SevenEyedJeff
Member
- Joined
- May 31, 2007
- Messages
- 1,054
Nikkei was down 6%, Hang Seng lost over 12%, and the Dow is unchanged? The DOW also held up much better than overseas markets on Friday as well.
WTF?
WTF?
*waits for conspiracy theories*
You know somewhere inbetween they're trying to make more money before they make a one world Government, or hey I know a better one - PPT is doing it.
I swear evil people...our market needs to collapse so my gold will lead me to power!...
*sarcasm*...but that is probably what most people want to hear around here
*waits for conspiracy theories*
You know somewhere inbetween they're trying to make more money before they make a one world Government, or hey I know a better one - PPT is doing it.
I swear evil people...our market needs to collapse so my gold will lead me to power!...
*sarcasm*...but that is probably what most people want to hear around here
Thursday is the day to watch. This is when the Fed is expected to cut rates and Q3 GDP stats are released. Anything goes, I have no idea what could happen. Many predicted a crash on Friday but that was just another bad day for the dow. Today the dow is up 100 currently.
I swear evil people...our market needs to collapse so my gold will lead me to power!...
I've been trying to follow this situation closely as well. I've also listened and read a lot of Peter Schiff's opinions on getting out of the US dollar. I tend to agree with his long-term prospects for the US dollar but I'm still having a hard time pulling the trigger on reallocating my investments out of my domestic funds and into foreign funds since the foreign funds have dropped the most during this crisis, especially the emerging markets which have dropped off a cliff.
Right now I'm 75%/25% between US/Foreign (20% developed, 5% emerging). I've lost about 40% this year with that allocation. Schiff has been recommending to get of the US funds for awhile now. I'd be down over 50-60% if I allocated the entire amount to foreign funds a year or so ago. I just wonder when, and if, the foreign markets are going to start going back up while the US markets lag behind. Or, when and if I should reallocate to 100% foreign. I'm not sure I want to reallocate to some of these countries that are on the verge of bankruptcy themselves.
For those who still have some money in the market, how are your investments allocated?