And how many different handles have you used to harass people? I know I’ve lost count.
I have one registered handle. I rarely post anonymously, and never harass other posters. So, very unlike you, an obviously disturbed individual.
Don’t make me laugh. Your anonymous and harassing posts litter this message board (though many have righteously been deleted by the mods). You seem to forget that we have ways to tell who is who around here.
'For the first time this century, cash pays a higher yield in interest than the S&P 500 does in earnings — and with cash you actually get the cold hard money in your hands, rather than relying on accountants to calculate corporate profits correctly.'
'For the first time this century, cash pays a higher yield in interest than the S&P 500 does in earnings — and with cash you actually get the cold hard money in your hands, rather than relying on accountants to calculate corporate profits correctly.'
'For the first time this century, cash pays a higher yield in interest than the S&P 500 does in earnings — and with cash you actually get the cold hard money in your hands, rather than relying on accountants to calculate corporate profits correctly.'
For all the endless prognostications from CNBC windbags, data points (GDP, PPI, CPI, Unemp #’s, etc.), Federal Reserve Events (Interest rate decisions, minutes, meetings and speeches), the market is exactly where it was in June 2021, almost 2.5 years ago.
Rosenberg is always good for a laugh and a snigger.
From a year ago, just before the market rallied 20%+.
I dunno, DR, maybe we DID say 'fight the fed' and we won.
David Rosenberg @EconguyRosie How can we be near any bottom in the stock market when it’s so abundantly clear that Powell wants asset values to deflate? Notice how the bulls no longer say “don’t fight the Fed”!
Jeffrey Kleintop @JeffreyKleintop China is again on the cusp of deflation. In the past, that has been a consistent indicator of global recessions (2001-02, 2008-09, 2020).
does it? Who knows. That's just 11%ish down from the 52-week high. Hard to call that serious. The average year has a 14% correction. Have to get to at least average before we call it serious, right?
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