Has the market hit bottom?

jlew24asujlew24asu Posts: 10,118
edited April 2009 in A Moving Train
Everyone seems very optimistic when Wells Fargo announced a solid profit this quarter. the next hurdle is whether or not GM will survive. if they dont, and personally I dont think they will or should, it will lead to many more job losses. so thats bad. lets say I'm cautiously optimistic. how bout u?
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  • soulsingingsoulsinging Posts: 13,202
    I'm still the guy hoping for a huge market crash. I think the whole concept of the stock market is a total work of fiction. What do those points even mean? It's just a really sophisticated casino for rich people, no different from betting on sports really. I still don't see why one is legal and the other is not.
  • jlew24asujlew24asu Posts: 10,118
    I'm still the guy hoping for a huge market crash. I think the whole concept of the stock market is a total work of fiction. What do those points even mean? It's just a really sophisticated casino for rich people, no different from betting on sports really. I still don't see why one is legal and the other is not.

    well gambling is based on pure guessing, chance, and probability. the person offering the bet(the casino or bookie) ALWAYS has better odds.

    investing is based on cold hard facts. at least it should be. too often emotions take over. for example, a publicly traded company is 100% transparent. again, at least is should be according the laws. companies use this money to grow their business, in turn, the stock holder can make some money "owning" the company. people buy stock based on the fact the company will grow and earn a profit. it is be no means fiction.

    hoping for (another) stock market crash is rather foolish and only hurts many people.
  • stickfig13stickfig13 Posts: 1,532
    I'm still the guy hoping for a huge market crash. I think the whole concept of the stock market is a total work of fiction. What do those points even mean? It's just a really sophisticated casino for rich people, no different from betting on sports really. I still don't see why one is legal and the other is not.


    Hoping the market crashes is certainly not something to hope for....Whether you like the idea of it or not.
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  • CosmoCosmo Posts: 12,225
    jlew24asu wrote:
    Everyone seems very optimistic when Wells Fargo announced a solid profit this quarter. the next hurdle is whether or not GM will survive. if they dont, and personally I dont think they will or should, it will lead to many more job losses. so thats bad. lets say I'm cautiously optimistic. how bout u?
    ...
    Jlew... First off.. welcome back. Really, i missed your honest, thought out debates.
    As for your questions... I don't know. I am more concerned about the Financial sector, than the auto industry. I am hoping that by shoring up the banks and their insurers, we can stablize the global markets. After that... i know the word 'Regulation' is on the Conservative hit-list but, we have seen that a corporation such as AIG cannot grow to the size that makes them a threat to the world economy if they are allowed to consume the competition and make wreckless decisions that endanger us all.
    As for General Motors... their leaders have been digging their own grave for decades. It has gotten so wide and deep that is will bury a lot of people. They need to re-organize or file for bankruptcy.
    If I were head of GM.. I wouls re-organize and streamline the operation. Chevy as the racing division.. Cadillac as the Luxury division... GMC for trucks... Buick for old people sedans... Pontiac for entry level and younger drivers. No more making crap cars that get rebadged and spread amongst all brands. Each Division focus on their market... for example, have Pontiac focus on making an economical, reliable, fuel efficient commuter/student car... while Chevy focuses on the Corvette, Camaro and NASCAR Racer. Pool the technology and resources so the advances the racing division deveops can be used by the others, along with the advances in alternate fuel sources from the entry level division.
    ...
    And i am with you.. i hope things work out. I think we all need to work on this, setting aside our political difference and realize that we are all in the same boat.
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  • jlew24asujlew24asu Posts: 10,118
    thanks cosmo, not sure if this is a glitch in the system, but I actually miss debating here. this board, more then others, has views from the most extreme of sides. usually makes for interesting discussion.

    I think financial industry regulation is inevitable and even necessary. to what extent is the $40 trillion dollar question. I am confident however that much has been very hard lessons learned. we'll see.

    the fix for GM is easy, IMO. TEAR UP THE UNION CONTRACTS. problem solved. obviously that wont happen and what appears to also not happen is big concessions from the unions. so I think backruptcy is the only option. GM simply can not afford to pay the unions anymore. its simply not possibly unless the government continues to borrow them money to do so. and even Obama says that wont happen.
  • callencallen Posts: 6,388
    jlew24asu wrote:
    thanks cosmo, not sure if this is a glitch in the system, but I actually miss debating here. this board, more then others, has views from the most extreme of sides. usually makes for interesting discussion.

    I think financial industry regulation is inevitable and even necessary. to what extent is the $40 trillion dollar question. I am confident however that much has been very hard lessons learned. we'll see.

    the fix for GM is easy, IMO. TEAR UP THE UNION CONTRACTS. problem solved. obviously that wont happen and what appears to also not happen is big concessions from the unions. so I think backruptcy is the only option. GM simply can not afford to pay the unions anymore. its simply not possibly unless the government continues to borrow them money to do so. and even Obama says that wont happen.

    Was under the impression that if GM filed bankcrupcy they could tear up existing contracts. Have mixed feelings on this as there were many Americans that worked hard for GM and were promised benefits during their careers. There should be a balance.

    Cosmo: .they no longer have a sedan that crosses all they're brands. Still a couple like Chevrolet and GMC trucks but mostly its done. No longer have a Pontiac Firebird and Chevy Camoro or Buick Century, Olds Cutlass, Pontiac Grand Prix and Chevy Monte Carlo.

    What would help American corporations would be universal health care...that would unload a huge burden and allow them to become more competetive with other world players.
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  • soulsingingsoulsinging Posts: 13,202
    jlew24asu wrote:
    I'm still the guy hoping for a huge market crash. I think the whole concept of the stock market is a total work of fiction. What do those points even mean? It's just a really sophisticated casino for rich people, no different from betting on sports really. I still don't see why one is legal and the other is not.

    well gambling is based on pure guessing, chance, and probability. the person offering the bet(the casino or bookie) ALWAYS has better odds.

    investing is based on cold hard facts. at least it should be. too often emotions take over. for example, a publicly traded company is 100% transparent. again, at least is should be according the laws. companies use this money to grow their business, in turn, the stock holder can make some money "owning" the company. people buy stock based on the fact the company will grow and earn a profit. it is be no means fiction.

    hoping for (another) stock market crash is rather foolish and only hurts many people.

    It is fiction. They all cook their books. And pressure to inflate stock prices is the reason for this. It's a slash and burn economy because of the stock market. There's no transparency. How else could the entire financial industry have been blindsided by the collapse of a dozen major companies in just ONE year?

    Say you run a successful company that turns a huge profit one year, then turns a good profit the next. Your company is now a failure. Why? Stockholders don't see profit, they see "oh my god, my dividends went down, the company is not doing well!" Enter sell off. Enter firing the good CEO with a solid, if not dazzling growth plan. Enter new CEO, a head hunter who axes jobs, ships them overseas, cuts quality, and provides record profits. Enter stock holders happy as pigs in shit. Then the bottom falls out on this unsustainable plan, the company folds, everyone loses their jobs, the shareholders lose their money (aside from the insiders that got tipped off to sell before the bottom fell out), but that CEO walks home with billions in compensation and benefits for destroying the company, while the previous guy can't find a job because he was a "failure."

    It's bullshit.

    Also, stocks are as much speculation as sports. You look at who's got what and what they're doing with it, and make guesses and projections based on how you think it will pay off come "game time." You can get facts on baseball players and how they play, just like you can get facts on companies and how they've done in the past. You do that to guess if they'll be up or down in the next go round. And just as bookies have the upper hand in sports, so do the insiders have the upper hand on the market.

    You think it's all based on fact? There was some study a few years back (I wish like hell I could find it), where a monkey threw darts at a random listing of stocks. He did just as well as the average Wall Street broker did that year. And you're telling me there's no chance or guessing and it's all very predictable fact?
  • jlew24asujlew24asu Posts: 10,118
    callen wrote:
    Was under the impression that if GM filed bankcrupcy they could tear up existing contracts. Have mixed feelings on this as there were many Americans that worked hard for GM and were promised benefits during their careers. There should be a balance.

    right, under bankruptcy they could tear up the contracts. but I'd rather they re-negotiate them instead of filing for bankruptcy. and that option looks to be off the table.
  • jlew24asujlew24asu Posts: 10,118
    soul, lets just agree to disagree. I do this type of stuff for a living. they are many honorable companies out there that dont lie. there are many proven mathematical strategies for trading stock based on company earnings. its not all one big guessing game. all too often greed and emotion take the consistency out of stock trading....like we saw in 1929, late 80s, 2000, and now. but over the long term, consistency is there.

    but I agree with your sports analogy. when I said gambling, I was more referring to blackjack, craps, slot machines, etc..
  • JOEJOEJOEJOEJOEJOE Posts: 10,627
    I'm still the guy hoping for a huge market crash. I think the whole concept of the stock market is a total work of fiction. What do those points even mean? It's just a really sophisticated casino for rich people, no different from betting on sports really. I still don't see why one is legal and the other is not.

    Aren't you the fella who called someone "self-centered" when they complained about the EV ticket sale procedure?

    Hoping for a huge market crash is 100x more self-centered, ain't it?
  • soulsingingsoulsinging Posts: 13,202
    stickfig13 wrote:
    I'm still the guy hoping for a huge market crash. I think the whole concept of the stock market is a total work of fiction. What do those points even mean? It's just a really sophisticated casino for rich people, no different from betting on sports really. I still don't see why one is legal and the other is not.


    Hoping the market crashes is certainly not something to hope for....Whether you like the idea of it or not.

    Sure it is. Time to reboot. It takes a catastrophe to cause the paradigm shift we need.
  • soulsingingsoulsinging Posts: 13,202
    JOEJOEJOE wrote:
    I'm still the guy hoping for a huge market crash. I think the whole concept of the stock market is a total work of fiction. What do those points even mean? It's just a really sophisticated casino for rich people, no different from betting on sports really. I still don't see why one is legal and the other is not.

    Aren't you the fella who called someone "self-centered" when they complained about the EV ticket sale procedure?

    Hoping for a huge market crash is 100x more self-centered, ain't it?

    How is it self-centered? I think it'd be better for everyone in the long run.
  • soulsingingsoulsinging Posts: 13,202
    jlew24asu wrote:
    soul, lets just agree to disagree. I do this type of stuff for a living. they are many honorable companies out there that dont lie. there are many proven mathematical strategies for trading stock based on company earnings. its not all one big guessing game. all too often greed and emotion take the consistency out of stock trading....like we saw in 1929, late 80s, 2000, and now. but over the long term, consistency is there.

    but I agree with your sports analogy. when I said gambling, I was more referring to blackjack, craps, slot machines, etc..

    Yeah, I was referring to sports betting. Like I said, not sure why one is ok and the other isn't.

    In any event, I've no doubt there are honest companies and honest people. I think the problem is that the stock market sets up a means for incentives the inevitable result of which is to encourage and reward greed and dishonesty.

    My other 'reboot' suggestion was instead of bailing out the banks by giving them huge lumps of money in an effort to get them to loan again (which is the exact thing that got us into this mess), you basically do a jubilee year. Use that money to pay off all the mortgages that are toxic. Yeah, people in over their heads get a huge windfall, but it's either that or we stay fucked. But that frees the banks from dead weight, and instantly helps consumers get out of crushing debt so that can start putting money back into the economy again. I don't get that people bitch about how they were responsible so why should other homeowners be bailed out for recklessness, but I never hear anyone saying that about massive money to banks that were irresponsible. But the way we're doing these bailouts helps nothing in the long term. It's just prolonging the agony. Either we ride it out, or we do something to help the problem. We don't just hand money to poorly run banks to insure their profits.
  • jlew24asujlew24asu Posts: 10,118

    Sure it is. Time to reboot. It takes a catastrophe to cause the paradigm shift we need.


    we have to a certain degree. stock market has lost HALF its value from the high. the rules of banking are changing as we speak.
  • AbuskedtiAbuskedti Posts: 1,917
    I believe the fundamental concept of the stock market are good.

    There are 2 things that turn it into the random gambling circus that brings down our economy.

    1. there is an enormous amount of discressionary money in the hand of a very few men and women. Their actions sway demand of some stock and the markets as a whole that often defy logic - and there are no mathematical strategies to forcast this

    2. Misinformation. Now that every man woman and child can own stocks or mutual funds. They are fed misinformation by the media and those "in the know". this is very calculated misinformation designed to manipulate investing of the pupulace after positioning themselves to profit.

    The only regulation we need is to punish misleading statements. We must find a way to motivate our media to be honest.. and expose thier slants. I believe it can be done. The stock markets are only a small example of the mess they make.
  • WildsWilds Posts: 4,329
    "you aint seen nothin yet".


    It is going to get a lot uglier. Sadly hitting rock bottom is the solution, and only then can we rebuild.

    We need to pay the piper and he hasn't even taken his interest yet, let alone the principle.
  • Regarding the first post, while Wells Fargo is one of the better banks out there (compared to the rest that's not saying a lot), there is the possibility that some of their positive news relates to number crunching the acquisition of Wachovia.

    As for GM, I agree that they should have re-negotiated the Union contracts, adjusting salaries while ensuring health benefits. It is not possible for GM to function at this rate, so throwing money at a completely broken problem is a waste. These american car companies had it all early on in the 80's, but have failed to adjust to competition. Add in the Union refusing to budge and there's our problem.

    Finally, I do not think the market has hit bottom. A market so volatile is not a completely accurate representation of company finances. We all saw how investor panic helped drive down AIG stock. That touches on the last post about misinformation too.

    My question is what happens when the next wave of defaulting on loans comes through? If someone can't make car payments how do they make student loan payments etc? The government is bankrupt already, but I guess they'll have to keep writing off losses.
  • soulsingingsoulsinging Posts: 13,202
    jlew24asu wrote:

    Sure it is. Time to reboot. It takes a catastrophe to cause the paradigm shift we need.


    we have to a certain degree. stock market has lost HALF its value from the high. the rules of banking are changing as we speak.

    I hope you're right about that, but I can't shake the feeling I get that these bail outs are basically a sign of approval for the practices that got us into this mess. A kind of, it's ok if your practices screwed us all, we'll hand you the money to get through it. There are strings attached to the loans, but I haven't seen any indication that the rules of banking generally are being even considered for reform. And even if they do, they're likely to be as reactionary and misguided and useless as Sarbanes-Oxley.
  • jlew24asujlew24asu Posts: 10,118
    Wilds wrote:
    "you aint seen nothin yet".


    It is going to get a lot uglier. Sadly hitting rock bottom is the solution, and only then can we rebuild.

    We need to pay the piper and he hasn't even taken his interest yet, let alone the principle.

    care to expand on this? what do you base this on? what will the low in the S&P be?
  • jlew24asujlew24asu Posts: 10,118
    jlew24asu wrote:

    Sure it is. Time to reboot. It takes a catastrophe to cause the paradigm shift we need.


    we have to a certain degree. stock market has lost HALF its value from the high. the rules of banking are changing as we speak.

    I hope you're right about that, but I can't shake the feeling I get that these bail outs are basically a sign of approval for the practices that got us into this mess. A kind of, it's ok if your practices screwed us all, we'll hand you the money to get through it. There are strings attached to the loans, but I haven't seen any indication that the rules of banking generally are being even considered for reform. And even if they do, they're likely to be as reactionary and misguided and useless as Sarbanes-Oxley.

    the best thing I have seen happen lately is many huge banks including Northern Trust and Goldman Sachs have already paid back the "bailout" money and refuse to take any more. thats a very very good thing. several other banks have submitted plans to pay the government back as well.

    and as much as I usually hate the media, we have them to thank for this. anytime a company that received bailout money farts, we hear about it non stop. I love that.

    regarding sarbanes...before I do what I do now, I worked at a large public corporation. they are in the real estate business and very highly leveraged in debt. I dont know if its the norm, but they were ANAL about sarbanes. crossing every T and dotting every I. maybe as a result of that, they have weathered this crisis extremely well considering the business they are in. so based on my experience, I wouldnt say its far from useless, but rather a very effective deterred to bending the accounting rules.
  • LesbelgesLesbelges Posts: 434
    jlew24asu wrote:


    regarding sarbanes...before I do what I do now, I worked at a large public corporation. they are in the real estate business and very highly leveraged in debt. I dont know if its the norm, but they were ANAL about sarbanes. crossing every T and dotting every I. maybe as a result of that, they have weathered this crisis extremely well considering the business they are in. so based on my experience, I wouldnt say its far from useless, but rather a very effective deterred to bending the accounting rules.


    Yes I can confirm that SOX is taken very very seriously (and I work at GM). We have a ton of technical accountants that make sure we are SOX compliant and then we have external auditors that audit individual groups periodically. I think this is a good thing even though it is quite a burden on a company. I think going forward a good place to put money in the stock market is in these audit companies that specialize in SOX and other such controls....You just know that the government is going to create some new rules for banks and hedge funds and someone is going to have to oversee them (meaning major bucks for auditing companies).

    I read a comment about GM not rebadging, well most GMCs are rebadged Chevy trucks and our SUVs are all rebadged...Chevy Equinox=Saturn Vue, Chevy Traverse=Buick Enclave=GMC Acadia=Saturn Outlook, Pontiac Solstice = Saturn Sky. We are getting away from this but still has been happening till very recently.
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  • mhterrapinmhterrapin Posts: 99
    edited April 2009
    soulsinging- I think you're right about a lot of current banking reform, being that it may be reactionary. While we get the story in the news about banks and TARP funds, these are usually the biggest banks out there. The way things have gone, the big banks got the funds right away while the local banks around the country are often still waiting on their paperwork being processed, months later. They can still reject the money, but even so. They have always done bank stress tests, that is nothing new. But it still remains uncertain how to value many of these assets, mostly real estate. That is hard enough, but then you have the banks/investment firms with additional toxic assets on their books.

    It is hard to say what type of reform they're aiming at, but being that it's so difficult to put a value on all of their toxic assets is a real issue. Not only that, but the added stress on the FDIC is barely manageable. The FDIC has increased coverage costs to some banks to a very high rate, cutting into their profits. Seems like that will cause even more local banks to close. If you run a bank, why risk it and continue to operate when you're only making 2%?

    Goldman Sachs was mentioned a few posts up, while TARP funds is one thing, there is no clear solution to putting a value on derivatives. There are people who are in charge of overseeing derivatives, but even they can't place a value on it. They can only guess how much they "lost". That being said, they will most likely remain on the top of the list of "bailouts" and recipients of funds, it's in the best interest of some members of our government. Henry Paulson made that very obvious.
    Post edited by mhterrapin on
  • AnonAnon Posts: 11,175
    It's just a really sophisticated casino for rich people

    I disagree. People have made fortunes and come from nothing to achieve their dreams because of investing in the stock market. It is in no way an invite-rich-only-club.
  • jlew24asujlew24asu Posts: 10,118
    JB811 wrote:
    It's just a really sophisticated casino for rich people

    I disagree. People have made fortunes and come from nothing to achieve their dreams because of investing in the stock market. It is in no way an invite-rich-only-club.

    and its also not a situation where the house ALWAYS wins like in a casino.
  • soulsingingsoulsinging Posts: 13,202
    jlew24asu wrote:
    JB811 wrote:
    It's just a really sophisticated casino for rich people

    I disagree. People have made fortunes and come from nothing to achieve their dreams because of investing in the stock market. It is in no way an invite-rich-only-club.

    and its also not a situation where the house ALWAYS wins like in a casino.

    Oh come on. How many people go from living on the street to millionaires via stock market? It's not like that movie trading places. People that "come from nothing" don't have capital to invest in the stock market to begin with.
  • jlew24asujlew24asu Posts: 10,118
    Oh come on. How many people go from living on the street to millionaires via stock market? It's not like that movie trading places. People that "come from nothing" don't have capital to invest in the stock market to begin with.

    I'll agree with you here...that was a bit of a stretch...
  • soulsingingsoulsinging Posts: 13,202
    jlew24asu wrote:
    Oh come on. How many people go from living on the street to millionaires via stock market? It's not like that movie trading places. People that "come from nothing" don't have capital to invest in the stock market to begin with.

    I'll agree with you here...that was a bit of a stretch...

    You do have a point about the house not always winning though, as the last few months have proven. But surely you can thus understand my sadistic pleasure in some of it. After you've been getting screwed by the house for years, it's kinda nice to see them taking it in the ass for once ;)
  • FiveB247xFiveB247x Posts: 2,330
    The stock market isn't a clear indication of the US economy, rather it merely represents big business, day traders and the like going about their business as usual. Things like real unemployment, gdp and consumer spending are better reflections of our overall economic standing, and by those measures, we've got a long way to go.
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  • I'm still the guy hoping for a huge market crash. I think the whole concept of the stock market is a total work of fiction. What do those points even mean? It's just a really sophisticated casino for rich people, no different from betting on sports really. I still don't see why one is legal and the other is not.


    "sophisticated casino for rich people?" "What do those points even mean?"

    my question is, "seriously?" Thats just conspiracy/fool talk.
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  • Welcome back Jlew.

    We will drift sideways for the next 6 to 12 months, baring anymore unpredictable catastrophic events at the large scale institutions.

    The central banks have flooded the markets with enough liquidity to fend off anymore significant downside.
    A range of 7000-9000 sounds about right for the DOW for the near future.

    Expect things get ugly again when the real money supply starts an inflation snowball.
    There are several things that can happen if things "get better". Because of all the government intervention and manipulation, there are a series of events that are likely to transpire juts when people think we are "out of the woods".

    Among the most potentially destructive of these are
    1. A bond market crash
    the PRECEIVED turnaround in global markets will likely lead to a mass sell off of US Treasury securities which in turn will prompt hikes in nominal interest rates, which means loan (and particularly home loan) rates will start to soar.

    2. massive inflation
    once bank reserves (which have been stuffed full by the Fed) start actually CIRCULATING in the system ... meaning, once lending resumes and all this issued (but UNcirculated) credit actually finds its way in to the market place, the value of the USD will have hell to pay.

    Thats my quick take.
    I'm with out a steady net connection for the next week or so, if anyone is wondering.

    Again, welcome back Jlew.
    :D
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