Where are rich people going to put their money? You do understand we are actually in a weird kind of crisis because the wealthy are too wealthy and are actually making poor investments time and time again because there is literally nothing else to do with it. The market requires competition and sort of weeding out that creates strong competition but stronger winners, and resilient losers. Right now, you can't lose, the market is propped by the treasury with 4-5 trillion providing liquidity, although it happens to come from our children in the form of higher taxes. The last 10-13 years has literally been a taxpayer buffet for the richest If I could count on the wealthy being held accountable I would say we need a massive correction, but this will just result in more massive bailouts of companies, banks, and funds who know they can't fail. The deficit is absolutely disgusting but the quantitative easing in the trillions started last september when the market should have failed. People wonder, where is the inflation if the taxpayers are propping up the market....look at the house market...it is in more of a bubble than late 2007.Be careful. I predict things will get scary. Watch the political battle in Georgia for the senate that is coming over the next two months. A few hundred votes makes an enormous difference.
History tells us that the greatest market crashes happen under red presidents and blue ones clean up the mess...not sure why...maybe regulation actually helps to create stability.Georgia will have two senate runoff elections. If those two seats were to fall to the Dems, the Senate will be effectively blue at 50-50. That will send the markets into turmoil. Even the possibility of this will cause a decline in market prices. I sold a bunch today after profiting under the COVID-19 recovery. I know the election for president isn't over but my hopes are fading. Trump was a great president for the economy (and more than that). BTW you should fear Kamala a lot. It's a done deal at some point.
The biggest market crashes...Be careful. I predict things will get scary. Watch the political battle in Georgia for the senate that is coming over the next two months. A few hundred votes makes an enormous difference.
History tells us that the greatest market crashes happen under red presidents and blue ones clean up the mess...not sure why...maybe regulation actually helps to create stability.
The biggest market crashes...
29 depression
87
90
2007
2020
Which party was in control of the white house? I am not saying party influences the markets but data would say that all of the biggest market instabilities happen when one party is dominating the fed. There is a reason for regulation.
Worst case it for us. 40% drop? More?Its going to collapse around the 1st if the year regardless
Obviously it depends on the individual stock, but generally speaking i think we will see a 30-35% drop by the end of q1. Probably looking at a long slide over a period of 2 years or so that might be as much as 70%. It kind of depends on what foreign currencies do and how stable southeast Asia and the Middle East are.Worst case it for us. 40% drop? More?
You’re really going to call 2020 a market crash? Wow you’re dense. You do realize NASDAQ hit an all time high, and Dow is sitting at 28k.. all going on now in 2020.
You have some examples of the wealthy and their poor investments? I agree there isn’t as much value buying opportunity out there, talking companies and stocks. But smart wealthy are not making bad investments because there is nothing else to do with their cash.Where are rich people going to put their money? You do understand we are actually in a weird kind of crisis because the wealthy are too wealthy and are actually making poor investments time and time again because there is literally nothing else to do with it. The market requires competition and sort of weeding out that creates strong competition but stronger winners, and resilient losers. Right now, you can't lose, the market is propped by the treasury with 4-5 trillion providing liquidity, although it happens to come from our children in the form of higher taxes. The last 10-13 years has literally been a taxpayer buffet for the richest If I could count on the wealthy being held accountable I would say we need a massive correction, but this will just result in more massive bailouts of companies, banks, and funds who know they can't fail. The deficit is absolutely disgusting but the quantitative easing in the trillions started last september when the market should have failed. People wonder, where is the inflation if the taxpayers are propping up the market....look at the house market...it is in more of a bubble than late 2007.
WEWORK...Theranos ...WeWORK is the big one with nearly 11 BILLION invested into a company that sold work spaces. Theranos was valued in the billions but never had a working product and had nearly a billion invested into it. These are just a few off the top of my head...and they are basically both fraudulent startups that were either fake or doomed to fail. The government has been propping the market since 2008...is it a bad idea? IDK, I am kind of a socialist and I don't have problem with tax payers encouraging innovation and development of new technologies, whether through private or public. But our technological innovation has to continue to develop if we use the taxpayer as the "insurance" for the market. Most people would say socialism makes people lazy, less driven, and used to handouts...same can be said for the market and business. Every bailout, everytime the market is saved from a crash by providing liquidity through the treasury makes business/financial more likely to try to produce less to make more. For every apple, amazon, tesla there are hundreds of funds and companies that are poorly run and fail but make more money for the managers than we will see in our lifetime.You have some examples of the wealthy and their poor investments? I agree there isn’t as much value buying opportunity out there, talking companies and stocks. But smart wealthy are not making bad investments because there is nothing else to do with their cash.
Obviously it depends on the individual stock, but generally speaking i think we will see a 30-35% drop by the end of q1. Probably looking at a long slide over a period of 2 years or so that might be as much as 70%. It kind of depends on what foreign currencies do and how stable southeast Asia and the Middle East are.
Yes.When's the last time the DJIA lost 70% of its value over a 2 year period? Pretty sure 1929. So you're calling a second Great Depression?
Obviously it depends on the individual stock, but generally speaking i think we will see a 30-35% drop by the end of q1. Probably looking at a long slide over a period of 2 years or so that might
if you are a long term investor none of this really matters. the market goes up over time. id like a big crash soon. i've got money i'd like to invest.If there is a real chance that Biden’s capital gains tax increase could happen, then yes I think there could be a massive sell off. Younger investors will buy the dip which will bring the market back up. Q1 could be a wild ride.
if you are a long term investor none of this really matters. the market goes up over time. id like a big crash soon. i've got money i'd like to invest.