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"H the K" wrote in message
m... On 10/15/09 12:51 PM, nom=de=plume wrote: wrote in message news ![]() On Thu, 15 Oct 2009 09:34:37 -0400, Keith Nuttle wrote: It might be a good time to pick a "get out alive" price and place your sell orders. If you do that you will really lose money. We stuck it out and have recovered a good chunk of money lost we lost in the pelosi plunge and obama slide. OK do what you want but I bet there is a correction and you can buy your position back for about 60-70%% of where it was when you sold it. Some day soon it will occur to Wall Street that the American consumer is broke. The fat cats may still be getting their bonuses but we still have double digit unemployment and worse "underemployment" where skilled trades are wearing orange aprons in empty Home Depots. Real recovery will start when the middle class recovers.That hasn't happened yet There will likely be a correction toward the end of the year. This is what I've heard from several sources. That doesn't mean it'll be a dramatic correction. Corrections are normal and expected. It's foolish in the extreme to attempt to time the market. The best strategy is dollar cost averaging and diversification, both domestically and in foreign markets. The technical recovery has begun, but unemployment will continue to climb, likely to 10 or even 11 percent. That, coupled with underemployment and a rise in foreclosures will likely continue for the next year or so. There's a demographic shift also going on to an older population, and this will continue to put pressure on the economy, as healthcare costs continue to rise unless something dramatic is done. My guess is that something fairly dramatic will be done regarding the insurance company cartel (they are exempt from anti-trust laws). This will likely get a lot of attention in the next few months. Certainly, over the next few years, the insurance companies will prove to the general public (and to Congress) that the current system is unsustainable, as many in both groups still don't believe it. When that happens, it would probably be best not to be heavily invested in such companies. Thus spake the Oracle. lol I think the health insurers should lose their anti-trust exemptions. Frankly, I don't know what public purpose private, for-profit health insurers serve. It serves no purpose except to ensure their profits. I believe a couple of senators are circulating a bill to revote that status. -- Nom=de=Plume |
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