Friday: No Major Economic Releases
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[image: Mortgage Rates] Note: Mortgage rates are from MortgageNewsDaily.com
and are for top tier scenarios.
Friday:
• At 10:00 AM ET, *University of Michig...
1 hour ago
5 comments:
Stag,
"They say never try to catch a falling knife. In my opinion, investors of today are trying to catch a knife thrown at a ceiling. Good luck figuring out how high that might be. I'll pass."
This is a fantastic argument to use whenever some blasted bull/fool who claims to have invested in the stock market "at the bottom" in March of last year posts their fantasy gains.
Unless they can link me/us up to some posts showing their convictions at the time (the bottom) it is nothing but illusion.
G.H.,
This is a fantastic argument to use whenever some blasted bull/fool who claims to have invested in the stock market "at the bottom" in March of last year posts their fantasy gains.
Claims to have invested? It is almost like you don't believe what an anonymous Internet poster may or may not have made? Shocking! Shocking I tell you!!
When I see a stock crash on one day and a trader on Yahoo's message board tells me that he sold the previous day just in time, who am I going to believe? Him or my gut?
Here's cheers to guts baby!!
Trouble is, the forums I frequent require (I mean REQUIRE) absolute proof when you object to someone's fantasy "hindsight" claim.
Unless you can dredge up some actual posts from the past that show confliction between today's claims and yesterday's "claimed" convictions you have nothing.
I occasionally score a victory but mind you it's hard researched and fought. Usually though, it's not worth the effort.
It's not a matter of not believing anonymous posters. It's a matter of pinning their asses to the wall.
I'm working on just such a man as we speak. I'm a little hesitant to post links to the forum because doing so could implicate me in a conspiracy of using much smarter bloggers material without source to state my case!
Not that I would actually do that of course ;)
I'm not sure why you think the last S&P bubble was "rational" - the money for it was coming from this which is less rational than anything I've ever seen.
bobn,
I'm not sure why you think the last S&P bubble was "rational"...
I said...
I joke that this last bubble was a rational bubble because nobody could see it coming.
I joke.
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