nyinvestingmeetup

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    • Sun Aug 3rd 09:05 AM | Rating: 0 0
      Commented on:
      Is the U.S. Banking System Safe?
      Almost every point in this article was covered in the fall of 2007
      by the New York Investing meetup, up to and including our predicting the insolvency of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. We agree that the U.S. authorities are attempting to copy the 1990s disastrous Japanese policy decisions for the U.S.banking system. However, we disagree with other analysts in that we are predicting the U.S. will experience a major inflation episode instead of the deflation experienced in Japan.
      - Organizer, New York Investing meetup
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    • Thu Jun 26th 08:13 AM | Rating: 0 0
      Commented on:
      The Current Market Atmosphere: Easy Money Hard to Come by
      The most important statement in this article is: "The "experts" made available to the public have and will never alert you in a timely manner". This is why the average investor can never make money in the market. The people who do make money understand this concept well and pay no attention to the investment advice offered through the media.
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    • Mon Jun 16th 10:55 AM | Rating: 0 0
      Commented on:
      Nasdaq vs. Homebuilders vs. Oil
      This article is comparing apples to oranges and is ridiculous. While a Nasdaq comparison is reasonable, the Nasdaq rally began in 1982, not 1994, with the beginning of a secular bull market that lasted 18 years. There is no reason the oil rally can't last 18 years as well and that commodities are in an 18 year secular bull market. The oil rally actually began at the low in 1998, so that would give it a potential 8 more years (if you wish to date the beginning of the secular bull in 2001, then 11 more years) based on the reasoning of this article. As for comparing homebuilders, the factors that affect their prices are not the same as those that woudl affect the price of a commodity. That comparison is completely invalid.
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    • Fri Mar 28th 21:54 PM | Rating: 0 0
      Commented on:
      The Fed is Deflating: 10 Reasons Why
      This is quite possibly the stupidest thing I've ever read online. Deflation as described in this article is actually a key component of hyperinfllation, which takes places when the monetary base doesn't expand nearly as fast as prices increases. In Weimar Germany, the monetary authorities and top economists constantly made the same argument made in this article, claiming deflation was really taking place just as inflation was beginning to skyrocket, just as is happening in the U.S right now. The fools that listened to such idiocy were wiped out.
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