Strategies & Market Trends | The Residential Real Estate Post-Crash Index-MODERATED


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To: Travis_Bickle who wrote (67458)5/18/2012 6:07:20 PM
From: posthumousone1 Recommendation   of 90830
 
this is an interesting chart...haven't seen one like this before

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To: posthumousone who wrote (67467)5/18/2012 6:15:16 PM
From: BWAC   of 90830
 
Thats a very informative chart.

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From: bentway5/18/2012 6:18:47 PM
   of 90830
 
Maybe It's Time to See Scenic, Broke Greece

IF IT LEAVES THE EUROZONE, IT'LL BE A REAL BARGAIN, EXPERTS SAY

By Kevin Spak, Newser Staff
newser.com 
Posted May 18, 2012 1:13 PM CDT

(NEWSER) – These days you probably think of Greece as the place threatening to set the euro on fire. It's easy to forget that it's also a pretty beautiful tourist destination, loaded with ancient ruins and sunny beaches—and soon, NPR points out, it could be a pretty cheap destination, too. If Greece leaves the euro, the value of its currency would plummet between 30% and 50%, analysts predict.

"It could become an incredible travel bargain, like Paris in the 1950s," one travel expert says. Of course, there are a few caveats: First, while everything in Greece might be cheaper, airfare probably won't be, and there's no guarantee major tour operators will drop their rates just because their costs have gone down. On the bright side, the place won't be crowded. "We've seen a major cancellation of bookings," says one economist, "because the great majority of tourists are very risk-averse."

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To: LTK007 who wrote (67466)5/18/2012 7:37:57 PM
From: Lazarus   of 90830
 
volatility is our friend :)

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To: patron_anejo_por_favor who wrote (67465)5/18/2012 8:03:44 PM
From: Riechers3 Recommendations   of 90830
 
LOL, Fleece Book even shook down the underwriters today unless you think all those shares they had to eat at 38 bucks are going to be held for the Panglossian long term.

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To: posthumousone who wrote (67467)5/18/2012 8:24:59 PM
From: Jim McMannis   of 90830
 
Looks like somebody had some preset 'puter program executions.

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To: Jim McMannis who wrote (67472)5/18/2012 9:11:38 PM
From: posthumousone11 Recommendations   of 90830
 
Meanwhile Theophilus Hodges, a 36-year-old property manager, stopped into an E*Trade branch in downtown Chicago on Friday morning specifically to open an account to buy Facebook shares, he said.

"If it wasn't for Facebook I wouldn't be here," he said as he left the branch to go to his bank and transfer money into his new account. "I missed out on Groupon when it went public, so I'm not going to miss the boat this time."

Mr. Hodges said he plans to invest $10,000 in Facebook shares—including $4,500 of his own money and $5,500 from his mother.

Mr. Hodges expressed confidence in Mark Zuckerberg as Facebook's CEO and said he isn't worried about Mr. Zuckerberg being young. "To me, he's a genius. You know, he created something for the whole world... Everything is social now. The world is a different place with Facebook," he said.



From the WSJ




dear god.....sigh.....yeah the world is different place mr hodges.....now there is some chance in the world that i may actually run across an idiot like you surfing the net.....where before you were safely hidden away

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To: Giordano Bruno who wrote (67459)5/18/2012 9:14:03 PM
From: TH3 Recommendations   of 90830
 
GB,

Ugly is about to go exponential.

And the central wankers won't be able to do jack, as rats scurry and don't listen during fires.

I wish all these gold gurus would stop calling it a bottom. Until they do, we ain't got not bottom. I want to hear FEAR in the gold guru's words, as then it is safe to buy again.

GT
TH

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To: LTK007 who wrote (67466)5/18/2012 9:16:54 PM
From: TH   of 90830
 
Max,

I'm starting to think that might the point for the bottom too. I was leaning more towards the 1150 level, as I'm not sure how much pain Bernanke will take before he goes back to button-pushing.

For now, reality rules the market. And reality will bring 1050 unless the clowns want to force more printed fantasy.

Good Trading
TH

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To: posthumousone who wrote (67473)5/18/2012 9:20:14 PM
From: posthumousone5 Recommendations   of 90830
 
from WS: Morgan Stanley, which led the platoon of 11 Wall Street banks that arranged the listing, had to dip into an emergency reserve of around 63 million Facebook shares—worth more than $2.3 billion at the offer price—to boost the price and create a floor around $38 a share, according to people close to the situation. In successful IPOs, the reserve, known as the "overallotment" or "green shoe," is used by underwriters to meet soaring demand but in this case, it was used to prop up Facebook's ailing share price.The process is common in IPOs and works like this: The underwriters have the extra shares available to either sell or buy for a period after the IPO. If demand is strong, they sell them like all the other shares. But if the stock price falls, they can buy them back, effectively creating a floor for the price.

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