In relation to the markets I don’t really listen to the constant stream of commentary from all those “experts”. I have grown accustomed over the years to journalists wheeling out the bulls on the days when the market is up and then dragging out the bears when the market goes down. If the media was a human being you would have to conclude that they were suffering from multiple personality disorder and would have them committed.
July 6th, 2010 | Murray Dawes | 0 comments | ContinuedAll Posts Tagged With: "swarm trader"
Australia Possibly Among Top 10 Countries Globally Measured By Size of Gas Reserves
“We expect that Australia, in the very near future, will be among the top 10 countries globally measured by the size of its gas reserves. The size of Australia’s gas reserves means that further strong growth in this country’s LNG exports is assured,” Dr. Bethune said in Energy Quest’s latest quarterly report.
September 2nd, 2009 | Dan Denning | 8 comments | Continued
House Prices Down and Aussie Market Enters Second Wave of Rebound Rally
If you were drawing up a plan for your dream economic recovery, this is how you would draw it up. The weakness emerging in the Australian housing sector (the fastest decline in prices in six years) would be made up for by resurgent Chinese demand for Aussie resources, led by the first growth in China’s manufacturing sector in nine months.
May 5th, 2009 | Dan Denning | 6 comments | Continued
Traders Sell Bank Stocks Due to Goldman Sachs Surprise
What we wonder is why Goldman needed to be made whole at all if its exposure to AIG was hedged? And why did Goldman get paid US$14 billion for its securities when the market value was around $8 billion?
April 15th, 2009 | Dan Denning | 36 comments | Continued
The Road to Weimar
Over at the Wall Street Journal’s European edition (paid subscribers only), Frenchman Jacques Attali reckons we are all on the road to Weimar now. That is, he believes the entire planet may be headed for a depression and massive inflation. We are slouching towards Weimar Germany, where inflation was rampant…
February 16th, 2009 | Dan Denning | 7 comments | ContinuedA Pivot Point
It’s at a turning point right now. One thing your editor has learned in the last eleven years of daily market observation is that when public sentiment reaches a point of maximum anxiety, it breaks like a wave crashing on the rocks. This is not as bad as it sounds. What we mean is that though the general trend of the market is obvious-lower stock prices on a weak economy and a confused policy response to the crisis-you will often be surprised at when the rallies come and how high they go…
February 11th, 2009 | Dan Denning | 12 comments | Continued


