ATM is not a bargin at current prices, it's an absolute steal. Lol
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I am sorry I don't buy into all this gloom.
HGH had a very solid result today,with a positive outlook, and they also increased their divie.
GNE,MEL and SPK pay great divies,other stocks will have good results
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/trade...094924518.html
Markets in Europe opened up okay but is now getting sold off as China now escalates the trade war by calling Trump's bluff.
Can't see Trump backing down just as it is clear now that the Chinese are prepared to see this aggravation through until 2020 election.
Dow & Nasdaq futures both showing 1% loss so far.
Going to be a long last/loss quarter of 2019?
massive volatility in us markets overnight , so head spinning actually im worn out this week looking forward to the w/e. overall we consolidating at lows in the move at the moment next test might be june lows remebering we are back in the giant range so vo;atilty can become huge now in this environment. yields had massive move down again last night but still havnt tested the lows yet. catch up next week
Neither do I Percy.
Down 800 points on the day.... Pfffft.
CNN and other US Main Stream Media just bursting to jump on any short term negativity to announce, yet again, that under Trump's reign the sky is falling.
Not to say a big (proper big) correction won't occur, but if it does the MSM will be culpable for creating unwarranted mass hysteria in another attempt to create its desired prophecy.
I am quite tired of the doom and gloom....since it really got started, I have continued to drag in my dividends and see capital appreciation. The volatility does hurt the short-term view, but surely it is good for the consistent buyers.
http://www.sharechat.co.nz/article/2...even-yearshtml
Low business and consumer confidence too. Retail card spend in July was down too. I suppose it all could be just a coincidence LOL
BNZ economist Craig Ebert said the contraction was worth keeping tabs on but didn't mean that the economy was definitely going to stagnate.
"July’s result is no dead-set that the economy at large is contracting, even growing poorly. The PMI was down in this area in 2011 and 2012, only for annual GDP growth to trundle along near 2 percent. And GDP growth was closer to 3 percent when the PMI slumped to 44.3, way back in 2005," he said.