redbaron

Comment Stream » DIA

Comment Stream
Filter comments by:
Highest rated Latest comments
  • Chart of the Day: Various Stages of a Bear Market
    Where are we? I could have found the chart by myself. No opinions?
    Oct 28 07:21 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment |View article
  • It's Rough Out There: How You Can Protect Your Holdings in the Worst Market Since 1974
    The 'SS', so much has happened since 'Monday', that I can't remember the details of that day. If you want to be considered relevant, suggest that perhaps you should be posting these thoughts the day you write them.
    Sep 19 07:44 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment |View article
  • This Rally Is Over, and Here’s Why
    On the ISM/EDI chart, a question: what are all those valleys on the chart, that are outside of the red boxes? And how is one certain that the current decline in not another of these same situations?
    Sep 05 09:59 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment |View article
  • The Great Consumer Crash of 2009
    Some people just don't get it. This guy fills his article with facts, and some apparently can't read and think. That will be to their peril.

    Good article, lots of facts, and hence, I can't argue with the conclusion.
    Aug 14 07:46 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment |View article
  • Looking for a Cause for Thursday's Sell-off? Blame Greenspan
    What Detector said!
    Aug 01 08:37 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment |View article
  • The Top 5 Looming Financial Issues
    Great discussion, John. Many thanks for getting it started. I can't read fast enough to keep up with the posts. Perhaps we are now beginning to realize how serious this problem has become.
    Jul 28 18:26 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment |View article
  • A Fed Rate Hike Won't Solve the Current Crisis
    I agree, and would also add this. If the US had not of exported all our jobs to the BRIC countries, they would not be using all this oil, and this problem would be much easier to manage. I can't see how we can put the genie back in the bottle however, and the emerging countries are going to continue to emerge, i.e., use more oil.

    The people trying to manage this problem with financial manipulations, may well fail. What then?

    I think T. Boone Pickens has it exactly correct, as the recent natural gas discoveries in this country are enough to supply his proposals and bridge us to the next fuel, hydrogen.
    Jul 24 09:03 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment |View article
  • Consumption, Cacophony and Clarity
    What then to invest in? Not financials, not housing, not industrials, not global stocks (as US problems will eventually go there also), so where should one be invested and in what instruments? The problem is well defined already, as I see it, so what are your suggestions as to where to invest? Is it gold? Is it energy?
    Jun 17 09:38 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment |View article
  • An Oil-Driven Paradigm Shift?
    While you touch on China, overall your 'little scenario' doesn't consider Global Oil/Gas increased consumption. While we here in the US are now using slightly less oil, the demand from the Mideast alone is going up more than we have eliminated, and that does not include the increase from China, India and other countries where energy consumption is subsidized by the Gov't. This is not just a US problem, and while I agree that there will be technological advances over time, exactly what direction these new developments will take, and how long it will take to implement them, is not at all clear at this point in time. Until those developments happen (or are invented and implemented), it seems to me that oil will continue to be a very prized global commodity, and as a result, highly priced.

    Key Word: Global
    Jun 09 11:28 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment |View article

redbaron's Comments Stream Stats

  • 174 Comments, 48 , 26
  • Total Comment Stream rating - = 22