Posted on 04/09/2020 6:21:54 PM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum
The bulls broke loose in financial markets this week and gored the coronavirus.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose a mild 1.2 percent on Thursday, bringing its weekly gain to around 12.7 percent. That makes it one of the best weeks ever for the blue-chip index.
The S&P 500 climbed 1.45 percent for a weekly surge of 12.1 percent. That is the best week for the S&P since 1974. The Nasdaqs 0.77 percent gain brings the week to 10.6 percent, the best week since 2009.
The Russell 2000 soared 4.62 percent on Thursday for a weekly gain of 18.5 percent.
Oil had a wild ride. Brent crude jumped up to 12 percent higher in the morning, only to fall all the way back to close down 2.71 percent for the day.
American stocks will be closed for Good Friday tomorrow.
(Excerpt) Read more at breitbart.com ...
After the worst month in 100 years, that’s not much of a comfort.
No they didn’t.
They are barely on some kind of ventilator.
The last week needs to be kept in context.
I put all my money in airline and Cruise stocks. Hope I dont turn out to be an etrade add.
If you believe in America and the power of our way of life, you buy. Now.
If you don’t...and you are right, money won’t be worth a damn anyway, so you might as well buy.
(my opinion...:)
A lot of the financial pundits are talking about this being the next big bull market. I can’t see the future but I can’t help but think this a bull trap.
Airlines... maybe.
Cruise stocks, I think not.
My reasons are as follows:
- the US gov’t will support airlines as essential
- It won’t support cruise lines, as they are largely non-American in terms of ship flagging and employees
- Personally, I could see myself on an airplane after things die down with a couple hundred people and a face mask for a few hours,
- But not on a ship for a couple of weeks with several thousand people.
I don’t think people will be as eager to cruise as they were for a while. Flying will come back first.
Contact Senator Richard Burr, he should be able to help you out.
As soon as I bought Delta, I heard Buffett sold all his. Figures. My investing is like slow Joes foreign policy advice. Do the opposite as fast as you can.
Well, you made me laff out loud, though I do sympathize with your hard luck in stocks.
[A lot of the financial pundits are talking about this being the next big bull market. I cant see the future but I cant help but think this a bull trap.]
https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/country/us
https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/country/italy/
I had assumed that Italy was an outlier. The problem is that for resolved cases, we are becoming Italy. And then there’s that nasty unresolved question of what happened in Bergamo, such that for March, this year’s death numbers were 6x last years:
While no fan of Burr or Loeffler, I find it interesting that Dianne Feinstein has been predictably dropped from the discussion.
You have nerves of steel my friend. I really hope you made a good bet. You will be slammed for the cruise stocks but I have hopes for those. Millions of people love cruises and it will be back but that will take a while for sure. The Petri dish thing is an exaggeration and can be easily mitigated.
To confuse things further, I’ll mention that I read that the Saudi sovereign fund purchased 8.2% of Carnival Cruise line at an average price of $17.82, about 3 days ago. It’s dipped well below that and partially rebounded.
As soon as I start talking about stocks, I slap myself in the head and remember how many times my basic economics was fooled by the vagaries of crony capitalism. I once even bought some social justice stocks to spite my loosings. Wouldnt you know it, I made money.
Also, Buffett sold about 1/6 of his Delta position, not all of it.
Im old enough not to give a darn anymore. Plus, I turned 21 in Texas.
Oh. Thats good to know.
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