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Không cần biết hôm nay Mỹ thế nào, mai cứ bán toàn bộ đã

Chủ đề trong 'Thị trường chứng khoán' bởi MartinStock, 22/09/2008.

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  1. MartinStock

    MartinStock Thành viên rất tích cực

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    26/02/2007
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    Không cần biết hôm nay Mỹ thế nào, mai cứ bán toàn bộ đã

    Deutschbank công bố báo cáo lo ngại nếu Mỹ tung tiền cứu TT thì siêu lạm phát có thể xảy ra trên phạm vi toàn cầu. VN là nước có tỉ lệ lạm phát cao nhất nhì, lại thêm rủi ro giảm tăng trưởng do tình hình thế giới bi bét. Khả năng huy động vốn giảm mạnh do suy thoái. GDP 2009 chỉ khoảng 4-5% là may.

    Bán bán bán từ mai
  2. EVo198x

    EVo198x Thành viên rất tích cực

    Tham gia ngày:
    20/06/2008
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    Chúc mừng Martin vừa short 50K MB ăn luôn cọc trong 2 tiếng..kiếm 100tr nhẹ nhàng như đẩy xe hàng...
  3. xiclohoavien

    xiclohoavien Thành viên gắn bó với f319.com Not Official

    Tham gia ngày:
    14/09/2007
    Đã được thích:
    6.257
    ku em có hàng để bán?....(^_^)
  4. lechinh6882

    lechinh6882 Thành viên rất tích cực

    Tham gia ngày:
    05/03/2007
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    1
    Cái phao cứu thị trường bị đâm xẹp thì chết hết à
  5. MartinStock

    MartinStock Thành viên rất tích cực

    Tham gia ngày:
    26/02/2007
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    châu Âu đã đỏ lửa sau báo cáo lo ngại siêu lạm phát và suy thoái lan rộng tại Châu Âu. Oil, gold đều tăng mạnh. Mai cứ bluechips mà xả cho chết ngập thị trường.
  6. FPTleader

    FPTleader Thành viên quen thuộc

    Tham gia ngày:
    15/09/2007
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    1
    à, có kết quả tương đối chuẩn rồi, không phải đoán già đoán non nữa. Tối nay Mẽo tèo rồi. chấm dứt màn kịch Bull Trap

    European Stocks, U.S. Futures Decline; Asian Shares Advance

    By Adam Haigh

    Sept. 22 (Bloomberg) -- European stocks and U.S. futures fell as higher oil prices weighed on carmakers and retailers, overshadowing plans by the U.S. government to buy $700 billion of bank assets and a crackdown on bets against financial companies. Asian shares advanced.

    Volkswagen AG dropped 1.7 percent, while Carrefour SA slid 2.2 percent as crude climbed for a fourth day. Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc. rose more than 4 percent after U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson announced plans to buy soured mortgage securities and provide $400 billion to guarantee money-market mutual funds.

    Europe''s Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index declined 0.5 percent as of 8:23 a.m. in London. Futures on the Standard & Poor''s 500 Index lost 0.6 percent following the gauge''s biggest two-day gain since the aftermath of the 1987 crash. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index added 2.5 percent as Germany, France, the Netherlands, Belgium, Australia and Taiwan widened the global crackdown on short selling.

    The Stoxx 600, the U.K.''s FTSE 100 and France''s CAC 40 posted their biggest rallies on record Sept. 19 after the U.S. announced plans to halt the credit-market seizure.

    The dollar dropped against the yen for the first time in three days on concern Paulson''s plan to allow the government to buy a variety of mortgage-related securities to relieve a freeze in credit markets will widen the country''s budget deficit. U.S. Treasuries rose on speculation the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates to support the rescue plan.

    Short-Selling Ban

    Democrats, who control both houses of the U.S. Congress, pledged not to slow down its passage or tie it to an economic stimulus plan.

    Germany, France, the Netherlands and Belgium followed the U.S. and U.K. in barring short sales of financial companies, to defend banks from trading blamed for pushing down share prices and worsening a market crisis.

    BaFin, the German financial regulator, banned short positions in companies including Deutsche Bank AG and Commerzbank AG for the rest of the year. France''s Autorite des Marches Financiers and Belgium''s Banking, Finance and Insurance Commission imposed a three-month ban for Fortis, Dexia SA, Credit Agricole SA and other firms.

    Volkswagen, Europe''s biggest carmaker, lost 1.7 percent to 257.49 euros. Carrefour, the world''s second-largest retailer, dropped 2.2 percent to 33.33 euros.

    Mitsubishi UFJ, Japan''s biggest bank, climbed 4.2 percent to 898 yen, the highest since Aug. 6.

    To contact the reporter on this story: Adam Haigh in London at [email protected]

    Last Updated: September 22, 2008 03:31 EDT

    http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=a2VLPfJHrFG0&refer=home
  7. MartinStock

    MartinStock Thành viên rất tích cực

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    26/02/2007
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    thank bác. Lâu lâu cũng phải kiếm lại cảm giác shortsell ăn dễ như trở bàn tay. Bác cứ yên tâm đây là bulltrap thế kỉ. VNI hình thành vai đầu vai rồi
  8. bultrap

    bultrap Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    21/09/2008
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    0
    Tóm lại ngày mai đầu phiên cứ bán cho nó lành.Suy thoái toàn cầu roài.
  9. EVo198x

    EVo198x Thành viên rất tích cực

    Tham gia ngày:
    20/06/2008
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    Vừa tin báo về MB 19.4 - 19.2 ... sắp cuối giờ... MB sẽ nhích lên chút ít... short tiếp ... đây gọi là trung bình tăng (khối lượng) đánh xuống ...
  10. MartinStock

    MartinStock Thành viên rất tích cực

    Tham gia ngày:
    26/02/2007
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    0
    tin siêu xấu cho Mỹ, hạn chế leverage trong đầu tư CK. Giờ thì lấy đâu ra tiền mua CK Mỹ đây, khi mà tiền đem cứu BĐS hết roài

    Democrats to Use Gains in Congress to Push New Rules on Markets

    By Laura Litvan

    Sept. 22 (Bloomberg) -- No matter who''s elected president in November, Democrats are poised to expand their congressional majority. And that means they will have a leading role next year in pushing through tough new regulation of U.S. financial markets.

    Presidential candidate John McCain''s post-convention bounce in the polls and the enthusiasm generated by the choice of Sarah Palin as his running mate haven''t trickled down to congressional contests so far. Experts, Democrats and even some Republicans say they expect the party to lose about six seats in the Senate and as many as two dozen in the House of Representatives.

    ``Has the dynamic changed in favor of Republicans in the House and Senate races? The answer is, clearly, no,'''' says Del Ali, president of Research 2000, an Olney, Maryland-based polling company that tracks congressional elections.

    That would put the Democrats in the driver''s seat next year, as the U.S. carries out the biggest expansion of federal power over the financial system since the Great Depression.

    It also would keep in charge lawmakers such as House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank of Massachusetts, who last week proposed the creation of a new federal agency to buy bad debt from private institutions.

    Permanent Measures

    Frank says the stop-gap plan developed over the weekend, authorizing the Treasury to take on financial companies'' troubled assets to help stabilize markets, will be followed next year by permanent measures.

    Congress will move to apply rules to hedge funds, private- equity firms and investment banks similar to those governing commercial banks, he adds. The rules may include capital requirements and limits on leverage.
    ``As soon as we get back in session next year, we will put in rules that will prevent this from happening again,'''' the Democrat, 68, said in an interview broadcast this weekend on Bloomberg Television''s ``Political Capital with Al Hunt.''''

    ``We are now determined to put in rules so these bad judgments can''t be made again, because we don''t want to have to keep'''' intervening in the markets after the Federal Reserve and Treasury takeovers this month of mortgage lenders Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and insurer American International Group Inc., he says.

    Post-Election Landscape

    The post-election landscape may be most dramatically different in the Senate, where Democrats currently hold a 51-49 majority thanks only to the support of two independents -- one of whom, Connecticut Senator Joe Lieberman, is supporting Republican McCain for president.

    If everything breaks their way, Democrats may get or come close to the 60-vote majority they would need to break filibusters -- a parliamentary delaying maneuver that Republicans have used to stymie some bills in the last two years.

    ``The Democrats come in with a head of steam to impose a much tougher regulatory hand and a pro-consumer bias,'''' says Charles Gabriel, managing director of Washington-based Capital Alpha Partners, which advises investors on policy.

    The Republicans say they still have hopes of limiting the damage. ``We''re not in a situation where we''re ahead, but we''re not as far behind,'''' says Representative Tom Cole of Oklahoma, chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee.

    On the Senate side, National Republican Senatorial Committee Chairman John Ensign of Nevada sees a bright spot in Alaska Senator Ted Stevens''s re-election bid. Stevens, 84, has been indicted on federal corruption charges; while he trails his Democratic opponent, Anchorage Mayor Mark Begich, in polls, he has narrowed the gap recently.

    The Palin Factor

    Nationally, Ensign says, polls show that voters have a more favorable opinion of Republican candidates since Alaska Governor Palin, 44, joined the presidential ticket last month. ``I feel better than I did at any point in the past,'''' Ensign says.

    Still, congressional Democrats remain far better funded. As of Sept. 8, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee had raised $115 million, with $56.5 million still on hand. The National Republican Congressional Committee, meanwhile, had raised $89.7 million and had just $14.2 million left.

    On the Senate side, the Democrats took in $98.6 million and had $43 million left, while Republicans raised $62.5 million and had $25.4 million remaining.

    The Republicans also are battling the drag of an unpopular president and retirements from their ranks. Twenty-nine Republicans in the House and five in the Senate are retiring this year, far more than on the Democratic side. Most of those open seats are rated competitive by independent, nonpartisan groups such as the Washington-based Rothenberg Political Report.

    `Stacked Against Them''

    ``The problem Republicans have is that the playing field is dramatically stacked against them,'''' says Nathan Gonzales, Rothenberg''s political editor.

    Last week, the Rothenberg Report reclassified Republican- held Senate seats in North Carolina and Oregon as more competitive than a month ago. Nine Republican-held seats now are rated as possible takeovers, and just one Democratic seat -- in Louisiana -- is ranked as competitive.

    State surveys since early September show incumbent Republican Senators Gordon Smith of Oregon, Elizabeth Dole of North Carolina and Norm Coleman of Minnesota in tight contests after polls in July and August suggested they were gaining more comfortable leads.

    Democrats Ahead

    Meanwhile, polls show Democrats ahead by 10 or more percentage points in races for currently Republican seats in New Hampshire, Virginia and Colorado. In New Mexico, they show Democratic Representative Tom Udall leading Republican Representative Steve Pearce for the seat of retiring Republican Pete Domenici.

    In the House, where Democrats hold a 235-199 majority with one vacancy, the Washington-based Cook Political Report last week added three more Republican-held seats to its list of competitive races: those of Republicans Lee Terry of Nebraska and Bill Sali of Idaho, along with the open seat now held by Representative Wayne Gilchrest of Maryland, who lost his primary earlier this year.

    The new ratings bring the number of Republican-held competitive seats to 33, compared with 18 for the Democrats.

    Mississippi

    Research 2000''s Ali says Republicans may be in trouble even in some places where they are still ahead. In Mississippi, for example, Senator Roger Wicker, a Republican, is in a close race against Democratic challenger Ronnie Musgrove. Ali says an incumbent senator in a Republican-dominated state should be much further ahead.

    `If Republicans were recovering, Wicker would be ready to seal the deal,'''' Ali says.

    Yet even with their expected gains, Democratic leaders may face challenges because of the party''s internal divisions, says Ethan Siegal, president of the Washington Exchange, which tracks political developments for institutional investors.

    That''s because many of the new seats would come in areas where Republican voters dominate, and the new Democratic lawmakers may feel they need to side with Republicans on some issues.

    ``As Democrats, they will be more pro-business, and they won''t be as likely to embrace all of the Democrats'' legislative agenda,'''' Siegal says.

    That doesn''t damp the outlook for House Democratic Caucus Chairman Rahm Emanuel of Illinois.

    ``If you look at the issues, you look at the battlefield and you look at the climate,'''' Emanuel says, he would ``rather be us than them.''''

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