DIA Dow Jones 30 (ETF)

Acciones, ETFs
CHIQUI1
Mensajes: 12154
Registrado: Jue Ago 10, 2006 11:47 am

Re: DIA Dow Jones 30 (ETF)

Mensajepor CHIQUI1 » Mar Dic 01, 2009 10:24 am

Poo escribió:13:57:34 h.

Bancos USA
JP Morgan rebaja previsiones de beneficios sobre varios bancos grandes, como Wells Fargo y Bank of America entre otros

parece que elmercado no leda bola nada ,ambos bancos en el Pre estan :arriba:

Poo
Mensajes: 8975
Registrado: Jue Ago 20, 2009 11:31 am

Re: DIA Dow Jones 30 (ETF)

Mensajepor Poo » Mar Dic 01, 2009 10:15 am

13:57:34 h.

Bancos USA
JP Morgan rebaja previsiones de beneficios sobre varios bancos grandes, como Wells Fargo y Bank of America entre otros

LUCHO
Mensajes: 4339
Registrado: Mar Feb 06, 2007 12:53 pm

Re: DIA Dow Jones 30 (ETF)

Mensajepor LUCHO » Mar Dic 01, 2009 9:33 am


0zK
Mensajes: 7449
Registrado: Lun Mar 03, 2008 8:01 pm

DIA Dow Jones 30 (ETF)

Mensajepor 0zK » Mar Dic 01, 2009 8:59 am

martes negro .. futuros 76 pts :arriba:

rafaelerc
Mensajes: 149
Registrado: Lun Sep 01, 2008 9:07 pm

Re: DIA Dow Jones 30 (ETF)

Mensajepor rafaelerc » Lun Nov 30, 2009 8:18 pm

Vengo siguiendo a ING GROUP, el adr en NYSE, y la de Amsterdam, mi pregunta es, cual es la que mueve los hilos la de alla(AEX AMSTERD) o la de Nyse? y si el euro empieza con una correccion al ADr no le conviene para nada no??

PAC
Mensajes: 8885
Registrado: Mié Ago 10, 2005 1:01 am

Re: DIA Dow Jones 30 (ETF)

Mensajepor PAC » Lun Nov 30, 2009 7:42 pm

que relojito lo unico que veo es un dibujo en un papel , no es ningun reloj aca se va a poner peor que antes cuando esto muestre la realidad con que volo el mercado porque si la deuda la tapas con mas deuda solo conseguis que a la corta si estaba fundido lo terminas de aniquilar es como si tenes un tipo con un revolver y se esta por suisidar en ves de decirle no hagas una voludes le decis dale apreta el gatillo :twisted:

este vuelo es lindo si porqe a mas de uno le dio un gran respiro
pero ese oxigeno va al pulmon que le sacaron a sandro. imaginate el resultado

PAC
Mensajes: 8885
Registrado: Mié Ago 10, 2005 1:01 am

Re: DIA Dow Jones 30 (ETF)

Mensajepor PAC » Lun Nov 30, 2009 7:35 pm

obama dice
el mercado hace

2009 cierra a toda orquesta y nada de ombu en el 2010 se viene el drama de quien paga las cuentas y las burbujas que se pincharan

laviba

DIA Dow Jones 30 (ETF)

Mensajepor laviba » Sab Mar 10, 2007 3:03 pm

Clásico de clásicos: Paul Krugman. tomado de un artículo de The New York Times.

Friday, March 02, 2007
PAUL KRUGMAN: The Big Meltdown

FEB. 27, 2008

The great market meltdown of 2007 began exactly a year ago, with a 9 percent fall in the Shanghai market, followed by a 416-point slide in the Dow. But as in the previous global financial crisis, which began with the devaluation of Thailand’s currency in the summer of 1997, it took many months before people realized how far the damage would spread.

At the start, all sorts of implausible explanations were offered for the drop in U.S. stock prices. It was, some said, the fault of Alan Greenspan, the former chairman of the Federal Reserve, as if his statement of the obvious — that the housing slump could possibly cause a recession — had been news to anyone. One Republican congressman blamed Representative John Murtha, claiming that his efforts to stop the “surge” in Iraq had somehow unnerved the markets.

Even blaming events in Shanghai for what happened in New York was foolish on its face, except to the extent that the slump in China — whose stock markets had a combined valuation of only about 5 percent of the U.S. markets’ valuation — served as a wake-up call for investors.

The truth is that efforts to pin the stock decline on any particular piece of news are a waste of time.

Wise analysts remember the classic study that Robert Shiller of Yale carried out during the market crash of Oct. 19, 1987. His conclusion? “No news story or rumor appearing on the 19th or over the preceding weekend was responsible.” In 2007, as in 1987, investors rushed for the exits not because of external events, but because they saw other investors doing the same.

What made the market so vulnerable to panic? It wasn’t so much a matter of irrational exuberance — although there was plenty of that, too — as it was a matter of irrational complacency.

After the bursting of the technology bubble of the 1990s failed to produce a global disaster, investors began to act as if nothing bad would ever happen again. Risk premiums — the extra return people demand when lending money to less than totally reliable borrowers — dwindled away.

For example, in the early years of the decade, high-yield corporate bonds (formerly known as junk bonds) were able to attract buyers only by offering interest rates eight to 10 percentage points higher than U.S. government bonds. By early 2007, that margin was down to little more than two percentage points.

For a while, growing complacency became a self-fulfilling prophecy. As the what-me-worry attitude spread, it became easier for questionable borrowers to roll over their debts, so default rates went down. Also, falling interest rates on risky bonds meant higher prices for those bonds, so those who owned such bonds experienced big capital gains, leading even more investors to conclude that risk was a thing of the past.

Sooner or later, however, reality was bound to intrude. By early 2007, the collapse of the U.S. housing boom had brought with it widespread defaults on subprime mortgages — loans to home buyers who fail to meet the strictest lending standards. Lenders insisted that this was an isolated problem, which wouldn’t spread to the rest of the market or to the real economy. But it did.

For a couple of months after the shock of Feb. 27, markets oscillated wildly, soaring on bits of apparent good news, then plunging again. But by late spring, it was clear that the self-reinforcing cycle of complacency had given way to a self-reinforcing cycle of anxiety.

There was still one big unknown: had large market players, hedge funds in particular, taken on so much leverage — borrowing to buy risky assets — that the falling prices of those assets would set off a chain reaction of defaults and bankruptcies? Now, as we survey the financial wreckage of a global recession, we know the answer.

In retrospect, the complacency of investors on the eve of the crisis seems puzzling. Why didn’t they see the risks?

Well, things always seem clearer with the benefit of hindsight. At the time, even pessimists were unsure of their ground. For example, Paul Krugman concluded a column published on March 2, 2007, which described how a financial meltdown might happen, by hedging his bets, declaring that: “I’m not saying that things will actually play out this way. But if we’re going to have a crisis, here’s how.”


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