>What do you all think the stimulus did for the economy
It did nothing for the working class economy because it neither bailed out home owners not was it spent into the economy.
It helped the economy of those of us who live off invested assets.
Stock Market or jobs?
Discussion in 'Political Debate & Discussion' started by SolaSaint, Jun 12, 2012.
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InTheLight Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
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I would say that jobs are most important. As we have seen a rising stock market, and government Keynesian policies to reinflate do not help with job creation.
The stock market seems to be more of a bubble situation to me. The government has made money cheap with printing more of it, and saving money difficult with ultra low interest rates. In essence the Feds are promoting the idea that we should buy, buy buy, consume more, go into debt, not save. This creates bubbles, as we have seen with many metals, oil, and other commodities over the past few years, along with stocks.
Thought Dr. Weiss had a nice article on this:
"The 800-Pound Gorilla in the Room"
http://www.moneyandmarkets.com/49557-49557
excerpt:
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InTheLight Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
So no Republican House members voted for it.
On February 10, the Senate voted 61–37 with only three Republicans voted in favor (Susan Collins, Olympia Snowe, and Arlen Specter), with Specter later switching to the Democratic party.
You are correct that some Republicans (2) voted for the bill. You are incorrect that the Republicans made it possible. -
InTheLight Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
Individual stocks don't go up because the money supply increases. Individual stocks go up (mainly) because the company is profitable and/or the company is poised to be profitable. There are other factors but the money supply is NOT one of them.
And yes, Bank of America is worth more now than it was 16 months ago. -
Over 60% of stock trades are made by high speed computers and the price "trends" are measured in microseconds. Long term profitability is immaterial.
from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technical_analysis
In finance, technical analysis is security analysis discipline for forecasting the direction of prices through the study of past market data, primarily price and volume.[1] Behavioral economics and quantitative analysis build on and incorporate many of the same tools of technical analysis [2] [3][4] [5], which, being an aspect of active management, stands in contradiction to much of modern portfolio theory. The efficacy of both technical and fundamental analysis is disputed by efficient-market hypothesis which states that prices of any tradable instrument are essentially unpredictable.[6]
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