Investing General Discussion

Sanrith Descartes

Von Clippowicz
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If you have never heard or understand the term "order flow" this short blog post is worth the educational read. Blogger is Chief Investment Officer and Director of Research at the ETF Database.

 
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Loser Araysar

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I think DELL is going to blow up tomorrow morning



1592944329053.png
 
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TJT

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We all knew this was coming when the brrrrr machine slowed down and the rona restrictions were still in place. The liquidity crunch was indeed delayed. But if our esteemed retards in power want to lockdown until next year. Like it appears they are intent on doing.

This is might get very interesting.
 

Sanrith Descartes

Von Clippowicz
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As info, Zero Hedge has a very bearish bent. Its been accused on numerous occasions to be a Russian operation. Like everything I read I take it with a grain of salt.
 

Asshat wormie

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As info, Zero Hedge has a very bearish bent. Its been accused on numerous occasions to be a Russian operation. Like everything I read I take it with a grain of salt.
Only a grain? IMO zerohedge should be taken with the Dead Sea amount of salt.
 
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Sanrith Descartes

Von Clippowicz
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One more thing to watch. The results of the banks stress tests are to be released tomorrow by the Fed. Expect a lot of volatility in the banks tomorrow. My opinion is banks are oversold and the stress tests will prove their balance sheets are substantially stronger than in 2008. Their main risks are consumer default rates (credit card and mortgages) and the Fed keeping interest rates down for the foreseeable future which hurts their interest revenue.

Or I am totally wrong.
 

Jysin

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You also have:


Economics
IMF Forecasts Deeper Global Recession From Growing Virus Threat
By
Eric Martin
June 24, 2020, 2:00 PM GMT+1
  • Fund projects 4.9% contraction in 2020 versus 3% previously
  • Financial markets seen as ‘disconnected’ from economic outlook

The IMF warned that the rebound in global financial-market sentiment “appears disconnected from shifts in underlying economic prospects,” raising the possibility that financial conditions will tighten more than forecast in its core scenario.

The fund lowered its expectations for consumption in most economies based on a larger-than-expected disruption to domestic activity, demand shocks from social distancing and an increase in precautionary savings.

In recent weeks, the IMF repeatedly noted that it was likely to downgrade its mid-April forecasts based on incoming data, with chief economist Gita Gopinath saying as early as May 8 that the global outlook had worsened.

The projections assume that countries with declining infection rates don’t need to reinstate the strict lockdowns from the first half of the year and are able to rely on alternative methods such as increased testing, contact tracing and isolation to contain transmission.

One bright spot has been financial conditions, which have eased in advanced economies and to a lesser extent in emerging markets.

Announced fiscal measures amounting to about $11 trillion globally, up from $8 trillion estimated in April, have helped cushion the blow to workers and businesses. Swift and innovative interventions by central banks have limited the rise in borrowing costs, and portfolio flows into emerging markets have recovered from record withdrawals.

The fund said its new forecast is subject to revision depending on the length of the pandemic and lockdowns, voluntary social distancing and displaced workers’ ability to find jobs.

‘Debt Crises’
The forecast could be upgraded if there’s a medical breakthrough or business activity resumes more quickly, but significant downside risks include outbreaks requiring more lockdowns or tightening financial conditions.

“This could tip some economies into debt crises and slow activity further,” the IMF said.

In the U.S., GDP is expected to contract 8% in 2020, compared with the previous 5.9% projection. The world’s largest economy may grow 4.5% next year, the IMF said.

The euro area will probably shrink 10.2% in 2020 and expand 6% in 2021, the fund said.

The IMF sees advanced economies shrinking the most, contracting 8%, compared with 6.1% previously. Emerging-market and developing economies will see a 3% contraction, compared with the 1% forecast in April. China will still manage to expand 1%, supported by policy stimulus.

Ugly Numbers
Most economies are predicted to contract this year

Source: IMF

Trade Tumble
India saw the largest revision among the biggest economies from the April forecasts, with a 4.5% contraction now expected, compared with a prior projection of a 1.9% expansion, the fund said. Latin America has been hit by the virus due in part due to less developed health systems, and its two biggest economies, Brazil and Mexico, are forecast to contract 9.1% and 10.5%, respectively.

Global trade volume in goods and services will probably tumble 11.9% this year, the fund said.

The IMF warned that the pandemic’s impact may significantly increase inequality, with more than 90% of emerging-market and developing economies forecast to show declines in per capita income.

The IMF presents two alternative scenarios: In one, there’s a second virus outbreak in early 2021, with disruptions to domestic economic activity about half the size of those assumed for this year. The scenario assumes emerging markets experience greater damage than advanced economies, given more limited space to support incomes. In that case, output would be 4.9% below the baseline for 2021 and would remain below the baseline in 2022.

In the second scenario, with a faster-than-expected recovery, global output would be about a half percentage point better than the baseline this year and 3% above the baseline in 2021.
 

Sanrith Descartes

Von Clippowicz
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Looks pretty grim today.

Any good dips to pick up?
If you feel lucky, big banks. If they pass the stress tests they should run some. I added a little today.

Industrials are getting beaten pretty bad. RTX, GD, LMT, NOC etc.

Nothing has really jumped out and said buy me today.

Keep an eye on LDOS. I think it's buyable at 90. Govt contractor.. does a fuckton of their software across the board.
 

Furry

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AAL is still operating waaaay below typical during what is usually the busiest time of year. That said, business is about +100% since a month ago, still a long ways to go to full operations.
 

Jysin

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I think Q2 earnings and Q3 projections will spook a lot of investors. We are merely a week away from the beginning of earnings season. As much as I want to buy dips today, I think we are in for better value buys come July.
 

Sanrith Descartes

Von Clippowicz
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Vast majority of the companies I would consider buying/adding to have risen so far that today's dip isn't really a buying opportunity. The ones I missed buying in Mar/Apr are beyond good entry points I think.
 

Locnar

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Vast majority of the companies I would consider buying/adding to have risen so far that today's dip isn't really a buying opportunity. The ones I missed buying in Mar/Apr are beyond good entry points I think.

So whats a investor to do? Also do you subscribe to the idea that the "true" crash is yet to come or do you think the worse is behind us and the only question is slow or fast recovery
 

Furry

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Saying tech is over-priced is like saying everest is a big hill. Still, the dumb investors will keep climbing.