Sama pak, saya juga pegang barang.

Kalo dibawah turun... Yahh mau buat apa, kan kite2 cuma retail..

Moga2 si B itu bisa jadi harapn terakhir.

Mbah nihh yang kompeten untuk jawab.

Kalo kata pak peter alimin tadi... Disambung dengan dow yg minus merah ini, 
sapa tau ML udah bisa prediksi bahwa akan ada something happen... Makanya last 
minutes buang barang ga karuan.

Mungkin sedikit jelas kalo puzzle tadi sore digabungkan dengan dow merah malam 
ini.

But who knows...

Sapa tau cece el, ama koko arto mau narikkkkkkkk....

Kalo tetep turun.. At least kita nyangkut rame2....
-----Original Message-----
From: Rei <highwaysta...@gmail.com>

Date: Fri, 14 Aug 2009 21:52:10 
To: <obrolan-bandar@yahoogroups.com>
Subject: Re: [ob] ::DOW -100 nihh:: U.S. Stocks Fall on Concern Rally Outpaced 
        Recovery Prospects


Memang Senin libut, selasa index otomatis immune ya pak Thomas? hehehe
Dari yg punya barang :D

On Fri, Aug 14, 2009 at 9:17 PM, Thomas Frederick <thomaszone_2...@yahoo.com
> wrote:

> Nahhh ini dia berita yg ditunggu2 yang ga punya barang....
>
> Untuk yg punya barang.... Syereeeemmmmmm
>
> Untung hari senin libur ya....
>
>  Coba buka tebak sendiri dehh....
>
> Aug. 14 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. stocks fell for the first time in three days on
> concern that the rally in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index to a 10-month high
> has outpaced the prospects for the economy’s recovery.
>
>  Boeing Co., the world’s second largest commercial airplane manufacturer,
> led declines in the Dow Jones Industrial Average after saying it found flaws
> in 23 of its 787 Dreamliners. Alcoa Inc., 3M Co. and Travelers Cos. also
> slumped as commodity, financial and industrial shares posted the biggest
> declines.
>
>  “A lot of people think the market has come up more than enough and it
> needs to rest,” said Charles Knott, chief investment officer at Knott
> Capital Management in Exton, Pennsylvania, who oversees about $550 million.
> “We’ve got a pretty sobering outlook and are concerned about the economy on
> a long-term basis. We think there’s neither the will power nor the means to
> fully finance that type of V shape recovery.”
>
>  The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index slipped 0.4 percent to 1,008.84 at 9:41
> a.m. in New York. The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 39.98 points, or 0.4
> percent, to 9,358. European and Asian shares advanced.
>
>  U.S. stocks are “dramatically overpriced” because the fallout from the
> financial crisis will continue to hurt consumer spending, said David Tice,
> Federated Investors Inc.’s chief portfolio strategist for bear markets.
> Tice, who predicts that the S&P 500 will eventually slump to 400, said he
> would add to short positions if the market goes much higher.
>
>  ‘Need to Be Realistic’
>
>  “I’d love for prosperity to return, unfortunately I think you need to be
> realistic and it takes time to work off these excesses” from a bubble in
> credit markets, Tice said in an interview with Bloomberg Television.
>
>  Equities declined even after industrial production in the U.S. rose for
> the first time in nine months after mid-year retooling at automakers and as
> a federal “cash-for-clunkers” program fueled demand for cars. The 0.5
> percent increase in output at manufacturers, mines and utilities was more
> than forecast, Federal Reserve figures showed.
>
>  Stocks gained yesterday after investor John Paulson’s hedge fund bought
> stakes in banks, helping offset an unexpected slump in retail sales. The S&P
> 500 is little changed on the week after climbing for the last four.
>
>  A 50 percent rebound from a 12-year low on March 9 left the S&P 500
> trading at 18.6 times the profits of its companies on Aug. 7, the highest
> valuation since 2004, according to weekly Bloomberg data.
>
>  Earnings Season
>
>  Per-share earnings topped analysts’ estimates by 10 percent on average for
> the companies in the S&P 500 that have released results since June 17,
> according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Profits slumped about 30 percent in
> the period, a record eighth straight quarter of falling earnings.
>
>  Instead of a so-called New Normal of subdued growth, the U.S. may be
> heading for a robust recovery. The worst recession since the 1930s has
> created a reservoir of demand that will buoy the economy, say a growing
> number of economists led by James Glassman at JPMorgan Chase & Co., former
> Fed Governor Laurence Meyer and Stephen Stanley at RBS Securities Inc.
>
>  Boeing said it stopped work more than a month ago on two sections for the
> 787 Dreamliner after flaws were found on 23 airplanes. The 787 was almost
> two years behind its initial May 2008 first-delivery target before the
> latest delay. Shares of the second-biggest defense contractor fell 3.1
> percent to $45.19.
>
>  To contact the reporter on this story: Whitney Kisling in New York at
> wkisl...@bloomberg.net .
>
> ===
> Sent from Bloomberg for Blackberry. Download it from the Blackberry App
> World!
>
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