Retirement Without Working: It wont be long before we all go on vacation!!

ElfoodStampo

Well-Known Member
I think that I'm a smart investor.
I don't doubt it, but in the history of the stock exchange why is there such a huge increase in value of stocks/companies when the economy is sucking such a huge dick?
Ever since 2008 the market is jumping 400-500 pts in a day both positive and negative. This volatility is what worries me about the market. everything is based off what the fed and ECB says on a daily basis. Fundamentals of a company are no longer what you look at for investing. Instead its which industry will be subsidized or who will benefit from the next bailout
 

god1

Well-Known Member
No I'm nowhere near that in age. I invested 3% of my wages, and it was matched by my employer. I did this for 4 years. I invested in energy stocks, because I know they won't fail in the current system.

did you ever calculate how much you lost when you pulled it out?

who did your taxes? you'd better ask!
 

kelly4

Well-Known Member
I don't doubt it, but in the history of the stock exchange why is there such a huge increase in value of stocks/companies when the economy is sucking such a huge dick?
Ever since 2008 the market is jumping 400-500 pts in a day both positive and negative. This volatility is what worries me about the market. everything is based off what the fed and ECB says on a daily basis.
I have a system. I can let you in on it for $299.
 

ElfoodStampo

Well-Known Member
ugh --- take an econ class;
the least i can say is that it doesn't work the way you apparently think.
I did, I have a degree in financial planning from the Ohio State University. None of this was talked about in school.
That's not the place to learn about the markets. I can tell you that much.
 

ElfoodStampo

Well-Known Member
It's obvious education was wasted on you
Going to college wasn't the best use of my time. my father spent 4x the amount of money on my college prep than I did on my actual college tuition. I learned critical thinking from my high school, I learned about the markets from my grandfather, who did extremely well in the 80's and 90's . If the system was not rigged I would invest. But putting money into a system that is manipulated by a bank is not my idea of sound investment.
 

NLXSK1

Well-Known Member
social security is a handout now?
The social security system has been looted and the piggy bank stuffed full of IOU's. Yes, it is a handout now because the government stole all the money and spent it on other things.

Also, When people get multiple times more back from social security than they pay in it is most certainly a welfare program. The government is not wisely investing the money and paying it back with interest.
 

ElfoodStampo

Well-Known Member
About the Fed Not Trying Hard Enough To Hit Its Inflation Target

It is hard not to be cynical when you see charts like this one. It shows what appears to be a systematic relationship over the past 6 years between changes in the Fed share of marketable treasuries and PCE core inflation:


http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-2jip5I0Yf1s/U_pBnmWPZeI/AAAAAAAAKfI/rXlhT6RDYO8/s1600/fed1.jpg
The figure indicates the Fed allows its share of marketable treasuries--by either engaging in LSAPs or refraining from doing so as the total share grows--to change so that core PCE inflation stays in the 1% to 2% corridor. Here is the scatterplot of this data:

Now this is just a reduced-form relationship, but it is highly suggestive and consistent with my claim from an earlier post that there really is no 2% target. Rather, there is a 2% ceiling to an inflation target corridor. As I showed in that post, the timings of the QE programs tend to line up with this view. The above chart provides further evidence.
P.S. For those observers who are so focused on endogenous money that they fail to see how a central bank can shape the medium-to-long run path of inflation recall what we discussed here and here. A brief excerpt:
Now to be clear, most money is inside money--money endogenously created by banks and other financial firms--and the Fed only indirectly influences its creation. However, it does so in an important way by shaping the macroeconomic environment in which money gets created. Consequently, it can have a large influence on inside money creation. For the same reason it can also influence how stable is the velocity of money. By successfully stabilizing the expected growth path of total dollar spending, the Fed will be causing this seesaw process [offsetting changes in the money supply and money velocity] to work properly. Posted by David Beckworth at 3:16 PM
 
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