the tax benefits of a retirement plan but also working around the limitations of IRAs and 401(k)s.

3x leverage can also triple your losses when the market bounced back. If you bought SPXU a week ago, you are about breaking even with the bounce. If you bought a year ago, you have lost 16%. Inverse ETFs work only when stocks are falling.

As of this moment, DOW has gained about 1000 points between yesterday and so far today.
 
NYSE suffers cosmetic problem on floor data screens!

http://www.cnbc.com/2015/08/27/nyse-suffers-cosmetic-problem-on-floors-data-screens.html

Read a deliberate manipulation after the dow hit an intraday high of 16666!

This is being manipulated! Two days ago the market closed at 15666, seven years ago the S&P bottomed at 666.
On the day where the dow closed down 777 points, the opening bell did not ring.

Shemitah stuff. Freaky.

Or maybe I watched this for too long and should take my aluhat off...

 
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3x leverage can also triple your losses when the market bounced back. If you bought SPXU a week ago, you are about breaking even with the bounce. If you bought a year ago, you have lost 16%. Inverse ETFs work only when stocks are falling.

As of this moment, DOW has gained about 1000 points between yesterday and so far today.

Levered etfs are absolutely toxic to the long term of a portfolio...
A suckers bet, invented to take the money of folks who think they are a lot smarter than they actually are...

And this applies to the up ones as much as the down ones..
 
Levered etfs are absolutely toxic to the long term of a portfolio...
A suckers bet, invented to take the money of folks who think they are a lot smarter than they actually are...

And this applies to the up ones as much as the down ones..

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What are you even talking about? QQQ is up 2X over the past 5 years on steady climb; all it does is track the Nasdaq X3. Honestly I think some people are scared of financial instruments as if they were poltergeist.

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What are you even talking about? QQQ is up 2X over the past 5 years on steady climb; all it does is track the Nasdaq X3. Honestly I think some people are scared of financial instruments as if they were poltergeist.

That is not an inverse ETF fund which is what I was discussing (and you were suggesting earlier). Yes- there are ETFs which have performed well. Inverse ETF funds are toxic and highly dangerous to your portfolio. At this moment, SPUX- which you recommended- is $37 a share. Since July, 2010, it has lost 98% of its value!!!

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http://www.nasdaq.com/symbol/spxu/s...dy=volume&comparison=off&index=&drilldown=off

Short QQQ has gone from $1300 a share in 2010 to $24 a share today. http://finance.yahoo.com/echarts?s=SQQQ+Interactive#{"range":"max","allowChartStacking":true}

Short Dow 30 has done better- "only" falling from $80 a share to $24 a share in that time. http://finance.yahoo.com/echarts?s=dog+Interactive#{"range":"max","allowChartStacking":true}
 
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Inverse ETF funds are toxic and highly dangerous to your portfolio.
Enh, you just say that because you think the thing they're inverting is bound to always go up.

How about an inverse fund of gold? What would you say to that, Zippy?



At this moment, SPUX- which you recommended- is $37 a share. Since July, 2010, it has lost 98% of its value!!!
Great. But he wasn't recommending it in July, 2010, now was he? And duh -- the stock market has gone up during that time. As an inverse stock market fund, it was doing its job.

Sigh.
Where has all the IQ gone,
Long time passing,....
 
I want to see long term performance. Not just one week. I know you don't own any stocks or funds for just one week either. Between August 18 and August 24th it made money. Half of those gains are already gone unless you sold on the 24th.

Sigh.
Where has all the IQ gone,
Long time passing,....
 
I'm a patient man. To simply the hypothesis ;D the theme here of #GTFOSTOCKMARKET is:

Minimum 30% down from the May high before we see the May high again.
Anticipated time line 6 - 18 months from 8/5/15


All US EURO major index inverse ETFs 6-18 months of wild blue moon rising.
 
Enh, you just say that because you think the thing they're inverting is bound to always go up.

How about an inverse fund of gold? What would you say to that, Zippy?



Great. But he wasn't recommending it in July, 2010, now was he? And duh -- the stock market has gone up during that time. As an inverse stock market fund, it was doing its job.

Sigh.
Where has all the IQ gone,
Long time passing,....

Also, all that 3x magic leverage is not free, those funds are exhorbantly expensive for what they are...

Everybody is always looking for that can of magic beans... In the financial world they only exist in the minds of poor simpletons who paradoxically believe they know everything...
 
I'm a patient man. To simply the hypothesis ;D the theme here of #GTFOSTOCKMARKET is:

Minimum 30% down from the May high before we see the May high again.
Anticipated time line 6 - 18 months from 8/5/15


All US EURO major index inverse ETFs 6-18 months of wild blue moon rising.

Dow was 18,300 in May. 30% off would mean Dow 12,810. Six to 18 months from May or from today? (we are already about five months past then).
 
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