SPY - Monthly Expanded View 2008 - 2022

Started by OZER, Jan 09, 2022, 04:19 PM

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Money printing, a population of consumers, minimal production, and a president whos in bed with China. And that is the recipe for collapse. Citizens of the US got played like a fiddle.


commerce educated) opinion, the most bubbly thing right now? S&P 500.OK I hate how their definition of a bubble is super unclear. Tulips were also a "thing", like lumber, and in 1600s Netherlands that was the DEFINITION of a bubble. So I'm going to take a stab at this definition - Supply chain causing shortage is f, bubbles exist on a scale. In my (not economicallynot a bubble, because demand has not gone up due to speculation. Seriously, who's going to speculate on lumber? Maybe a few individuals, but speculation itself is difficult to do, and everyone believed prices will come down. Housing right now is more of a bubble, because demand has gone up due to the pandemic, it's drawing investors, and creating a cycle of inflating prices. But Odyssey guy is right, there is a supply issue too. Prices going us is not a bubble, speculation and investors over-stretching due to FOMO creates a bubble. It's also not a boolean t

Inflation is a tax on poor consumers.. It cannot be stopped, not as long as the federal reserve and fractional banking system exists. It is nothing less than modern serfdom

Of course it can but why would it this benefits the wealthy and keeps the working class dependent on the government.


I will not give my money to gambling addicts that assure me it#39ll be safe with them.

If you care about America please read Ray Dalios newest book.

No matter what currency we deal with in life it will always fail because humanity is not perfect amp it is by the humans hand that needs to control the outcome so that outcome will come with failures with time of a person#39s decisions.

promised to hold Trump insurrectionists accountable, but he has not done so for the insurrection leaders and he is not cooperating with all other justice departments.

if this company doesn't get bought out, and if we have a recession, it will more than likely go to zero...


If his products run the world the stock wouldn't wouldn't be $7.  It would be profitable

LOL when I hear the 2 % preferred rule... Have they ever done a good job of keeping that the average rate.. LOL! I think the average rate has been more closer to like 3 or 4% over the last 40 years, let me know if Im wrong. I like learning more than I like being right by a lot.

As long as any of these systems allow the userclient to buy or sell large amounts, they#39ll be easy to attack.