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HK March 3rd 09 07:08 PM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 
....are selling for the same amounts as "penny stocks" used to sell for...

....what are penny stocks selling for?


My take on stock prices:

Stocks are now selling are prices that more closely reflect the actual
value of the companies that issued them, and the prices they should have
been selling for for the past two decades.

Frogwatch[_2_] March 3rd 09 07:28 PM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 
On Mar 3, 2:08 pm, HK wrote:
...are selling for the same amounts as "penny stocks" used to sell for...

...what are penny stocks selling for?

My take on stock prices:

Stocks are now selling are prices that more closely reflect the actual
value of the companies that issued them, and the prices they should have
been selling for for the past two decades.


Meanwhile, in the real world.............

D.Duck March 3rd 09 07:59 PM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 

"HK" wrote in message
m...
...are selling for the same amounts as "penny stocks" used to sell for...

...what are penny stocks selling for?


My take on stock prices:

Stocks are now selling are prices that more closely reflect the actual
value of the companies that issued them, and the prices they should have
been selling for for the past two decades.


And who/what determines the actual value of stocks, your real estate, your
boat, your car, etc.?



HK March 3rd 09 09:13 PM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 
D.Duck wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
m...
...are selling for the same amounts as "penny stocks" used to sell for...

...what are penny stocks selling for?


My take on stock prices:

Stocks are now selling are prices that more closely reflect the actual
value of the companies that issued them, and the prices they should have
been selling for for the past two decades.


And who/what determines the actual value of stocks, your real estate, your
boat, your car, etc.?



The price of one's house (at least when you buy it new), car, boat,
commercial real estate, has little to do with the sort of speculation
and book-cooking done in connection with the sale of corporate stocks,
et cetera. Now, because of greed and outright fraud in the lending,
stock, insurance businesses, the value of just about everything has gone
down because far fewer people have the wherewithal to buy.

I saw earlier today that Citibank shares were selling for less than the
ATM charges some banks charge.

Does anyone really think the value of shares will rise to where they
were a couple of years ago? Or that they should?

Eisboch[_4_] March 3rd 09 10:13 PM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 

"HK" wrote in message
m...
...are selling for the same amounts as "penny stocks" used to sell for...

...what are penny stocks selling for?


My take on stock prices:

Stocks are now selling are prices that more closely reflect the actual
value of the companies that issued them, and the prices they should have
been selling for for the past two decades.



How do you determine that? Last time I checked stock sold for whatever
people were willing to pay for it with a hopeful expectation that their
value would go up over time.

What is sad is that some poor sucker who socked his money away for
retirement in a 401K plan is back to where he was in 1996-97. That's not a
correction. That's a crash.

Eisboch


HK March 3rd 09 10:45 PM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 
Eisboch wrote:

"HK" wrote in message
m...
...are selling for the same amounts as "penny stocks" used to sell for...

...what are penny stocks selling for?


My take on stock prices:

Stocks are now selling are prices that more closely reflect the actual
value of the companies that issued them, and the prices they should
have been selling for for the past two decades.



How do you determine that? Last time I checked stock sold for whatever
people were willing to pay for it with a hopeful expectation that their
value would go up over time.

What is sad is that some poor sucker who socked his money away for
retirement in a 401K plan is back to where he was in 1996-97. That's
not a correction. That's a crash.

Eisboch



I base it on my belief that the inflated stock prices of the last few
decades were based upon nothing more than fraud, collusion between
accounting companies and corporations, lax enforcement and, of course,
greed.

BAR[_2_] March 4th 09 12:21 AM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 
HK wrote:
D.Duck wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
m...
...are selling for the same amounts as "penny stocks" used to sell
for...

...what are penny stocks selling for?


My take on stock prices:

Stocks are now selling are prices that more closely reflect the
actual value of the companies that issued them, and the prices they
should have been selling for for the past two decades.


And who/what determines the actual value of stocks, your real estate,
your boat, your car, etc.?


The price of one's house (at least when you buy it new), car, boat,
commercial real estate, has little to do with the sort of speculation
and book-cooking done in connection with the sale of corporate stocks,
et cetera. Now, because of greed and outright fraud in the lending,
stock, insurance businesses, the value of just about everything has gone
down because far fewer people have the wherewithal to buy.

I saw earlier today that Citibank shares were selling for less than the
ATM charges some banks charge.

Does anyone really think the value of shares will rise to where they
were a couple of years ago? Or that they should?


The price is determined by the purchaser.

GC Boater March 4th 09 12:23 AM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 
On Mar 3, 4:45*pm, HK wrote:
Eisboch wrote:

"HK" wrote in message
om...
...are selling for the same amounts as "penny stocks" used to sell for....


...what are penny stocks selling for?


My take on stock prices:


Stocks are now selling are prices that more closely reflect the actual
value of the companies that issued them, and the prices they should
have been selling for for the past two decades.


How do you determine that? * Last time I checked stock sold for whatever
people were willing to pay for it with a hopeful expectation that their
value would go up over time.


What is sad is that some poor sucker who socked his money away for
retirement in a 401K plan is back to where he was in 1996-97. *That's
not a correction. *That's a crash.


Eisboch


I base it on my belief that the inflated stock prices of the last few
decades were based upon nothing more than fraud, collusion between
accounting companies and corporations, lax enforcement and, of course,
greed.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Was that what they taught you at Yale?

Eisboch[_4_] March 4th 09 12:51 AM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 

"HK" wrote in message
...
Eisboch wrote:

"HK" wrote in message
m...
...are selling for the same amounts as "penny stocks" used to sell
for...

...what are penny stocks selling for?


My take on stock prices:

Stocks are now selling are prices that more closely reflect the actual
value of the companies that issued them, and the prices they should have
been selling for for the past two decades.



How do you determine that? Last time I checked stock sold for whatever
people were willing to pay for it with a hopeful expectation that their
value would go up over time.

What is sad is that some poor sucker who socked his money away for
retirement in a 401K plan is back to where he was in 1996-97. That's not
a correction. That's a crash.

Eisboch



I base it on my belief that the inflated stock prices of the last few
decades were based upon nothing more than fraud, collusion between
accounting companies and corporations, lax enforcement and, of course,
greed.



Of course you do. And it's all Bush's fault too. Obama simply inherited
the problems.

But of course your simplistic beliefs make it easy to "understand" a very
complex situation brought on by many factors and actions on both sides of
the political spectrum. And, of course, the fact that the fraud and
collusion in big business that gets all the media attention is
representative of a small percentage of businesses, most of which operate in
an honest and lawful manner. Your union affiliations blind you to the
truth.

So, it's pointless to debate. I do remember, however, the days of your
bragging about how well your investments had performed, notably Microsoft.
How times have changed with the political wind.

Eisboch


D K[_8_] March 4th 09 01:18 AM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 
GC Boater wrote:
On Mar 3, 4:45 pm, HK wrote:
Eisboch wrote:

"HK" wrote in message
m...
...are selling for the same amounts as "penny stocks" used to sell for....
...what are penny stocks selling for?
My take on stock prices:
Stocks are now selling are prices that more closely reflect the actual
value of the companies that issued them, and the prices they should
have been selling for for the past two decades.
How do you determine that? Last time I checked stock sold for whatever
people were willing to pay for it with a hopeful expectation that their
value would go up over time.
What is sad is that some poor sucker who socked his money away for
retirement in a 401K plan is back to where he was in 1996-97. That's
not a correction. That's a crash.
Eisboch

I base it on my belief that the inflated stock prices of the last few
decades were based upon nothing more than fraud, collusion between
accounting companies and corporations, lax enforcement and, of course,
greed.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Was that what they taught you at Yale?


They forgot to tell WAFA that union organizers and their buddies are
financed by greed.

GC Boater March 4th 09 01:18 AM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 
On Mar 3, 6:51*pm, "Eisboch" wrote:
"HK" wrote in message

...





Eisboch wrote:


"HK" wrote in message
news:ENOdnbmmx96NHTDUnZ2dnUVZ_gqWnZ2d@earthlink. com...
...are selling for the same amounts as "penny stocks" used to sell
for...


...what are penny stocks selling for?


My take on stock prices:


Stocks are now selling are prices that more closely reflect the actual
value of the companies that issued them, and the prices they should have
been selling for for the past two decades.


How do you determine that? * Last time I checked stock sold for whatever
people were willing to pay for it with a hopeful expectation that their
value would go up over time.


What is sad is that some poor sucker who socked his money away for
retirement in a 401K plan is back to where he was in 1996-97. *That's not
a correction. *That's a crash.


Eisboch


I base it on my belief that the inflated stock prices of the last few
decades were based upon nothing more than fraud, collusion between
accounting companies and corporations, lax enforcement and, of course,
greed.


Of course you do. *And it's all Bush's fault too. *Obama simply inherited
the problems.

But of course your simplistic beliefs make it easy to "understand" a very
complex situation brought on by many factors and actions on both sides of
the political spectrum. *And, of course, the fact that the fraud and
collusion in big business that gets all the media attention is
representative of a small percentage of businesses, most of which operate in
an honest and lawful manner. * Your union affiliations blind you to the
truth.

So, it's pointless to debate. *I do remember, however, the days of your
bragging about how well your investments had performed, notably Microsoft..
How times have changed with the political wind.

Eisboch- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


What you wanna bet that the Microsoft shares were in the same boat
(pun intended) as: Yale / Doctor-Doctor / Lobster Boat?

HK March 4th 09 02:18 AM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 
Eisboch wrote:

"HK" wrote in message
...
Eisboch wrote:

"HK" wrote in message
m...
...are selling for the same amounts as "penny stocks" used to sell
for...

...what are penny stocks selling for?


My take on stock prices:

Stocks are now selling are prices that more closely reflect the
actual value of the companies that issued them, and the prices they
should have been selling for for the past two decades.


How do you determine that? Last time I checked stock sold for
whatever people were willing to pay for it with a hopeful expectation
that their value would go up over time.

What is sad is that some poor sucker who socked his money away for
retirement in a 401K plan is back to where he was in 1996-97. That's
not a correction. That's a crash.

Eisboch



I base it on my belief that the inflated stock prices of the last few
decades were based upon nothing more than fraud, collusion between
accounting companies and corporations, lax enforcement and, of course,
greed.



Of course you do. And it's all Bush's fault too. Obama simply
inherited the problems.

But of course your simplistic beliefs make it easy to "understand" a
very complex situation brought on by many factors and actions on both
sides of the political spectrum. And, of course, the fact that the
fraud and collusion in big business that gets all the media attention is
representative of a small percentage of businesses, most of which
operate in an honest and lawful manner. Your union affiliations blind
you to the truth.

So, it's pointless to debate. I do remember, however, the days of your
bragging about how well your investments had performed, notably
Microsoft. How times have changed with the political wind.

Eisboch



Indeed, at one point, I had shares in a handful of companies, including
Microsoft, which I bought at close to the beginning of its public
availability. These days, I don't even have shares in Garmin anymore.

Fraud and collusion is rampant in big business, by the way.

D.Duck March 4th 09 02:21 AM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 

"HK" wrote in message
m...
D.Duck wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
m...
...are selling for the same amounts as "penny stocks" used to sell
for...

...what are penny stocks selling for?


My take on stock prices:

Stocks are now selling are prices that more closely reflect the actual
value of the companies that issued them, and the prices they should have
been selling for for the past two decades.


And who/what determines the actual value of stocks, your real estate,
your boat, your car, etc.?


The price of one's house (at least when you buy it new), car, boat,
commercial real estate, has little to do with the sort of speculation and
book-cooking done in connection with the sale of corporate stocks, et
cetera. Now, because of greed and outright fraud in the lending, stock,
insurance businesses, the value of just about everything has gone down
because far fewer people have the wherewithal to buy.

I saw earlier today that Citibank shares were selling for less than the
ATM charges some banks charge.

Does anyone really think the value of shares will rise to where they were
a couple of years ago? Or that they should?


If stocks don't go up, look at all the retirees that will be working at
Wal-Mart till they just can't do it any longer. Many millions of people
have seen their 401Ks take a tremendous hit, money they were counting on for
retirement.



[email protected] March 4th 09 02:36 AM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 
On Mar 3, 5:45*pm, HK wrote:

I base it on my belief that the inflated stock prices of the last few
decades were based upon nothing more than fraud, collusion between
accounting companies and corporations, lax enforcement and, of course,
greed.


So, you didn't support the bailouts of GM, Chrysler, along with
various "Banksters"?
--
SJM


HK March 4th 09 02:36 AM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 
D.Duck wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
m...
D.Duck wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
m...
...are selling for the same amounts as "penny stocks" used to sell
for...

...what are penny stocks selling for?


My take on stock prices:

Stocks are now selling are prices that more closely reflect the actual
value of the companies that issued them, and the prices they should have
been selling for for the past two decades.
And who/what determines the actual value of stocks, your real estate,
your boat, your car, etc.?

The price of one's house (at least when you buy it new), car, boat,
commercial real estate, has little to do with the sort of speculation and
book-cooking done in connection with the sale of corporate stocks, et
cetera. Now, because of greed and outright fraud in the lending, stock,
insurance businesses, the value of just about everything has gone down
because far fewer people have the wherewithal to buy.

I saw earlier today that Citibank shares were selling for less than the
ATM charges some banks charge.

Does anyone really think the value of shares will rise to where they were
a couple of years ago? Or that they should?


If stocks don't go up, look at all the retirees that will be working at
Wal-Mart till they just can't do it any longer. Many millions of people
have seen their 401Ks take a tremendous hit, money they were counting on for
retirement.



Oh, I understand the ramifications of the crash. I just believe the
share values of the past were grossly overinflated due to speculators,
those who feed and feed upon speculators, dishonest accounting firms and
dishonest corporate officials, banking, brokerage and insurance
industries, and the mal-, mis-, and nonfeasance of the regulatory
agencies under Bush.

Any small investors who in the future decide to participate again in the
corporate stock ponzi schemes should be very, very sceptical of stock
prices and what supposedly underpins P/E ratios.

D.Duck March 4th 09 02:40 AM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 

"HK" wrote in message
m...
D.Duck wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
m...
D.Duck wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
m...
...are selling for the same amounts as "penny stocks" used to sell
for...

...what are penny stocks selling for?


My take on stock prices:

Stocks are now selling are prices that more closely reflect the actual
value of the companies that issued them, and the prices they should
have been selling for for the past two decades.
And who/what determines the actual value of stocks, your real estate,
your boat, your car, etc.?
The price of one's house (at least when you buy it new), car, boat,
commercial real estate, has little to do with the sort of speculation
and book-cooking done in connection with the sale of corporate stocks,
et cetera. Now, because of greed and outright fraud in the lending,
stock, insurance businesses, the value of just about everything has gone
down because far fewer people have the wherewithal to buy.

I saw earlier today that Citibank shares were selling for less than the
ATM charges some banks charge.

Does anyone really think the value of shares will rise to where they
were a couple of years ago? Or that they should?


If stocks don't go up, look at all the retirees that will be working at
Wal-Mart till they just can't do it any longer. Many millions of people
have seen their 401Ks take a tremendous hit, money they were counting on
for retirement.


Oh, I understand the ramifications of the crash. I just believe the share
values of the past were grossly overinflated due to speculators, those who
feed and feed upon speculators, dishonest accounting firms and dishonest
corporate officials, banking, brokerage and insurance industries, and the
mal-, mis-, and nonfeasance of the regulatory agencies under Bush.

Any small investors who in the future decide to participate again in the
corporate stock ponzi schemes should be very, very sceptical of stock
prices and what supposedly underpins P/E ratios.


And just how many of the thousands of corporations were affected by
"dishonest accounting firms and
dishonest corporate officials"?



D.Duck March 4th 09 02:42 AM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 

"HK" wrote in message
m...
D.Duck wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
m...
D.Duck wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
m...
...are selling for the same amounts as "penny stocks" used to sell
for...

...what are penny stocks selling for?


My take on stock prices:

Stocks are now selling are prices that more closely reflect the actual
value of the companies that issued them, and the prices they should
have been selling for for the past two decades.
And who/what determines the actual value of stocks, your real estate,
your boat, your car, etc.?
The price of one's house (at least when you buy it new), car, boat,
commercial real estate, has little to do with the sort of speculation
and book-cooking done in connection with the sale of corporate stocks,
et cetera. Now, because of greed and outright fraud in the lending,
stock, insurance businesses, the value of just about everything has gone
down because far fewer people have the wherewithal to buy.

I saw earlier today that Citibank shares were selling for less than the
ATM charges some banks charge.

Does anyone really think the value of shares will rise to where they
were a couple of years ago? Or that they should?


If stocks don't go up, look at all the retirees that will be working at
Wal-Mart till they just can't do it any longer. Many millions of people
have seen their 401Ks take a tremendous hit, money they were counting on
for retirement.


Oh, I understand the ramifications of the crash. I just believe the share
values of the past were grossly overinflated due to speculators, those who
feed and feed upon speculators, dishonest accounting firms and dishonest
corporate officials, banking, brokerage and insurance industries, and the
mal-, mis-, and nonfeasance of the regulatory agencies under Bush.

Any small investors who in the future decide to participate again in the
corporate stock ponzi schemes should be very, very sceptical of stock
prices and what supposedly underpins P/E ratios.



Oh, and the Teamster's pension fund problems come to mind.



HK March 4th 09 03:00 AM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 
D.Duck wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
m...
D.Duck wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
m...
D.Duck wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
m...
...are selling for the same amounts as "penny stocks" used to sell
for...

...what are penny stocks selling for?


My take on stock prices:

Stocks are now selling are prices that more closely reflect the actual
value of the companies that issued them, and the prices they should
have been selling for for the past two decades.
And who/what determines the actual value of stocks, your real estate,
your boat, your car, etc.?
The price of one's house (at least when you buy it new), car, boat,
commercial real estate, has little to do with the sort of speculation
and book-cooking done in connection with the sale of corporate stocks,
et cetera. Now, because of greed and outright fraud in the lending,
stock, insurance businesses, the value of just about everything has gone
down because far fewer people have the wherewithal to buy.

I saw earlier today that Citibank shares were selling for less than the
ATM charges some banks charge.

Does anyone really think the value of shares will rise to where they
were a couple of years ago? Or that they should?
If stocks don't go up, look at all the retirees that will be working at
Wal-Mart till they just can't do it any longer. Many millions of people
have seen their 401Ks take a tremendous hit, money they were counting on
for retirement.

Oh, I understand the ramifications of the crash. I just believe the share
values of the past were grossly overinflated due to speculators, those who
feed and feed upon speculators, dishonest accounting firms and dishonest
corporate officials, banking, brokerage and insurance industries, and the
mal-, mis-, and nonfeasance of the regulatory agencies under Bush.

Any small investors who in the future decide to participate again in the
corporate stock ponzi schemes should be very, very sceptical of stock
prices and what supposedly underpins P/E ratios.


And just how many of the thousands of corporations were affected by
"dishonest accounting firms and
dishonest corporate officials"?



All we know about are the ones we know about. Remember Arthur Anderson?

HK March 4th 09 03:04 AM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 
D.Duck wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
m...
D.Duck wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
m...
D.Duck wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
m...
...are selling for the same amounts as "penny stocks" used to sell
for...

...what are penny stocks selling for?


My take on stock prices:

Stocks are now selling are prices that more closely reflect the actual
value of the companies that issued them, and the prices they should
have been selling for for the past two decades.
And who/what determines the actual value of stocks, your real estate,
your boat, your car, etc.?
The price of one's house (at least when you buy it new), car, boat,
commercial real estate, has little to do with the sort of speculation
and book-cooking done in connection with the sale of corporate stocks,
et cetera. Now, because of greed and outright fraud in the lending,
stock, insurance businesses, the value of just about everything has gone
down because far fewer people have the wherewithal to buy.

I saw earlier today that Citibank shares were selling for less than the
ATM charges some banks charge.

Does anyone really think the value of shares will rise to where they
were a couple of years ago? Or that they should?
If stocks don't go up, look at all the retirees that will be working at
Wal-Mart till they just can't do it any longer. Many millions of people
have seen their 401Ks take a tremendous hit, money they were counting on
for retirement.

Oh, I understand the ramifications of the crash. I just believe the share
values of the past were grossly overinflated due to speculators, those who
feed and feed upon speculators, dishonest accounting firms and dishonest
corporate officials, banking, brokerage and insurance industries, and the
mal-, mis-, and nonfeasance of the regulatory agencies under Bush.

Any small investors who in the future decide to participate again in the
corporate stock ponzi schemes should be very, very sceptical of stock
prices and what supposedly underpins P/E ratios.



Oh, and the Teamster's pension fund problems come to mind.



Once again, I will remind you and others that if you are a trustee on a
union pension fund and "mess around" with the funds, you are prosecuted,
and the financial losses are made good by the mandatory bond. The
bonding company typically works closely with prosecutors to try to
ensure time in the slammer for the perps.


BAR[_2_] March 4th 09 03:13 AM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 
HK wrote:
D.Duck wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
m...
D.Duck wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
m...
D.Duck wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
m...
...are selling for the same amounts as "penny stocks" used to
sell for...

...what are penny stocks selling for?


My take on stock prices:

Stocks are now selling are prices that more closely reflect the
actual value of the companies that issued them, and the prices
they should have been selling for for the past two decades.
And who/what determines the actual value of stocks, your real
estate, your boat, your car, etc.?
The price of one's house (at least when you buy it new), car, boat,
commercial real estate, has little to do with the sort of
speculation and book-cooking done in connection with the sale of
corporate stocks, et cetera. Now, because of greed and outright
fraud in the lending, stock, insurance businesses, the value of
just about everything has gone down because far fewer people have
the wherewithal to buy.

I saw earlier today that Citibank shares were selling for less than
the ATM charges some banks charge.

Does anyone really think the value of shares will rise to where
they were a couple of years ago? Or that they should?
If stocks don't go up, look at all the retirees that will be working
at Wal-Mart till they just can't do it any longer. Many millions of
people have seen their 401Ks take a tremendous hit, money they were
counting on for retirement.
Oh, I understand the ramifications of the crash. I just believe the
share values of the past were grossly overinflated due to
speculators, those who feed and feed upon speculators, dishonest
accounting firms and dishonest corporate officials, banking,
brokerage and insurance industries, and the mal-, mis-, and
nonfeasance of the regulatory agencies under Bush.

Any small investors who in the future decide to participate again in
the corporate stock ponzi schemes should be very, very sceptical of
stock prices and what supposedly underpins P/E ratios.



Oh, and the Teamster's pension fund problems come to mind.


Once again, I will remind you and others that if you are a trustee on a
union pension fund and "mess around" with the funds, you are prosecuted,
and the financial losses are made good by the mandatory bond. The
bonding company typically works closely with prosecutors to try to
ensure time in the slammer for the perps.


Yeah, right.



GC Boater March 4th 09 03:16 AM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 
On Mar 3, 9:04*pm, HK wrote:
D.Duck wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
om...
D.Duck wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
news:f56dnb95dsnDADDUnZ2dnUVZ_oTinZ2d@earthlink .com...
D.Duck wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
news:ENOdnbmmx96NHTDUnZ2dnUVZ_gqWnZ2d@earthli nk.com...
...are selling for the same amounts as "penny stocks" used to sell
for...


...what are penny stocks selling for?


My take on stock prices:


Stocks are now selling are prices that more closely reflect the actual
value of the companies that issued them, and the prices they should
have been selling for for the past two decades.
And who/what determines the actual value of stocks, your real estate,
your boat, your car, etc.?
The price of one's house (at least when you buy it new), car, boat,
commercial real estate, has little to do with the sort of speculation
and book-cooking done in connection with the sale of corporate stocks,
et cetera. Now, because of greed and outright fraud in the lending,
stock, insurance businesses, the value of just about everything has gone
down because far fewer people have the wherewithal to buy.


I saw earlier today that Citibank shares were selling for less than the
ATM charges some banks charge.


Does anyone really think the value of shares will rise to where they
were a couple of years ago? Or that they should?
If stocks don't go up, look at all the retirees that will be working at
Wal-Mart till they just can't do it any longer. *Many millions of people
have seen their 401Ks take a tremendous hit, money they were counting on
for retirement.
Oh, I understand the ramifications of the crash. I just believe the share
values of the past were grossly overinflated due to speculators, those who
feed and feed upon speculators, dishonest accounting firms and dishonest
corporate officials, banking, brokerage and insurance industries, and the
mal-, mis-, and nonfeasance of the regulatory agencies under Bush.


Any small investors who in the future decide to participate again in the
corporate stock ponzi schemes should be very, very sceptical of stock
prices and what supposedly underpins P/E ratios.


Oh, and the Teamster's pension fund problems come to mind.


Once again, I will remind you and others that if you are a trustee on a
union pension fund and "mess around" with the funds, you are prosecuted,
and the financial losses are made good by the mandatory bond. The
bonding company typically works closely with prosecutors to try to
ensure time in the slammer for the perps.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


"The perps." What kind of talk is that? You've been watching too
much television, Krausie.

HK March 4th 09 03:33 AM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 
BAR wrote:
HK wrote:
D.Duck wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
m...
D.Duck wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
m...
D.Duck wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
m...
...are selling for the same amounts as "penny stocks" used to
sell for...

...what are penny stocks selling for?


My take on stock prices:

Stocks are now selling are prices that more closely reflect the
actual value of the companies that issued them, and the prices
they should have been selling for for the past two decades.
And who/what determines the actual value of stocks, your real
estate, your boat, your car, etc.?
The price of one's house (at least when you buy it new), car,
boat, commercial real estate, has little to do with the sort of
speculation and book-cooking done in connection with the sale of
corporate stocks, et cetera. Now, because of greed and outright
fraud in the lending, stock, insurance businesses, the value of
just about everything has gone down because far fewer people have
the wherewithal to buy.

I saw earlier today that Citibank shares were selling for less
than the ATM charges some banks charge.

Does anyone really think the value of shares will rise to where
they were a couple of years ago? Or that they should?
If stocks don't go up, look at all the retirees that will be
working at Wal-Mart till they just can't do it any longer. Many
millions of people have seen their 401Ks take a tremendous hit,
money they were counting on for retirement.
Oh, I understand the ramifications of the crash. I just believe the
share values of the past were grossly overinflated due to
speculators, those who feed and feed upon speculators, dishonest
accounting firms and dishonest corporate officials, banking,
brokerage and insurance industries, and the mal-, mis-, and
nonfeasance of the regulatory agencies under Bush.

Any small investors who in the future decide to participate again in
the corporate stock ponzi schemes should be very, very sceptical of
stock prices and what supposedly underpins P/E ratios.


Oh, and the Teamster's pension fund problems come to mind.


Once again, I will remind you and others that if you are a trustee on
a union pension fund and "mess around" with the funds, you are
prosecuted, and the financial losses are made good by the mandatory
bond. The bonding company typically works closely with prosecutors to
try to ensure time in the slammer for the perps.


Yeah, right.




Yeah, right, what? If you are a trustee on a union fund, you have to be
bonded. The bonding company will have your butt on a platter if there is
monkey business with the money.

Here you go, ****-for-brains:

http://www.dol.gov/esa/olms/regs/com.../bonding.htm#b


Here's an excerpt:

Who Must Be Bonded

Organizations

Every union covered by the LMRDA is subject to the bonding requirements
except for unions with property and annual receipts that do not exceed
$5,000 in value. Every trust in which a labor organization is interested
is covered by the bonding requirements regardless of the value of its
property and annual receipts.

Persons

Every officer, agent, shop steward, and other representative and
employee who handles funds or other property of a covered union or trust
must be bonded, including:

* elected union officers;
* key administrative personnel, whether elected or appointed (such
as business agents, heads of departments or major units, and organizers
who exercise substantial independent authority);
* trustees and key administrative personnel of trusts;
* salaried nonsupervisory professional staff of unions and trusts; and
* secretarial, clerical, and service personnel of unions and trusts.

***Before any new employees or officers may handle funds, they must be
bonded for an amount based upon the funds handled by their predecessors
during the last fiscal year. No additional bonding is required if a
bond, which meets the requirements of the LMRDA, is already in force to
cover them.***

If a person who is not bonded handles union funds, he or she is
violating the law. The person who assigns him or her those functions is
also violating the law.

Vic Smith March 4th 09 03:51 AM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 
On Tue, 03 Mar 2009 22:04:24 -0500, HK wrote:



Once again, I will remind you and others that if you are a trustee on a
union pension fund and "mess around" with the funds, you are prosecuted,
and the financial losses are made good by the mandatory bond. The
bonding company typically works closely with prosecutors to try to
ensure time in the slammer for the perps.


What's really sick about all this is that one of the largest surety
bond providers, if not the largest, is.....AIG.

--Vic

HK March 4th 09 04:08 AM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 
Vic Smith wrote:
On Tue, 03 Mar 2009 22:04:24 -0500, HK wrote:


Once again, I will remind you and others that if you are a trustee on a
union pension fund and "mess around" with the funds, you are prosecuted,
and the financial losses are made good by the mandatory bond. The
bonding company typically works closely with prosecutors to try to
ensure time in the slammer for the perps.


What's really sick about all this is that one of the largest surety
bond providers, if not the largest, is.....AIG.

--Vic



And it is, or was, "A" rated. I haven't kept up with that side of the
biz, but I don't recall reading that AIG had defaulted - yet - on surety
bonds.

BAR[_2_] March 4th 09 11:32 AM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 
wrote:
On Tue, 3 Mar 2009 21:42:13 -0500, "D.Duck" wrote:

Oh, and the Teamster's pension fund problems come to mind.


Which pension fund problems are you talking about?
I remember in the late 50s and early 60s RFK was trying to say the
Teamsters squandered the pension funds by investing in Vegas casinos
but those investments out performed the Dow.
I guarantee the Teamsters retirees are in better shape than the UAW
right now. My sister's first husband is a retired teamster and he is
doing fine.


Sounds like the Teamsters pension fund benefited from being used as a
laundry facility.

D.Duck March 4th 09 01:06 PM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 

wrote in message
...
On Tue, 3 Mar 2009 21:42:13 -0500, "D.Duck" wrote:

Oh, and the Teamster's pension fund problems come to mind.


Which pension fund problems are you talking about?
I remember in the late 50s and early 60s RFK was trying to say the
Teamsters squandered the pension funds by investing in Vegas casinos
but those investments out performed the Dow.
I guarantee the Teamsters retirees are in better shape than the UAW
right now. My sister's first husband is a retired teamster and he is
doing fine.


And Jimmy Hoffa was a fine upstanding citizen. 8)



HK March 4th 09 01:33 PM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 
D.Duck wrote:
wrote in message
...
On Tue, 3 Mar 2009 21:42:13 -0500, "D.Duck" wrote:

Oh, and the Teamster's pension fund problems come to mind.

Which pension fund problems are you talking about?
I remember in the late 50s and early 60s RFK was trying to say the
Teamsters squandered the pension funds by investing in Vegas casinos
but those investments out performed the Dow.
I guarantee the Teamsters retirees are in better shape than the UAW
right now. My sister's first husband is a retired teamster and he is
doing fine.


And Jimmy Hoffa was a fine upstanding citizen. 8)




Compared to many of today's corporate CEO's? He sure was. It's hard for
me to imagine Hoffa knowingly distributing batches of peanut butter that
contained salmonella, or paying himself a $30 million bonus in a year
when his union lost a billion dollars.

Hoffa was a tough little guy because he had to be. But he was far less
violent and far more honorable than, say, the chairman of Blackwater.

Don White March 4th 09 02:53 PM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 

"HK" wrote in message
m...
BAR wrote:
HK wrote:
D.Duck wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
m...
D.Duck wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
m...
D.Duck wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
m...
...are selling for the same amounts as "penny stocks" used to sell
for...

...what are penny stocks selling for?


My take on stock prices:

Stocks are now selling are prices that more closely reflect the
actual value of the companies that issued them, and the prices
they should have been selling for for the past two decades.
And who/what determines the actual value of stocks, your real
estate, your boat, your car, etc.?
The price of one's house (at least when you buy it new), car, boat,
commercial real estate, has little to do with the sort of
speculation and book-cooking done in connection with the sale of
corporate stocks, et cetera. Now, because of greed and outright
fraud in the lending, stock, insurance businesses, the value of just
about everything has gone down because far fewer people have the
wherewithal to buy.

I saw earlier today that Citibank shares were selling for less than
the ATM charges some banks charge.

Does anyone really think the value of shares will rise to where they
were a couple of years ago? Or that they should?
If stocks don't go up, look at all the retirees that will be working
at Wal-Mart till they just can't do it any longer. Many millions of
people have seen their 401Ks take a tremendous hit, money they were
counting on for retirement.
Oh, I understand the ramifications of the crash. I just believe the
share values of the past were grossly overinflated due to speculators,
those who feed and feed upon speculators, dishonest accounting firms
and dishonest corporate officials, banking, brokerage and insurance
industries, and the mal-, mis-, and nonfeasance of the regulatory
agencies under Bush.

Any small investors who in the future decide to participate again in
the corporate stock ponzi schemes should be very, very sceptical of
stock prices and what supposedly underpins P/E ratios.


Oh, and the Teamster's pension fund problems come to mind.


Once again, I will remind you and others that if you are a trustee on a
union pension fund and "mess around" with the funds, you are prosecuted,
and the financial losses are made good by the mandatory bond. The
bonding company typically works closely with prosecutors to try to
ensure time in the slammer for the perps.


Yeah, right.




Yeah, right, what? If you are a trustee on a union fund, you have to be
bonded. The bonding company will have your butt on a platter if there is
monkey business with the money.

Here you go, ****-for-brains:

http://www.dol.gov/esa/olms/regs/com.../bonding.htm#b


Here's an excerpt:

Who Must Be Bonded

Organizations

Every union covered by the LMRDA is subject to the bonding requirements
except for unions with property and annual receipts that do not exceed
$5,000 in value. Every trust in which a labor organization is interested
is covered by the bonding requirements regardless of the value of its
property and annual receipts.

Persons

Every officer, agent, shop steward, and other representative and employee
who handles funds or other property of a covered union or trust must be
bonded, including:

* elected union officers;
* key administrative personnel, whether elected or appointed (such as
business agents, heads of departments or major units, and organizers who
exercise substantial independent authority);
* trustees and key administrative personnel of trusts;
* salaried nonsupervisory professional staff of unions and trusts; and
* secretarial, clerical, and service personnel of unions and trusts.

***Before any new employees or officers may handle funds, they must be
bonded for an amount based upon the funds handled by their predecessors
during the last fiscal year. No additional bonding is required if a bond,
which meets the requirements of the LMRDA, is already in force to cover
them.***

If a person who is not bonded handles union funds, he or she is violating
the law. The person who assigns him or her those functions is also
violating the law.


Even as a local treasurer, I had to be bonded as per requirements of our
national Union.



D.Duck March 4th 09 04:28 PM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 

"HK" wrote in message
m...
D.Duck wrote:
wrote in message
...
On Tue, 3 Mar 2009 21:42:13 -0500, "D.Duck" wrote:

Oh, and the Teamster's pension fund problems come to mind.
Which pension fund problems are you talking about?
I remember in the late 50s and early 60s RFK was trying to say the
Teamsters squandered the pension funds by investing in Vegas casinos
but those investments out performed the Dow.
I guarantee the Teamsters retirees are in better shape than the UAW
right now. My sister's first husband is a retired teamster and he is
doing fine.


And Jimmy Hoffa was a fine upstanding citizen. 8)



Compared to many of today's corporate CEO's? He sure was. It's hard for me
to imagine Hoffa knowingly distributing batches of peanut butter that
contained salmonella, or paying himself a $30 million bonus in a year when
his union lost a billion dollars.

Hoffa was a tough little guy because he had to be. But he was far less
violent and far more honorable than, say, the chairman of Blackwater.


There's bad apples in every barrel. No one group is exempt.



HK March 4th 09 04:37 PM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 
D.Duck wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
m...
D.Duck wrote:
wrote in message
...
On Tue, 3 Mar 2009 21:42:13 -0500, "D.Duck" wrote:

Oh, and the Teamster's pension fund problems come to mind.
Which pension fund problems are you talking about?
I remember in the late 50s and early 60s RFK was trying to say the
Teamsters squandered the pension funds by investing in Vegas casinos
but those investments out performed the Dow.
I guarantee the Teamsters retirees are in better shape than the UAW
right now. My sister's first husband is a retired teamster and he is
doing fine.
And Jimmy Hoffa was a fine upstanding citizen. 8)


Compared to many of today's corporate CEO's? He sure was. It's hard for me
to imagine Hoffa knowingly distributing batches of peanut butter that
contained salmonella, or paying himself a $30 million bonus in a year when
his union lost a billion dollars.

Hoffa was a tough little guy because he had to be. But he was far less
violent and far more honorable than, say, the chairman of Blackwater.


There's bad apples in every barrel. No one group is exempt.




Well...that's encouraging.

Frankly, I am a fan of old style union organizing and operation, sans,
of course, any corruption that harms the interests of the members or
retirees. Alas, the lawyers have infected the process.

D K[_8_] March 5th 09 01:25 AM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 
Don White wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
m...
BAR wrote:
HK wrote:
D.Duck wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
m...
D.Duck wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
m...
D.Duck wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
m...
...are selling for the same amounts as "penny stocks" used to sell
for...

...what are penny stocks selling for?


My take on stock prices:

Stocks are now selling are prices that more closely reflect the
actual value of the companies that issued them, and the prices
they should have been selling for for the past two decades.
And who/what determines the actual value of stocks, your real
estate, your boat, your car, etc.?
The price of one's house (at least when you buy it new), car, boat,
commercial real estate, has little to do with the sort of
speculation and book-cooking done in connection with the sale of
corporate stocks, et cetera. Now, because of greed and outright
fraud in the lending, stock, insurance businesses, the value of just
about everything has gone down because far fewer people have the
wherewithal to buy.

I saw earlier today that Citibank shares were selling for less than
the ATM charges some banks charge.

Does anyone really think the value of shares will rise to where they
were a couple of years ago? Or that they should?
If stocks don't go up, look at all the retirees that will be working
at Wal-Mart till they just can't do it any longer. Many millions of
people have seen their 401Ks take a tremendous hit, money they were
counting on for retirement.
Oh, I understand the ramifications of the crash. I just believe the
share values of the past were grossly overinflated due to speculators,
those who feed and feed upon speculators, dishonest accounting firms
and dishonest corporate officials, banking, brokerage and insurance
industries, and the mal-, mis-, and nonfeasance of the regulatory
agencies under Bush.

Any small investors who in the future decide to participate again in
the corporate stock ponzi schemes should be very, very sceptical of
stock prices and what supposedly underpins P/E ratios.

Oh, and the Teamster's pension fund problems come to mind.

Once again, I will remind you and others that if you are a trustee on a
union pension fund and "mess around" with the funds, you are prosecuted,
and the financial losses are made good by the mandatory bond. The
bonding company typically works closely with prosecutors to try to
ensure time in the slammer for the perps.

Yeah, right.



Yeah, right, what? If you are a trustee on a union fund, you have to be
bonded. The bonding company will have your butt on a platter if there is
monkey business with the money.

Here you go, ****-for-brains:

http://www.dol.gov/esa/olms/regs/com.../bonding.htm#b


Here's an excerpt:

Who Must Be Bonded

Organizations

Every union covered by the LMRDA is subject to the bonding requirements
except for unions with property and annual receipts that do not exceed
$5,000 in value. Every trust in which a labor organization is interested
is covered by the bonding requirements regardless of the value of its
property and annual receipts.

Persons

Every officer, agent, shop steward, and other representative and employee
who handles funds or other property of a covered union or trust must be
bonded, including:

* elected union officers;
* key administrative personnel, whether elected or appointed (such as
business agents, heads of departments or major units, and organizers who
exercise substantial independent authority);
* trustees and key administrative personnel of trusts;
* salaried nonsupervisory professional staff of unions and trusts; and
* secretarial, clerical, and service personnel of unions and trusts.

***Before any new employees or officers may handle funds, they must be
bonded for an amount based upon the funds handled by their predecessors
during the last fiscal year. No additional bonding is required if a bond,
which meets the requirements of the LMRDA, is already in force to cover
them.***

If a person who is not bonded handles union funds, he or she is violating
the law. The person who assigns him or her those functions is also
violating the law.


Even as a local treasurer, I had to be bonded as per requirements of our
national Union.



Wow.

Canuck57[_6_] March 6th 09 01:25 PM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 

"HK" wrote in message
m...
...are selling for the same amounts as "penny stocks" used to sell for...

...what are penny stocks selling for?


My take on stock prices:

Stocks are now selling are prices that more closely reflect the actual
value of the companies that issued them, and the prices they should have
been selling for for the past two decades.


Given the risk associated with the US economic outlook, I would agree. The
market always seeks prices that reflect the future economic outlook.

And currently it is a bleak one. The depression is here to stay. Now that
the dow is under 7000 and appears to be staying there at it's new lows, it
is likely US government/bank actions will make this permanent.



Dymphna[_6_] March 6th 09 05:01 PM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 

If you think the corrupt big corporations are not in it with the
government to take things over - think again. Before I say more - I need
to put out full disclosure. I am in manufacturing. We have over 120
people working here. We are non-union and take care of those who work
for us. Our greatest asset are our people. We are a privately held
corporation - so we are the largest stockholders right here. (And
because of this with the down turn have voted not to have a dividend for
2008 so we can keep more people working.)

The more the government gets involved in regulations for business - the
better it is for the big corporations. Why? Because it hurts the small
guy who cannot absorb the costs of the regulations. This creates less
competition for the big guy and more income.

So how do they promote this to the people? The create a jealousy
between the have and have not's . They make it so that all who have any
kind of money are evil and must pay more. (Sound familiar?)


--
Dymphna
Message Origin: TRAVEL.com


Eisboch[_4_] March 6th 09 06:50 PM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 

"Dymphna" wrote in message
...

If you think the corrupt big corporations are not in it with the
government to take things over - think again. Before I say more - I need
to put out full disclosure. I am in manufacturing. We have over 120
people working here. We are non-union and take care of those who work
for us. Our greatest asset are our people. We are a privately held
corporation - so we are the largest stockholders right here. (And
because of this with the down turn have voted not to have a dividend for
2008 so we can keep more people working.)

The more the government gets involved in regulations for business - the
better it is for the big corporations. Why? Because it hurts the small
guy who cannot absorb the costs of the regulations. This creates less
competition for the big guy and more income.

So how do they promote this to the people? The create a jealousy
between the have and have not's . They make it so that all who have any
kind of money are evil and must pay more. (Sound familiar?)


--
Dymphna
Message Origin: TRAVEL.com



I couldn't disagree with you more. Many small manufacturing businesses are
subcontractors to big businesses for items that it doesn't make economic
sense for the big business to build themselves.
Quite often big business will go out of their way to support their small
subcontractors because they need them.

Eisboch


HK March 6th 09 06:54 PM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 
Eisboch wrote:

"Dymphna" wrote in message
...

If you think the corrupt big corporations are not in it with the
government to take things over - think again. Before I say more - I need
to put out full disclosure. I am in manufacturing. We have over 120
people working here. We are non-union and take care of those who work
for us. Our greatest asset are our people. We are a privately held
corporation - so we are the largest stockholders right here. (And
because of this with the down turn have voted not to have a dividend for
2008 so we can keep more people working.)

The more the government gets involved in regulations for business - the
better it is for the big corporations. Why? Because it hurts the small
guy who cannot absorb the costs of the regulations. This creates less
competition for the big guy and more income.

So how do they promote this to the people? The create a jealousy
between the have and have not's . They make it so that all who have any
kind of money are evil and must pay more. (Sound familiar?)


--
Dymphna
Message Origin: TRAVEL.com



I couldn't disagree with you more. Many small manufacturing businesses
are subcontractors to big businesses for items that it doesn't make
economic sense for the big business to build themselves.
Quite often big business will go out of their way to support their small
subcontractors because they need them.

Eisboch



Business regulations came and come about because businesses won't behave.

Eisboch[_4_] March 6th 09 06:59 PM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 

"HK" wrote in message
m...


Business regulations came and come about because businesses won't behave.



Of course. How silly of me. What was I thinking?

Eisboch


HK March 6th 09 07:05 PM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 
Eisboch wrote:

"HK" wrote in message
m...


Business regulations came and come about because businesses won't behave.



Of course. How silly of me. What was I thinking?

Eisboch


Oh, come on...you know how easy it would be to cite examples.
Here's an easy one: child labor regulations and laws.
Why do you think they came about?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_tY1gk6J6zc

Eisboch[_4_] March 6th 09 07:26 PM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 

"HK" wrote in message
m...
Eisboch wrote:

"HK" wrote in message
m...


Business regulations came and come about because businesses won't
behave.



Of course. How silly of me. What was I thinking?

Eisboch


Oh, come on...you know how easy it would be to cite examples.
Here's an easy one: child labor regulations and laws.
Why do you think they came about?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_tY1gk6J6zc



Wake up. It's 2009.

Eisboch


thunder March 6th 09 07:57 PM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 
On Fri, 06 Mar 2009 14:26:09 -0500, Eisboch wrote:


Wake up. It's 2009.


Tell that to Nike.

http://www.albionmonitor.com/9606a/nikelabor.html

HK March 6th 09 08:02 PM

Now that 'blue chip' stocks...
 
Eisboch wrote:

"HK" wrote in message
m...
Eisboch wrote:

"HK" wrote in message
m...


Business regulations came and come about because businesses won't
behave.


Of course. How silly of me. What was I thinking?

Eisboch


Oh, come on...you know how easy it would be to cite examples.
Here's an easy one: child labor regulations and laws.
Why do you think they came about?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_tY1gk6J6zc



Wake up. It's 2009.

Eisboch



Yeah...and in the last couple of weeks, we have...The Peanut Corporation
of America.


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