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GPW: Tydzień bez wrażeń?

GPW: Tydzień bez wrażeń?

Money.pl / 2009-04-06 07:17
Komentarze do wiadomości: GPW: Tydzień bez wrażeń?.
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brydzia / 2009-04-06 10:04 / 10-sięciotysiącznik na forum
Handlowy otworzyli 16% teraz 6% , optymizm coraz większy
szymon ze skradzionym nickiem / 193.201.167.* / 2009-04-06 10:10
zarobek jak na lokacie w rok, rzeczywiscie fatalnie...
brydzia / 2009-04-06 10:18 / 10-sięciotysiącznik na forum
szczególnie jak kupiłeś na otwarciu , gdzie masz -10% lokate
Dylus / 2009-04-06 10:06 / portfel / Tysiącznik na forum
a na WIGu już ponad 314mln obrotu, a dopiero godzinka minęła.

Jest dobrze, zarabiać a nie narzekać :-)
mario_hani / 2009-04-06 10:02 / Ubrany w akcje
czy ktoś trzyma TVN, niesamowity gniot z alergią na wzrosty
g ol d / 2009-04-06 10:05 / Plunąć z brzegu...

niesamowity gniot z alergią na wzrosty

...prawie jak Chichot anie:))
mario_hani / 2009-04-06 10:12 / Ubrany w akcje
coś w tym stylu:)
Chichot historii / 83.5.238.* / 2009-04-06 10:02
Rio Tinto -2,7%. Nie ma popytu na surowce w pogłębiającym się kryzysie. Wyobrażam sobie teraz tę jazdę w dół naszego rynku, jak dotrze to w końcu do pompujących nasz KGHM.
warren buffet / 2009-04-06 10:01 / 10-sięciotysiącznik na forum - LIDER rankingu
wikana
Liczba zarejestrowanych akcji 1 680 558 693
Wartość rynkowa (mln zł) 168.06
Wartość księgowa* (mln zł) 49.29


pc guard
Liczba zarejestrowanych akcji 1 100 000 000
Wartość rynkowa (mln zł) 22.00
Wartość księgowa* (mln zł) 16.99
Wskaźnik cena / wartość księgowa* 1.29
warren buffet / 2009-04-06 10:02 / 10-sięciotysiącznik na forum - LIDER rankingu
radze sie zainteresowac pc guardem, minimum niby na 1 gr, ale to byly strzały desperatów, czyli główne minimum 2 gr, dzis będzie po 3 gr mozna nabyc. mniej akcji, śmieci zaczynają lot. wikana poszla z 5 na 15 gr a pc guard jest jeszcze po 3 gr....

nie naganiam, grac małą kwotą. dziś sobie dokupie po 3 grosze. mała kasa.
~antychichot / 90.156.32.* / 2009-04-06 10:01
Początek sezonu wyników kwartalnych

MD Puls Biznesu, pb.pl,05.04.2009 13:44
Czytaj komentarze(1)

Na Wall Street ostatnie cztery tygodnie były najlepsze od 75 lat. W tym tygodniu okaże się, czy dobre nastroje inwestorów utrzymają się.


Indeksy amerykańskich rynków akcji rosły przez cztery kolejne tygodnie po zanotowaniu 12-letniego minimum. Dow Jones zyskał w tym czasie 21,5 proc., najwięcej od 1933 roku, kiedy zanotował w tym samym okresie 31 proc. wzrost.
don kichottt / 212.160.133.* / 2009-04-06 09:58
In the fourth quarter of 2208, sales of Gilead’s top- selling AIDS drug Truvada, a two-drug combination pill, rose 25 percent to $562.1 million from a year earlier. Its three-drug AIDS pill Atripla had sales of $465.5 million, a 79 percent increase from a year earlier.

More people are being tested and diagnosed early for HIV infection, Kantor said. “So now you have earlier diagnosis and earlier treatment and that leads to market expansion,” he said.
don kichott / 212.160.133.* / 2009-04-06 10:00
The University of Connecticut is one win away from an undefeated season after beating Stanford 83-64 last night to reach the championship game of the women’s college basketball tournament.

Connecticut (38-0) will play the University of Louisville for the title tomorrow in St. Louis, Missouri. Louisville (34-4) rallied from a 12-point halftime deficit to beat Oklahoma 61-59 in yesterday’s other national semifinal.

Connecticut will be seeking its sixth national championship and third unbeaten season.

The Lady Huskies have beaten Louisville twice this season by a total of 67 points, including a 75-36 rout in the Big East Conference tournament final last month. Connecticut’s average margin of victory this season is almost 31 points.

Renee Montgomery scored 26 points last night and Maya Moore added 24 as Connecticut ran past a Stanford team that handed the Huskies their last loss, at last year’s Final Four. UConn will now look to add to its perfect seasons of 1995 and 2002.
don kichott / 212.160.133.* / 2009-04-06 10:02
In AMC’s “Breaking Bad” Cranston plays Walter, a former high-school chemistry teacher who starts making crystal methamphetamine to pay for chemotherapy. The actor won an Emmy for the show’s first season after being nominated three times for “Malcolm in the Middle.” He also received a Vespa motor scooter from AMC, a token of appreciation that he rides around his Los Angeles neighborhood.

The show is averaging 1.46 million viewers per episode for the season that began March 8, up from the 1.23 million in its first season, according to Nielsen Media Research.

“The second season is vital,” Cranston said. “That’s when the audience decides whether they’ll stick with you.”
oll1 / 2009-04-06 09:55 / portfel / Tysiącznik na forum
Warren, ale fajnie jest na gieldzie teraz co? Na to czekalismy :) Ale trzeba byc ostroznym. Jednak trzeba przyznac, ze jak jest nisko (1400) to po prostu trzeba akumulowac. Jak skonczyc sie ta fala (nazywana przez niektorych B) pewnie bedzie jeszcze jedna szansa na dobranie, a pozniej radocha. Pozdro
Don Chichot / 83.5.238.* / 2009-04-06 09:47
The fact that GDP must contract to sustainable levels when one "pulls forward" demand for 20 years has escaped these people - or they are just too full of themselves politically to admit it. Either way as debt-to-GDP rises lending will be choked off as the cost of borrowing shoots the moon, forcing further downward GDP.

There is no escape from reality; you can attempt to postpone it once again as was done in 2000, but whether Ben can succeed this time, with a far poorer macro environment, is dubious at best.

Unfortunately the price of failure, this time around, could literally mean failure of the United States politically and economically, since in the process of trying to prevent the natural outcome of a credit bubble Ben has shifted a tremendous amount of liability from private parties where it belongs onto the sovereign balance sheet of The United States, setting up the potential for a monstrous (and potentially disastrous) failure.
Don Chichot / 83.5.238.* / 2009-04-06 09:46
Bernanke seems to think The Depression was caused by "too high" borrowing costs, and that he can manipulate them to avoid this. He has forgotten the basics of lending, it would appear: the cost of borrowing money is not only set by the risk of future inflation, it is also set by the risk of future default. As debt load rises even with a risk-free rate of return of zero (a ZIRP environment as we have now) borrowing costs can and will skyrocket if the debt load is excessive and default risk gets out of hand.

Borrowing costs didn't rise in The Depression due to inadequate liquidity provided by The Fed. They rose due to the risk of default becoming ridiculous as debt-to-GDP levels skyrocketed, and falling GDP just made that ratio worse.
Don Chichot / 83.5.238.* / 2009-04-06 09:45
Note that while government borrowing has certainly expanded (and will even more) so has household, corporate, financial and GSE (which is really household, since that's mortgages) borrowing.

The question that Ben doesn't want to answer or even ponder out loud is "where is the wall?"

Japan found it, and discovered that attempting to "print" one's way out of a severe recession caused by excessive credit doesn't work - it simply transfers the debt to the government but any "recovery" that allegedly comes from this exercise is both short-lived and followed by an even worse decline. The Nikkei was beyond 30,000 when their bubble originally popped and hasn't been anywhere near since. Nor have property values recovered.

All that Japan managed to do is transfer that debt to the government where it has remained like a millstone around the neck of the economy, causing further slowdowns (like the current one) to be far more damaging.
Don Chichot / 83.5.238.* / 2009-04-06 09:44
"Increasing credit" sounds good if you're in a situation where credit is too tight because lenders can't (or won't) lend to willing and able borrowers. Since we are a credit-driven economy (and always have been, even before The Fed) this appears to be the right answer any time credit decreases.

But what if the reason credit granting is decreasing isn't due to a lack of willing and able borrowers or ability to fund loans, but rather because of saturation of credit demand - that is, all the willing and able borrowers have borrowed all they want, leaving only unable and unwilling borrowers?

If you lend to unable (to pay) borrowers you simply guarantee a loss. If you try to lend to unwilling borrowers your shouts of "free money!" fall on deaf ears.

In neither case can you increase the velocity of monetary transactions, which is at the end of the day Bernanke's entire point in this exercise.
hlava / 2009-04-06 09:39 / Bywalec forum
za chwile braknie wikany po 15gr
hlava / 2009-04-06 09:40 / Bywalec forum
i slowo stalo sie cialem
dar_o nielogo / 87.205.95.* / 2009-04-06 09:47
co oni chcą zrobić ?? Masters 100 oczek w jedną sesję ?? za starych dobrych czasów dla dzinsów nawet tak nie było .... na ale wtedy akcje droższe były
Chichot historii / 83.5.238.* / 2009-04-06 09:34
A shrinking global economy and collapsing world trade deepened the 1930s depression. And despite official attempts to stem the tide, this cycle is following a similar path.

Three major world organizations — the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and the Organization of Economic Development — are unanimously predicting that in the next few months and for the entire year, we will witness the first global decline since the Great Depression.

Result: World trade is falling off a cliff.

We are in the eye of an even bigger storm.
Don Chichot / 83.5.238.* / 2009-04-06 09:32
Just as Wall Street and Washington were trying to lure investors back into the stock market last week, the massive surge in unemployment announced Friday blew a giant, gaping hole in their arguments.

Even the government’s narrow, sugar-coated jobless measure surged massively to 8.5 percent, underscoring, once again, everything we’ve been warning you about:

* That economists are continually underestimating the unprecedented speed and depth of this decline …

* That sinking corporate revenues and drastic company cutbacks are now accelerating in an unstoppable vicious cycle…

* That even the gigantic $1.85 trillion deficit estimated by the Congressional Budget Office widely understates the coming flood of federal red ink …

* That unrestrained government borrowing to finance the deficit will inevitably drive long-term interest rates through the roof, and …

* That the worst phase of this great debt crisis is still dead ahead!
Ghostbuster / 83.5.238.* / 2009-04-06 09:30
Jakoś nie widać, żeby ktoś uwierzył w hossę? Szczególnie teraz , na górce, po chorym wzroście na bazie wyssanych z palca plotek?
anonim_03 / 2009-04-06 09:43 / portfel / Uznany Gracz Giełdowy
Kenuś, no ja cię prosze, nie trolluj.
spłukanydarek / 2009-04-06 09:40
to jest efekt beztroskich zabaw dzieci matki nadziei :/
Dylus / 2009-04-06 09:32 / portfel / Tysiącznik na forum
83.5.238.* | Ghostbuster
83.5.238.* | Chichot historii
83.5.238.* | Don Chichot

Daj spokój...
ester / 83.6.54.* / 2009-04-06 09:42
To Kenobi pracuje na trzy fronty
asdfdfasdf / 78.8.13.* / 2009-04-06 09:32
kipisz kenny , kipisz....
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