Cassin said:How about upticking?
JayBear said:Cassin said:How about upticking?
I have no idea what this is. I assume its some sort of trading technique?
The New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) Tick is a measure of how many stocks are rising in price versus how many are declining in price. An upticking stock is one where the most recent change in price was positive; a downticking stock is one where the most recent change was negative. Tick is calculated by subtracting the number of downticking stocks from the number of upticking stocks. For example, a tick reading of +350 means there are 350 more upticking stocks than downticking stocks. Tick is recalculated continuously throughout the day. Normal tick levels are between +500 and -500; tick readings of plus or minus 1000 are generally considered extreme. Daytraders often use extreme tick readings to determine short term overbought and oversold conditions.
badasshairday III said:I don't understand, are we having inflation or deflation? Apparently the dollar picked up value against the Euro but lost value to the Yen. Gas prices are getting lower, but food prices are high. Gardener, what does this mean?
Slartibartfast said:Yes, cash... but which flavour?The Gardener said:Frankly, in my personal opinion, I think deflation will win out. Cash will be king.
Massive inflation of the US dollar??? Did you look at the chart you cited in your URL?gazza2208 said:¨Inflation is always and everywhere simply an increase of the money supply (i.e. units of currency or means of exchange), which in turn leads to a higher nominal price level, as the real value of each monetary unit is eroded, loses purchasing power and thus buys fewer assets and goods and services.¨
Right now you are having a massive inflation of the US dollar but because of the govt not reporting M3 money supply as well as altering the way they make the statistics they are making themselves look better to the uninformed thus prolonging reckoning day.
The money supply is constricting, as the chart you cited up above shows. It's not being constricted by lack of willingness of the Fed to issue credit, rather, it's being constricted as M3 money supply, which is money supply provided by bank credit largesse, is unwound violently at ratios of over 20/1!... and for continental European banks, at breathtakingly speculative and risky ratios of over 50/1! The only temporary swing in commodities that I see is not the current relatively low price of oil, but rather, the extreme upward swing in oil prices that we saw last summer. This was due to people fleeing false expectations of inflation and wanting to park their money in a fungible commodity. It turned into a mini bubble... and now this is correcting back as the bubble has burst. If this current downward swing in oil prices were truly a temporary thing, then I question why OPEC would be hosting a meeting to try to put a floor under oil prices by cutting production. ( http://apnews.myway.com/article/20081009/D93N6TR80.html )gazza2208 said:A temporary reversal swing in some commodities (oil, etc..) does not make it deflation. It is simply a price change. Markets go up and down and there are reversals in any bull market. For real deflation the money supply would have to constrict.
I agree about the dollar getting some support. The Chinese are eager to see the dollar appreciate as it would keep their Renminbi weak and prevent their export economy from crashing. But the Chinese support is being done through purchases of US Treasuries... this is keeping short term interest rates low, which is inflationary, but the inflationary pressures of this are in single digits, and are in NO way able to offset the deleveraging and contraction of credit that is at factors of 20 or 30 to 1, or in the case of continental Europe 50 to 1, nor the slowing of demand, as the US and majority of the global economy sinks into an increasingly nasty recession... and recessions are ANTI-inflationary.gazza2208 said:The US dollar has been gaining for about a month after a huge market intervention on the quiet; probably to make McCain look better before the elections - failure there. The Euro now has problems cause of bank failures in the EU so the Euro is not having a good time. Japanese yen is going up is because of the unravelling of the carry trade.
JayBear said:I assume mid to high 600s doesn't count as spotless credit...
bubka said:I have a 13 year old car: 130K, and I love it. Seriously, it would make me sick having a $300 car payment every month, plus the added insurance.
bubka said:Also too, don't eat out, (as you said), you can live of food from the store for the same price as what a meal costs to eat out for two. Plus less chance of becoming a fat *** who as health problems and additional costs.