--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Bhairitu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Robert Gimbel wrote:
> > --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Bhairitu <noozguru@> wrote:
> >   
> >> Robert Gimbel wrote:
> >>     
> >>> Does anyone else feel there may be a correspondence?.
> >>>    
> >>>
> >>>  
> >>> ---------------------------------
> >>> Finding fabulous fares is fun.
> >>> Let Yahoo! FareChase search your favorite travel sites to find 
> >>>       
> > flight and hotel bargains.
> >   
> >>>   
> >>>       
> >> ROTFL! No!
> >>     
> >
> > Thanks for the open-mindedness...
> > Thanks for the benefit of the doubt...
> > Thanks for the fill in the blank_________



> I think it would be megalomaniac or delusional to believe that a 
reduced 
> dome attendance could cause such an effect.
>


***********

Well, market pundits certainly do not know why the market crashed:

http://www.salon.com/tech/htww/index.html

Stock market mayhem: "Look out below!"
Would it be more or less reassuring to know exactly why the U.S. 
stock market plummeted Tuesday, with the Dow Jones industrial average 
dropping 415 points, or 3 percent of its value? 
In the press coverage of Tuesday's market "correction," traders and 
analysts cited a variety of reasons for the abrupt fall. The massive 
plunge of the overheated Chinese stock market. The unexpectedly large 
decline in "durable orders" -- an economic indicator that measures 
the economy's appetite for significant manufactured goods like Boeing 
747s. The assassination attempt on Dick Cheney in Afghanistan. Alan 
Greenspan's mention of the word "recession" on Monday. The renewed 
climb of crude oil prices. There has also been plenty of nervousness 
about trouble in the subprime lending market, and a general sense 
that the market, which has been routinely hitting high marks, was due 
for a reset. 
This is known as the kitchen-sink explanation for market behavior. 
Or, in other words, we really don't have a clue why the market 
spooked. 
Early reports are saying that the Dow's 550-point midday plunge 
marked the worst day for U.S. markets since Sept. 17, 2001. That 
debacle, in contrast, was easy to explain -- it was the first day of 
trading after Sept. 11. After the worst terrorist attack on U.S. soil 
in history, aimed dead center at the very heart of American finance, 
few people were surprised that the stock market immediately 
collapsed. 
>From that perspective, Tuesday's drop almost seems more alarming -- 
because the lack of a single all-explanatory factor suggests that 
traders and investors are in a state of deep nervousness over where 
the economy is headed, and they are ready to bolt for the exits at a 
moment's notice. All it took was a discouraging word from Greenspan, 
a meltdown in Shanghai and a suicide bomber in Afghanistan, and they 
were off! 
But you never know. On Wednesday traders looking for bargains could 
swoop back in, and few market observers would be surprised to see a 
sudden lunge back up. Certainly, if you look at a chart of the Dow 
over the last five years, you will see little reason for pessimism. 
Sure, there have been some minor setbacks along the way, but the 
overall trend line has been up, up, up. How much can you complain 
when your correction comes after a record high? 
A more somber interpretation would be that this break recognizes that 
the business cycle is reaching an inflection point, that a recession 
is on the way, and a bear market is now upon us. The beginning of a 
real bear market on Wall Street, coming on the heels of the weak 
housing sector, and with oil prices once again on the move, could 
signal serious economic trouble ahead. When the value of shares keeps 
rising, all kind of things become possible, but it's a whole 
different story when the direction headed is down. That is when weak 
Wall Street financial players get weeded out, and cracks in the 
overall structure of the system get exposed. If the proliferation of 
hedge funds dealing in exotic derivatives has miscalculated the 
amount of risk that they are exposed to, then Tuesday's sell-off 
could just be the beginning of a long-feared shakeout. 
I imagine that there will be more than a few people having trouble 
sleeping tonight in New York City. 
-- Andrew Leonard





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