Was that it? Did the FED already kill the bears ??

*JDR*

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Have the fed done enough to avoid a recession or at least ensure a very minor one?

More importantly for everyone on this board..... is that it for the supposed Bear Market?

Was it in fact just a blip in an ongoing BULL market?

Personally, I really have no idea..... Is this rally just going to be similar to the October rally?
 
No, that is not it IMO. A global recession/depression will develop steadily over the next 3 years or so.
 
It's like the wild west at the moment...fortunes being won and lost in min's....very dangerous for experienced traders let alone newbies....just be careful and keep positions managable :smart:

cv
 
Have the fed done enough to avoid a recession or at least ensure a very minor one?

More importantly for everyone on this board..... is that it for the supposed Bear Market?

Was it in fact just a blip in an ongoing BULL market?

Personally, I really have no idea..... Is this rally just going to be similar to the October rally?

Not over . . .

Recession 2008: How bad it can get
Many economists are predicting a short, shallow recession. But there's also a significant risk of a more serious economic decline.
By Chris Isidore, CNNMoney.com senior writer
January 24 2008: 5:40 AM EST

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- The sputtering U.S. economy has gotten everyone from the financial markets to the Federal Reserve to Congress in a panic.

But here's a disheartening message for those already worried about economic growth -- it could get much worse.

Most economists who believe a recession is already here or at least near are looking for a relatively short and mild downturn, perhaps lasting only two or three quarters.

But many of those same economists say they also can envision a worst-case scenario where spending by consumers and businesses falls off sharply, unemployment heads higher than normal during a typical recession and housing and credit market problems worsen.

"I can easily imagine [the economy] going into a free fall," said Dean Baker, the chief economist for the Center for Economic and Policy Research. "The danger is that housing prices continue to tumble and accelerate, people's ability to pull out equity will evaporate, and you'll see a serious downturn in consumption."

We talked to three more leading economists to find out their biggest economic fears. Here's what they had to say.

Greenback blues David Wyss, chief economist with Standard & Poor's, said that among his biggest concerns is that overseas investors could pull back on investing in the dollar and other U.S. assets.

That could cause an even greater sense of fear among U.S. consumers and businesses, as stock prices fall and bond yields rise, which in turn would lift mortgage rates and be a bigger drag on the already battered housing market.

"Americans could just get scared by a barrage of bad news," Wyss said. "The stock market could continue going down because of foreigners pulling money out, and between that and home values going through the floor, it could lead to a real pullback of spending, particularly by Baby Boomers who are getting close to retirement."

Wyss said he's also concerned that oil prices could shoot higher, even if a recession cuts into global demand. He said supply disruptions in the Middle East could send oil prices up to $150 a barrel and help deepen any recession.

Wyss said that in his worst case scenario, the unemployment rate would climb to 7.5 percent by early 2009, up from its current level of 5 percent.

He also believes gross domestic product, the broad measure of the nation's economic activity, could wind up as much as 2 percent lower at the end of 2008 than it was at the end of 2007. That would be the biggest downturn since 1982. Many of those forecasting a recession this year are expecting GDP to show a slight gain by the end of the year.

House of pain. Edward McKelvey, senior economist at Goldman Sachs, agreed with Wyss that, in a worst case scenario, GDP could fall 2 percent this year..

His biggest fear is that home prices could fall much further in the coming months. In fact, Goldman and economists at Merrill Lynch have both predicted that home values could fall another 15 percent, on top of the 10 percent drop from earlier peaks that has already taken place.

McKelvey said further declines could cause much deeper problems for consumers and credit markets.

"One of the most likely candidates would be credit markets acting more violently than we thought, a tightening of the supply of credit to businesses and households," he said when asked what could bring about his worst case outlook.

"You could also see a more substantial response by businesses to the downturn through layoffs, cuts in their spending and business plans," he added.

Bank woes just beginning. Paul Kasriel, chief economist at Northern Trust, said he thinks there's a good chance that the economic pullback will be much steeper than now widely assumed. This weak forecast is based on his belief that the billions in dollars of writedowns already reported by Merrill Lynch (MER, Fortune 500), Citigroup (C, Fortune 500), JP Morgan Chase (JPM, Fortune 500), Bank of America (BAC, Fortune 500) and other big banks are just the beginning of the problem in the financial sector.

Kasriel said that if banks have to report more losses due to bad bets on subprime mortgages, they will be unwilling, or unable, to make large loans to businesses and consumers.

So even if the Fed keeps cutting interest rates, the impact of the cuts may be "less potent" than rate cuts in previous recessions since consumers and businesses may not be able to borrow enough to keep spending. That could make this recession more like the one in 1991-92 than the relatively short and mild recession of 2001.

"Historically, and not surprisingly, recessions accompanied by declines in consumer spending tend to be more severe. And people are going to be constrained from spending by the declines in housing," Kasriel said.

He added that state and local governments might have to cut back spending as a result of declining tax revenue. And that would be another sizable blow to the overall economy.

"People forget about state and local government spending, but it represents 11 percent of GDP," Kasriel said.
 
CV - Good advice...

I've closed a load of positions on the rally today (I trade shares)

I may have got it wrong..... but I have in my head a saying about selling rallies....
 
Pull up a chart of the FTSE30 (1973-1974), DJIA/S+P500 (1966-1982), Nikkei 225 (1990-2003), SE Asia (1996-98) and Nasdaq (2000-2003) to see examples of V-shaped bear market rallies.
 
A poster on Elite Trader summed it up well: they'll take the market right up to draw in the suckers and whack it right down again.

Grant.
 
The Bears will wait for the dust to settle before coming back into the markets, in the meantime markets will probably rally for a few more sessions. The problem is not a US one but global and most of the official data coming out of Asia points to the fact that a global slowdown has already started.

The chatter in Japan is already centering around a cut in interest rates to zero and a few countries are proposing the creation of national wealth funds to purchase local stocks. The Chinese Ruan will be allowed to rise more than 10% this year and that will drag other Asian currencies up in it's wake; this means further Dollar weakness which brings inflation in the US and a slowdown of economic growth in the Asian region.

Higher inflation will be the trade off that the FED will have to make in order to lower interest rates any further and it is very doubtful that the FED will want to continue with the policy for very long. As commodities are priced in Dollars it means that in order to maintain their value their prices will rise in Dollar terms thus bringing more inflation.

I am not sure where those that say house prices have fallen by 10% get their data from or how they make the calculations but prices are certainly down by much more than that in places like Florida. The consumer who is already struggling to make payments on mortgages, car loans and credit card debts will not find it much easier to make those payments just because the FED cuts rates by a couple of points; so they cannot come to the rescue. Hopefully the stimulus package will contain an element of 'Free Shopping Vouchers' for all US citizens/residents.

The future looks bleak and only concerted action by the powers that be around the globe are going to stop this one from being a depression.
 
Was watching Bloomberg last night and a guy from "elliot wave (something or other)" was saying that the market has essentially been in a 26 year uptrend and all that is about to change....
He is predicting 3 waves up and then all the way down to new lows again.... i think that is what he said.
 
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There is clealry something fundamentally wrong in the world economy. We have been consuming too much. In London, you can earn 2k a month net and you end up living in a box. If you have a family, you are probably going to be poor what with child care costs and all. You have to ask yourself if this makes sense and whether it is really sustainable. House prices that no one can really afford and money spent on the back of the 'value' of those houses. It is all nonsense and at some point, it wil emplode. However, you shouldn't underestimate the power of credit. It can keep us going for a very long time.

When it comes to the financial markets, it is worse than useless to pontificate about whether it is a bear market or not. These markets just show you what d!ckheads human being are. It is too silly for words. It shows how frighteningly ignorant we all are. If a market plunges 500 points one day and rises 500 points the next, it really behooves all of us to stop pretending that we have a grasp of what is happening. I have so much contempt for all the 'analysts' who say the 'bottom is in' or 'it is not. They don't know. What is worse, they can't know. Every body is just guessing.
 
There is clealry something fundamentally wrong in the world economy. We have been consuming too much. In London, you can earn 2k a month net and you end up living in a box. If you have a family, you are probably going to be poor what with child care costs and all. You have to ask yourself if this makes sense and whether it is really sustainable. House prices that no one can really afford and money spent on the back of the 'value' of those houses. It is all nonsense and at some point, it wil emplode. However, you shouldn't underestimate the power of credit. It can keep us going for a very long time.

When it comes to the financial markets, it is worse than useless to pontificate about whether it is a bear market or not. These markets just show you what d!ckheads human being are. It is too silly for words. It shows how frighteningly ignorant we all are. If a market plunges 500 points one day and rises 500 points the next, it really behooves all of us to stop pretending that we have a grasp of what is happening. I have so much contempt for all the 'analysts' who say the 'bottom is in' or 'it is not. They don't know. What is worse, they can't know. Every body is just guessing.

Agree to a point, but feels sooo much like last time, except now its a property/debt bubble. They weighed in with cuts and did little. They barked the bottom is in stuff on cnbc! PA is certainly suggestive.

I know im gona try get me some when it rolls over! :p
 
I quote in better words than mine, from Craig Harris

"While the politicians talk about this ridiculous $500 per family "stimulus package", the reality is that Wall Street is being bailed out by the Government and the evaporating middle class can go out to dinner a few times or get their car fixed (maybe). Instead of $500 they should be mailing people tents to live in. Maybe they should just fly helicopters dropping "money" across America. This whole idea is like a band aid for an open heart surgery. So things just keep getting more and more absurd all the time. What I am expected to believe would only make sense to a complete nit wit. We are now well into this whole decay scenario I've been talking about and there will be no recovery. Just more decay. I say that because of the obvious fact that America's problems will not be fixed by a printing press. They are putting band aids on band aids on band aids...throw in a little duct tape."
 
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