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huh

u guys can lock profit now to buy lower later & also follow dog jones as indicator
last time, u all will hold come rain or shine + average down like nobody business
now, u guys play timing market
in the coming months, all the factors r there for the markets to go bull running higher ie. dog jones la
whether goodie spillover effect to bolehland, u decide
obama may become 1 term president in year 2012 due to hope & change, republicans in congress is tightening the screws on spending
also refer earlier posting, it means analyst need to revise their estimates highers
DISTRIBUTION OF EARNINGS SURPRISES, POSITIVE SURPRISES: 258/368 = 70.1%
TOTAL UP EPS 297
tis libya & oil thingy is bullshit, its just the momo taking advantage to scare the weak holders + blood bath correction is alwiz healthy
no idea when selling subsides, doji wil giv a clue

I luv puts options & shorting capability, so u guys got reserves to shopping during doji?
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China’s ADRs have taken a beating the past two days as Libya’s turmoil sent fuel prices soaring. How is that any different from, say, French or Japanese stocks? Or the U.S. market, where some of the most rock-solid leaders have dived sharply? After all, fuel prices are soaring for everybody.
The glaring difference lies in the countries’ inflation rates, and the central banks’ monetary policies. In the U.S., the Bernanke-led Fed seems dead-set against any interest rate hikes for the near future. Still worried about a sluggish recovery from an awful economic mess, the Fed is doing all it can to boost the economy. It has embraced ZIRP, Zero Interest-Rate Policy, and soaring oil prices don’t seem likely to derail that plan.
The People’s Bank of China, in contrast, must deal with a nasty inflation problem. Driven by painful hikes in food prices, the PBOC has been raising interest rates and restricting the supply of credit. Of course, the downside to this war on inflation is economic growth. Some slowing in China’s
double-digit GDP gains is a near certainty. Investors must be worrying if these moves will send the emerging-market Goliath into a recession.
Add to this picture screaming oil prices, and the inflation that must result. Factories’ energy costs will rise. Workers must demand higher wages to offset their own surging fuel expenses as well as the higher prices for all manner of goods.
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i'm of the same view as well. but regardless of this, if it persists into a long term trend then can't fight the wave too

damn quote not working
This post has been edited by teehk_tee: Feb 25 2011, 07:08 AM