Itu namanya "The Power of Ngarep". Hehe

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-----Original Message-----
From: Tommy Yu <tradersej...@gmail.com>
Date: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 15:26:20 
To: <obrolan-bandar@yahoogroups.com>
Subject: Re: [ob] DJI rebound

Padahal waktu dibawah 10.000 dah mau copot jantungnya...
haha.. ternyata close diatas 10.000
phewww

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On Sat, Feb 6, 2010 at 7:31 AM, Hadi Purnomo <hugoterry.trad...@gmail.com>wrote:

>  Feb. 5 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. stocks rose, with the Dow Jones Industrial
> Average erasing a 167-point drop in the final hour of trading, on
> speculation the European Union may propose a solution for Greece’s budget
> deficit. Oil, gold and copper rebounded, and the dollar pared its gain.
>
>  The Dow rose 10.05 points to 10,012.23 at 4 p.m. in New York, and the
> Standard & Poor’s 500 Index rallied 0.3 percent after plunging 1.8 percent
> in what would have been the biggest two-day slump since March. The MSCI
> World Index cut its drop in half to 1 percent because of the recovery in
> U.S. stocks. Oil pared its loss to 1.8 percent and gold and copper climbed
> at least 0.3 percent in electronic trading after the close of commodities
> exchanges. The U.S. Dollar Index gained 0.5 percent.
>
>  Stocks and commodities had plunged around the world earlier on growing
> concern European nations will default on their debt. The recovery by U.S.
> equities showed confidence among investors that a solution will be reached
> in Europe. The retreat in American shares had been limited after the
> nation’s jobless rate unexpectedly fell to a five-month low of 9.7 percent.
>
>  “The markets are expecting a positive announcement out of the European
> Union this weekend as it relates to Greece and their debt,” said John Brady,
> Chicago-based senior vice president with the interest rates product group at
> MF Global Ltd. “Although it’s unclear whether Greece will be bailed out,
> some in the market think the EU has no choice.”
>
>  Investors have bet that Portugal, Spain and Greece will struggle to
> control their budget deficits, driving money into assets they consider
> safer.
>
>  ‘Very Nervous’
>
>  European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet has struggled to
> convince investors the euro region shouldn’t be punished for Greece’s budget
> problems. As Greece tries to control a record deficit and stem a slide in
> its bonds, Trichet said the economy of the 16-nation euro area is solid and
> its budget shortfall will probably be smaller than those of the U.S. and
> Japan this year. The comments yesterday didn’t stop Spanish and Portuguese
> stocks from dropping or the euro from tumbling to a nine-month low against
> the dollar.
>
>  “People are still very nervous about Spain, Portugal and Greece,” said
> David Rovelli, managing director of U.S. equity trading at Canaccord Adams
> Inc. in New York. “If one goes belly up and can’t raise money, it’s going to
> spread across Europe. It’s infectious.”
>
>  Getting Caught
>
>  Cisco Systems Inc., Intel Corp. and Alcoa Inc. climbed more than 2 percent
> for the biggest gains in the Dow average after a report at 3 p.m. in New
> York showed consumers paid down less of their debt than economists
> estimated. Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc. led commodity producers to
> the biggest advance among 10 industries in the S&P 500. Despite today’s
> gain, the S&P 500 fell for a fourth straight week, the longest slump since
> July.
>
>  “People don’t want to be short over the weekend if the EU says it will
> bail out Greece and Spain,” said Neil Massa, an equity trader at MFC
> Investment Global Management Co. “A lot of investors were short, and they’re
> closing their positions because they don’t want to get caught if something
> happens over the weekend.”
>
>  European stocks declined for a third day, extending the biggest weekly
> slump in 11 months, on concern efforts by Greece, Portugal and Spain to
> reduce their deficits will hurt the region’s economic recovery. The Dow
> Jones Stoxx 600 Index decreased 2.2 percent.
>
>  ICAP, BHP Fall
>
>  ICAP Plc, the world’s largest broker of transactions between banks, sank
> the most in 16 months in London trading after cutting its profit forecast.
> BHP Billiton Ltd., the world’s biggest mining company, and Rio Tinto Group
> led commodity producers lower on the earlier slump in metals.
>
>  Emerging-market stocks retreated. Brazil’s Bovespa stock index lost 1.8
> percent, extending its drop during the past month to 11 percent. Benchmarks
> for Taiwan, Turkey and South Africa retreated at least 2 percent.
>
>  BES Investimento do Brasil scrapped an international bond offering of as
> much as $350 million, capping a week of canceled sales from India to Korea
> after a global market rout pushed up emerging-market borrowing costs.
>
>  U.S. deals were completed. Kraft Foods Inc., the maker of Oreo cookies,
> raised $9.5 billion yesterday for its takeover of Cadbury Plc, while Warren
> Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc. sold $8 billion of notes for its buyout of
> railroad company Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp., which he called an
> “all-in wager” on the U.S. economy.
>
>  Rebound With Stocks
>
>  Oil lost 2.7 percent to $71.19 a barrel as of the close of exchange
> trading in New York. Gold futures slipped 1 percent to $1,052.80 an ounce at
> the close, while copper slipped to a three-month low. All three commodities
> rebounded in tandem with U.S. stocks.
>
>  The euro fell to an almost one-year low against the yen and to the weakest
> level in eight months versus the dollar on concern budget deficits in Greece
> and other European nations will hamper the region’s growth.
>
>  The euro declined for a third day, dropping 0.3 percent to $1.3678, from
> $1.3723 yesterday. The shared currency touched $1.3595, the least since May
> 20. Against the yen, the euro dropped 0.1 percent to 122.09, after falling
> 3.4 percent yesterday, the biggest drop since October 2008. It is at the
> lowest level since Feb. 24, 2009. The dollar rose 0.2 percent to 89.25 yen,
> from 89.05 yen yesterday.
>
>  To contact the reporter for this story: Nick Baker in New York at
> nbak...@bloomberg.net ; Craig Trudell in New York at
> ctrude...@bloomberg.net .
>
>
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>
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