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Post by elle on Oct 5, 2011 14:35:11 GMT -5
iwm finally! new hod, good, good, mebe get a little b/o now
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Post by elle on Oct 5, 2011 14:59:04 GMT -5
still moved some out.........I think I getting a cold, off to take a nap
auf Wiedersehen
$$ flos slight neg
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Post by Clinton SPX on Oct 5, 2011 15:00:39 GMT -5
glad thats over with
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Post by Clinton SPX on Oct 5, 2011 15:07:27 GMT -5
Mutual Fund Outflows Surge As NYSE Short Interest Back To March 2009 Levels... Yet Stocks Refuse To Plunge. Why? Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/05/2011 - 15:33 Ben Bernanke Bond Fund Flows New York Stock Exchange NYSE Short Interest Short Interest
ICI has reported the latest weekly mutual fund flow data and it is not pretty: the outflow from domestic equity mutual funds of $5.7 billion for the week ended September 30 is the largest since August 10, and is the 6th consecutive week of redemptions from mutual funds, bringing the total outflow YTD to $89 billion, following $98 billion in 2010. This is almost $200 billion in nearly consecutive weekly outflows from equity funds in the past two years, the bulk of which has gone into bond funds. Is there anyone who still thinks that retail has any interest in investing in stocks? But wait, there's more. According to the NYSE, short interest at the exchange soared to a whopping 15.7 billion shares as of September 15, an 828 million increase in one fortnight, and the biggest since the March 2009 lows. There is one difference: back then the S&P was 40% lower. Which means that the bear cavalry is positioned and waiting for a massive market flush... which keeps on not materializing. But that may very soon change...
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Post by shipoffools on Oct 5, 2011 15:14:05 GMT -5
Mutual Fund Outflows Surge As NYSE Short Interest Back To March 2009 Levels... Yet Stocks Refuse To Plunge. Why? Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/05/2011 - 15:33 Ben Bernanke Bond Fund Flows New York Stock Exchange NYSE Short Interest Short Interest ICI has reported the latest weekly mutual fund flow data and it is not pretty: the outflow from domestic equity mutual funds of $5.7 billion for the week ended September 30 is the largest since August 10, and is the 6th consecutive week of redemptions from mutual funds, bringing the total outflow YTD to $89 billion, following $98 billion in 2010. This is almost $200 billion in nearly consecutive weekly outflows from equity funds in the past two years, the bulk of which has gone into bond funds. Is there anyone who still thinks that retail has any interest in investing in stocks? But wait, there's more. According to the NYSE, short interest at the exchange soared to a whopping 15.7 billion shares as of September 15, an 828 million increase in one fortnight, and the biggest since the March 2009 lows. There is one difference: back then the S&P was 40% lower. Which means that the bear cavalry is positioned and waiting for a massive market flush... which keeps on not materializing. But that may very soon change... Retail can't be right, can they? Does this mean they run it up to coax them back in before the flush?
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Post by Clinton SPX on Oct 5, 2011 16:01:52 GMT -5
Total US Debt Update: $14.86 Trillion; $162 Billion Increase In Three Days; 98.9% Debt/GDP Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/05/2011 - 16:25 Gross Domestic Product Little to say here: total debt is now at, obviously, a new record high of $14,856,859,498,405.73, which is a $20 billion increase overnight, $67 billion in the past two days, and $162 billion in the last three days. We will repeat the last part: total US debt has increased by $162 billion in three days. Said otherwise, total US Debt/GDP is now 98.9%. Please carry on.
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