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October 6, 2008 at 8:46 pm #781351
Anonymous
InactiveThere has been a half sized “bounce-back” during the day … but it shows the scale of the problem when I post it’s “ONLY” a 3.5% to 4.5% drop on the DOW, NASDAQ and S&P.
:Cry:Apparently today lots of “mom & pop” people got their quarterly reports for their mutal funds and decided that enough was enough and have started pulling out remaining units – at least according to CNBC.
Basically no-one wants to get into the market right now – which means when you get a wave of people wanting to get out then stock prices just plunge without willing buyers.
October 6, 2008 at 8:55 pm #781352Anonymous
Inactivelooks much better atm
pffffffOctober 6, 2008 at 10:19 pm #781361Anonymous
InactiveI hope the markets crash and burn. Then we can pick up the pieces.
October 6, 2008 at 10:34 pm #781364Anonymous
Inactive@JackTen 179529 wrote:
I hope the markets crash and burn. Then we can pick up the pieces.
Maybe we should have used that $700 billion we already gave Paluson to help pick up the pieces.
October 6, 2008 at 10:45 pm #781367
pokman007MemberDow may be down for now, but:
Recession Creates a Perfect Storm for Internet GamblingQuote:The current economic downturn with high energy costs, cheap broadband internet connection and a smoking ban in all licensed premises in most countries of the world is creating a perfect storm for internet gambling.Quote:“People are leaving their cars in the garage, playing online bingo or watching a match on TV and placing a bet from the comfort of an armchair,” said Bartlett. “The land based businesses are going to find it hard to compete with the value on the internetOctober 6, 2008 at 11:06 pm #781374Anonymous
InactiveThis is the guy that Hank Paulson put in charge of getting us headed out of the economic crisis.
Meet The New Boss: Office of Financial Stability Head Is A Rocket Scientist!
John Carney | Oct 6, 08 2:58 PMRemember the days when people described a smart person as a “rocket scientist” and downplayed the intellectual difficulties of a task by saying “it’s not rocket science”?
It seems that Hank Paulson does. The guy he appointed to run the newly created Office of Financial Stability—which will administer the huge bailout fund signed into law last week—is a former rocket scientist. Neel Kashkari, who is only 35 years old, got his start as an aerospace engineer at TRW, where he worked on little things like James Webb Space Telescope for NASA.
After getting an MBA from Wharton, he landed at Goldman Sachs in San Francisco. And then, of course, at the Treasury Department, where he has been one of the main architects of the bailout plan. According to DealJournal, he was one of three guys at Treasury who stayed up until 4 a.m. the day after the House flunked the bailout bill last week.
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