Yeah instead you just stay the course, expecting a different result each year from the exact same bullsh!t.
I've taken flack for this before from some users for being "insensitive", but I legitimately, sincerely believe that if you took an IQ you would score under 75.
Turkey’s inflation rate is 84%, locals are buying stocks to stay ahead since central bank interest rate has been pushed lower by Erdogan. Owning is dollars is benefiting TUR. I would assume looking at the chart it is a time bomb, but timing the explosion to the downside?
Turkey’s inflation rate is 84%, locals are buying stocks to stay ahead since central bank interest rate has been pushed lower by Erdogan. Owning is dollars is benefiting TUR. I would assume looking at the chart it is a time bomb, but timing the explosion to the downside?
Turkey’s inflation rate is 84%, locals are buying stocks to stay ahead since central bank interest rate has been pushed lower by Erdogan. Owning is dollars is benefiting TUR. I would assume looking at the chart it is a time bomb, but timing the explosion to the downside?
“As of Friday, December 16, the S&P 500 Index is down -19.7% from the most speculative level of valuations in U.S. history – exceeding even the 1929 and 2000 extremes, based on the valuation measures we find best-correlated with actual subsequent market returns in cycles across history. The apparent shallowness of this loss isn’t a sign of “resilience.” Despite being nearly a year into what we expect to be a far deeper retreat, the relatively shallow loss isn’t even surprising. The same thing happened in the first year of each of the three deepest post-war stock market collapses: the 2000-2002, 2007-2009, and 1973-74.
Specifically, from the March 24, 2000 bubble peak through March 9, 2001 (just under a year into that bear market, as today), the S&P 500 index lost only -19.3%. Similarly, from October 7, 2007 through September 19, 2008, in what was soon to be known as the global financial crisis, the S&P 500 lost just -19.8%. From January 11, 1973 market peak to January 2, 1974, the S&P 500 lost just -18.8%, amid a bear market that would ultimately take the stock market down by half.”