Anonymous wrote:Trump baby!!! Setting him up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop trying to compare to 2008. Unlike 2008 when the Fed was able to bail everyone out, the fed cannot do that this time. Peope have to get it through their thick skulls that the Fed put is gone, and the fed is now the enemy of asset holders, not a friend. Good luck fighting the Fed with the hackneyed buy the dip attitude. This is going to be far worse than 2008.
Bingo. 100% agree.
Ppl have no idea. This is about what the Fed isn’t doing anymore..
Fed must kill the market to get inflation somewhat under control.
They think the stock market is trying to teach the fed a lesson by throwing a tantrum??
What if its not a tantrum? What if it's a reckoning? Bubble money? What does the world really need? Cheap energy, food, shelter and a reliable currency? Or massively expensive tech cars, phones, apps, crypto, that silence your freedom and rob the earth of precious metals?
Hmmm. What happens to the bubble?
Pop.
These new investors are clueless. They've seen nothing but easy money for 15 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop trying to compare to 2008. Unlike 2008 when the Fed was able to bail everyone out, the fed cannot do that this time. Peope have to get it through their thick skulls that the Fed put is gone, and the fed is now the enemy of asset holders, not a friend. Good luck fighting the Fed with the hackneyed buy the dip attitude. This is going to be far worse than 2008.
Bingo. 100% agree.
Ppl have no idea. This is about what the Fed isn’t doing anymore..
Fed must kill the market to get inflation somewhat under control.
They think the stock market is trying to teach the fed a lesson by throwing a tantrum??
What if its not a tantrum? What if it's a reckoning? Bubble money? What does the world really need? Cheap energy, food, shelter and a reliable currency? Or massively expensive tech cars, phones, apps, crypto, that silence your freedom and rob the earth of precious metals?
Hmmm. What happens to the bubble?
Pop.
These new investors are clueless. They've seen nothing but easy money for 15 years.
In addition, the Republicans were in charge in 2008 and 2020. The first stimulus measures were under their leadership and the Democrats, of course, supported it because it benefited the people on the street.
If a recession hits in 2023, and the house is under Republican control, forget any help from them. They don't care about people on the street nor do they care to help a Democratic President.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop trying to compare to 2008. Unlike 2008 when the Fed was able to bail everyone out, the fed cannot do that this time. Peope have to get it through their thick skulls that the Fed put is gone, and the fed is now the enemy of asset holders, not a friend. Good luck fighting the Fed with the hackneyed buy the dip attitude. This is going to be far worse than 2008.
Bingo. 100% agree.
Ppl have no idea. This is about what the Fed isn’t doing anymore..
Fed must kill the market to get inflation somewhat under control.
They think the stock market is trying to teach the fed a lesson by throwing a tantrum??
What if its not a tantrum? What if it's a reckoning? Bubble money? What does the world really need? Cheap energy, food, shelter and a reliable currency? Or massively expensive tech cars, phones, apps, crypto, that silence your freedom and rob the earth of precious metals?
Hmmm. What happens to the bubble?
Pop.
These new investors are clueless. They've seen nothing but easy money for 15 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Fed will still bail institutions out again if, like in 2008, it means a total collapse of the financial system. They have two mandates: fight inflation and keep employment steady. While they want the economy to cool off to fight inflation (and may start a recession to get there), a total collapse would not keep employment steady. That being said, it'll be a higher bar for a bailout this time around.
Exactly. I see the Fed stepping up and bailing out Coinbase and Facebook.
Anonymous wrote:The Fed will still bail institutions out again if, like in 2008, it means a total collapse of the financial system. They have two mandates: fight inflation and keep employment steady. While they want the economy to cool off to fight inflation (and may start a recession to get there), a total collapse would not keep employment steady. That being said, it'll be a higher bar for a bailout this time around.
Anonymous wrote:Stop trying to compare to 2008. Unlike 2008 when the Fed was able to bail everyone out, the fed cannot do that this time. Peope have to get it through their thick skulls that the Fed put is gone, and the fed is now the enemy of asset holders, not a friend. Good luck fighting the Fed with the hackneyed buy the dip attitude. This is going to be far worse than 2008.
Anonymous wrote:I will also laugh my ass off if that loser running $MSTR in Potomac who bought a ton of Bitcoin gets margin called as it continues to tank. How dumb do you have to be to put everything on the line on a joke like btc?
Anonymous wrote:Don’t worry all, this extremely bearish action is transitory - J. Powell, renowned economist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Feeling for anyone holding the BTC bag (not me). Down 12% since Fri/Sat and over 20% since Thurs
How old are you? Saw this in 2008, didn't change a thing; kept buying then too.