For NYSE usually the fun begins around 3:30 us eastern time.


--- In obrolan-bandar@yahoogroups.com, "Juragan Cumi" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
>
> *Stocks not swayed by global rate cuts*
> 
> *NEW YORK (Reuters) - Stocks fell in volatile trading on Wednesday 
as
> investors feared that coordinated rate cuts by global central banks,
> including the Federal Reserve, would fail to unfreeze the credit 
markets and
> avert a global recession.*
> 
> Nah lo .....
> Udah, penghuni wall st jadi model playboy ajah!
> *
> **If you've recently been laid off from your six-figure job at a 
top Wall
> Street investment and haven't been able to find anything on 
Monster.com,
> your search is over: Playboy (NYSE: PLA) has you covered. The 
magazine is
> looking for models for an upcoming "Women of Wall Street" feature. *
> 
> *Gary Cole, Playboy's photo editor, told Reuters that "It would be 
more
> interesting to have someone who's a financial analyst." 
Compensation will be
> determined in part by how many people apply for the "positions."*
> http://www.bloggingstocks.com/2008/10/02/playboy-looking-for-wall-
street-women/
> 
> Salam,
> Cumi, Cuma Mimpi
> 
> *Reuters*
> Stocks not swayed by global rate
> cuts<http://biz.yahoo.com/rb/081008/business_us_markets_stocks.html>
> Wednesday October 8, 11:04 am ET
> By Ellis Mnyandu
> 
> NEW YORK (Reuters) - Stocks fell in volatile trading on Wednesday as
> investors feared that coordinated rate cuts by global central banks,
> including the Federal Reserve, would fail to unfreeze the credit 
markets and
> avert a global recession.
> 
> ADVERTISEMENT
>  Adding to Wall Street's nervousness, the third-quarter earnings 
season
> started poorly after Alcoa Inc reported a lower-than-expected 
profit late on
> Tuesday and said it was halting major capital projects in the face 
of
> uncertain markets.
> 
> With financial markets awash with signs that credit markets remained
> effectively gridlocked, investors also sold off financial shares, 
sending
> Citigroup down 4 percent to $14.44 and Bank of America down 8 
percent to
> $21.77.
> 
> The S&P financial index was off 1.2 percent.
> 
> "What's hurting things right now is a crisis in confidence - people 
are not
> willing to lend," said Peter Jankovskis, director of research at 
OakBrook
> Investments LLC in Lisle, Illinois. "It's not that the rate terms 
are not
> favorable, they're just scared to death that they'll never get the 
money
> back."
> 
> The Dow Jones industrial average slid 138.91 points, or 1.47 
percent, to
> 9,308.20. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index fell 11.70 points, or 1.17
> percent, to 984.53. The Nasdaq Composite Index declined 16.90 
points, or
> 0.96 percent, to 1,737.98.
> 
> Bank of America shares were among those dragging down the Dow, 
falling for a
> fifth straight day. It was their longest streak of losses since an 
8-day
> slide that in June-July.
> 
> Alcoa dropped 18 percent to $13,77.
> 
> In other earnings news, agricultural technology company Monsanto Co 
posted a
> smaller quarterly loss as growing herbicide and seed sales helped 
offset
> seasonal weakness and increased research and development costs. Its 
shares
> rose 6 percent to $78.56.
> 
> The rate cuts came on the heels of a global rout that slammed Asia, 
where
> the Nikkei slid more than 9 percent, and declines in Europe, where 
fallout
> from the credit crisis prompted Britain to pump $87 billion of 
emergency
> capital to shore up its banks.
> 
> (Additional reporting by Leah Schnurr; Editing by Kenneth Barry)
>


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