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    Saturday, October 27, 2018

    Stock Market - Get ready for the trading week of October 29th, 2018!

    Stock Market - Get ready for the trading week of October 29th, 2018!


    Get ready for the trading week of October 29th, 2018!

    Posted: 27 Oct 2018 10:15 AM PDT

    Study: the current decline is probably just a correction in a bull market.

    Posted: 27 Oct 2018 04:03 AM PDT

    If this is still bull market, the stock market will experience more short term volatility, but the medium term is bullish.

    But even if this is the start of a bear market, the stock market will make a medium term bounce soon. Bear markets don't drop in a straight line (eg see 2007, 2000, 1973, 1969)

    r/https://bullmarkets.co/stocks-continue-crash/

    submitted by /u/troybombardia
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    What stocks are making it on your radar this weekend?

    Posted: 27 Oct 2018 10:19 AM PDT

    Bear Market vs. Correction

    Posted: 27 Oct 2018 08:09 AM PDT

    https://youtu.be/3C8668-EWCw

    The US stock market has pulled back big recently with the S&P 500 trading more than 10% off it's highs set last month. The culprit here is a slew of geopolitical turmoil including the below:

    Tariffs on imports of steel, aluminum, and other manufacturing materials.

    Hawkish comments from the Federal Reserve promising to hike interest rates once more this year and three more times in 2019.

    Midterm elections bringing uncertainty to the political power structure.

    A rising U.S. dollar. Which makes business overseas more expensive for U.S. companies.

    New home sales came in at 553,000 vs. 625,000 expected.

    I made a quick video to sum up what's going on, look at the Buffett Indicator and other economic indicators, and give my opinion! Please share your insight as well!

    https://youtu.be/3C8668-EWCw

    submitted by /u/dmwes4
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    Historically, Interest rates have trended down. What happens during next recession if rates are still low?

    Posted: 27 Oct 2018 09:31 AM PDT

    I pulled up a historic chart of Interest rates, and I noticed that they appear to have trended down over the last several decades.

    This leads me to think, what will happen if the next recession occurs in 1-2 years from now while interest rates are still very low?

    The Fed will have no ammo left to reduce rates significantly which will make any recovery much more drawn out. We could experience a "lost decade" as Japan has.

    I'm genuinely scared that the Fed blew their load during the 2008 recession, and now it feels like they waited too long to start rising rates again, so when we do have another crash, they will have almost no wiggle room to reduce rates as they are already so low.

    Am I well informed regarding QE and interest rates in regard to a recession, or is this an overblown fear?

    submitted by /u/LuxGang
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    When almost everyone on this thread and any other related threads just keep on saying that after a correction like this, the market is just going to climb again will probably be the blurry sign of the top.

    Posted: 27 Oct 2018 08:08 AM PDT

    Templeton-"Bull markets are born from pessimism, grow on skepticism, mature on optimism, and die from euphoria"

    I suppose we haven't reached the euphoric stage so it's not the top yet(?) but if we all acted on this theory, then it'd be a self-fulfilling prophecy :|

    submitted by /u/DanielFok
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    ANNOUNCEMENT! Holiday Giveaway!!!!

    Posted: 27 Oct 2018 09:50 AM PDT

    Put spread mispriced?

    Posted: 27 Oct 2018 02:40 AM PDT

    Hi all, I was wondering if someone could answer a question. I had bought an SPXW put spread (buy 2705, sell 2700) that expired today (10/26)...average around $1.2 per contract. SPX closed at 2658 (ish), but when the options went to settle at close, I ended up losing money on this trade. I keep thinking if I'm missing something very basic? Can someone help explain what happened? Should I not have made around $4-5ish per contract?

    submitted by /u/lulzasaur
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    Where do I start investing in stock?

    Posted: 27 Oct 2018 12:24 AM PDT

    Hello, I'm 15 and I really want to get into investing in the stock market. But I just don't know where and how to start. Any advise?

    Thanks.

    submitted by /u/sword23
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    Good-time to get into S&P?

    Posted: 26 Oct 2018 10:24 PM PDT

    Never invested in stocks..is this a good time to get in S&P with my savings? I hesitated the last 2 years because i didn't want to enter on a high note..

    Should i go or should i wait for it to drop more and enter when it starts picking-up?

    submitted by /u/RandomHandle31
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