monsoon, on Apr 30 2009, 10:14 AM, said:
Short term views of the stock market (anything less than a year) is basically nothing more than gambling. Any piece of news can cause a dramatic change and unless one is willing to work with unpredictable odds, then I don't recommend it. The market is up since March. I don't think it is any sign at all that the economy is improving. It's a sign that corporations have improved their bottom lines at the moment by firing people during the first quarter. Is it sustainable in the long run? I don't think so. This economy won't recover until they admit what the real problems are and address them.
One thing to consider. Suppose something like a stock was worth $100 in October and was worth $10 in March. It lost 90 dollars which is a 90% drop. Easy enough. Now suppose that stock rises 90% from March to now. That is only a rise of $9. Much much less than the original fall $9 vs $90 even though both sound the same. This is how the media reports it.
fine and good monsoon, but this is in fact the beauty of the stock market. It is in fact a confidence game. if people get scared, they get out. if people get out stocks fall. regardless of profits etc, peoples confidence in stock is what drives the market.
a perfect example is Lehman brothers. LEH was profitable when it went under. People lost confidence in the industry and were getting out, then Lehman was identified as the "weakest" in the sector, so its stock was hit hardest. not because it was any worse off than Goldman Sachs, but because it was targeted by a lack in confidence that focused on it.
so, in the last 2 years say, the market in general has lost 90% (for example sake) and during this process trillions of dollars were taken out of the market and placed in traditional bank accounts for safe keeping (as evident in the increase in deposits at commercial banks) that is fine and good. we have a bad ass fincancial crisis on ourt hands right. well now that the damage has been mostly done things settle out, and some of the more risk advers get back into the market in blue chips first and then other more risky companies. the market now rises 90% over the last 2 months. people who got that 90% are psyched. people that did not are now wondering why their money is sitting in a savings account at Bank of America earning .01%
some of those people will take the positive sounding 90% return news coming from the media and get a stiffy like me and invest tentitively in the markets again while mostly staying safe. the addition of several billion to the equity markets drives the S&P higher and over the next quarter we get another 90% increase.
sure the value is still just 37% of what it was back in october, but now lots of people feel like they are missing the boat and the process accelerates.
this is how out markets work man.
it is irrelevent what some loser paid for a stock back in October.
If I bought on March 6th I am a rock star. if I could buy more now I would.
I am not talking about day trading here I am talking about getting on board with the market shifts. if you were one of the lemming jumping behind the market because it has been kicking butt for 5 years and you have lost your shirt over the last 2 years, I am sorry, but not entirely sorry. it is buyer be ware. if you buy low sell high you win. the market is currently at generational lows in terms of value. so buy.
buy stocks
buy land
buy houses
only if you can afford it and you can handle the risk.
I bought some GE shares a while ago when I thought it was near bottom. I was wrong and they re still under water. but I planned on spending the money and holding those shares literally to pay for my future unborn childerens college. so am I upset that I misjudged the bottom on GE? yes, but am I upset that I bought the shares. no, or at least ask me in 25 years.
I seemingly correctly judged the apparent bottom of ING shares, and so you win some you lose some.
the point is that in general you have to seriously look for value in this market. it is not moron proof, and honestly I hope morons loose money. They likely also bought a house they could not afford and were hoping to flip it in 2007.
the market was so moron proof over the last several years that people were bound to loose money.
shares of companies with emotional values often trump shares of companies with sound financials
do not ever pretend that the stock market is ever more than a popularity contest with a financial aspect.
being concerned with the real problems and addressing them is commendable, but the market does not care about them. it cares about appearance. look at how porkbellies dropped because of swine flu. the two are completely unrelated in reality, but the perception is enough to change billions of dollars. you can say its too risky I say its too tempting not to be a part of it. but be contrarian. if you like a stock wait for it to have a bad day. do not buy DNDN now that it bounced 100% hell never buy a drug company because of an FDA approval, but seriously if you are conciding buying a company like Aetna Insurance (AET) watch it for a bit research it and then when the time is right buy it. After posting earnings yesterday the stock skunked because of increased costs. It dropped over 10$ there is always a bounce back the next day, no matter how bad things are there is a bounce back. Catch the stock before the bounce back(only if you still like the company) and wether you are in short term mid term or for life, you at least start off by buying it at a discount because people got over ambitous in selling the day before. AET is up .46 right now.
I am not saying buy Aetna, it is a huge risk with the potential socialization of helthcare looming, but if there is a company you know and it has a banner day, you likely should not buy it that night. wait till it has a bad day. everyone has a bad day.
so many people lost life savings over the last 2 years, I am just saying if they want to re-coup any of those losses they need to get back in NOW. or 2 monts ago.
it makes no sense to be in while your getting beat up and stay out when you can win.