Yg saya pahami secara textbook martin pring dan kenyataan:
Bullish itu lebih lama dari bearish
2009/11/7, Cougar Boy boysngi...@gmail.com:
Buat mereka yang berharap crash cepat..
STOP DREAMING
Buat mereka yang berharap bullish..
STOP EXPECTING
Market isn't going anywhere.
It takes 1 full year to get the full effect of subprime morgate, which mean
It took one full year for bozz to distribute their stock.
So...for those who are expecting quick crash... you can have holiday and
wait until next year.
And for those who are hopping strong bull rally... better donate your money
to orphane house.
For those who still trading... better follow mr JT :D
Good luck
On Sat, Nov 7, 2009 at 12:08 AM, a_zakar...@yahoo.com wrote:
Utk short term sich positif, utk medium term negatif utk IHSG n saham
global
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*From: * inderaw...@gmail.com
*Date: *Fri, 6 Nov 2009 14:07:13 +
*To: *obrolan-bandar@yahoogroups.com
*Subject: *Re: [ob] Jobless Rate Jumps to 10.2% as Labor Market Still Weak
Monday? We take profit or cut loss.. Simple, rite? :p
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*From: * billy_budiman92 billybudima...@yahoo.com
*Date: *Fri, 06 Nov 2009 13:46:57 -
*To: *obrolan-bandar@yahoogroups.com
*Subject: *[ob] Jobless Rate Jumps to 10.2% as Labor Market Still Weak
U.S. employers cut a deeper-than-expected 190,000 jobs in October,
government data showed on Friday, driving the unemployment rate to 10.2
percent, the highest in 26-1/2 years.
The Labor Department said the unemployment rate was the highest since
April
1983. It revised job losses for August and September to show 91,000 fewer
jobs lost than previously reported.
Analysts polled by Reuters had expected payrolls to drop by 175,000 and
the
jobless rate to edge up to 9.9 percent from 9.8 percent in September.
The labor market is being watched for signs whether the economic recovery
that started in the third quarter can be sustained without government
support. The economy grew at a 3.5 percent annualized rate in the
July-September period, probably ending the most painful U.S. recession in
70
years.
Payrolls have declined for 22 consecutive months now, throwing 7.3 million
people out of work since December 2007, when the recession started.
However, the pace of layoffs has slowed sharply from early this year, when
nearly three-quarters of a million jobs were lost in January. In October,
job losses were across almost all sectors, with education and health
services and professional and business services bucking the trend.
Manufacturing employment fell 61,000 last month, while construction
industries payrolls dropped 62,000.
The service-providing sector cut 61,000 workers in October and
goods-producing industries slashed 129,000 positions.
Education and health services added 45,000 jobs, while government
employment was flat.
This is a very-very bad news, so how about monday ?