we are due for a Depression, if you look at trading patterns for the last 500 years..
fuji said:
I'm not reading anything into this. I'm being realistic: The markets are going to be in a slide for the next 3-4 years and it is probably 10+ years before they recover to the values they had last year.
That's how long it took for the markets to end their decline and then recover last few times we had a slide this large.
Anyone who thinks this is going to turn around this year is dreaming, there are serious fundamental problems with the economy that caused this, and there are no quick fixes.
You are quite right, most companies/ people will go bankrupt in the USA, as they will not be able to raise $$$, have less customers/ work, etc. Here is a graphic example of how bad it is globally if these numbers are correct:
http://quotes.nasdaq.com/asp/etfsscreen.asp?etfsize=4&etftype=4&etfstyle=5&etfprice=6&etfreturn=1
There will be limited time/ trading opportunities/ windows and a short term trader/ fund who goes with the flow (short/ long/ hedge/ etc.) will do very well, but the "buy and hold" of days gone by are over for many years to come.
Even Mr. Buffet and his company Berkshire will have to trade like a hedge fund, to be viable, unless they offer something unique or a market leader. Maybe that is why he invested in Goldman Sachs, GE (Finance vs. their traditional businesses I hear, as they are getting offered some pretty sweet deals). Nothing wrong with being opportunistic if you are a free market person, just ask the PM:
http://www.thestar.com/Business/article/515946
Some of my favourite defensive stocks are also available at fire-sale prices:
Walgreen Co., the dominant U.S. drugstore chain (about 50 per cent off its 5-year high); Rona Inc. (down about 60 per cent, and takeover bait for Lowe's Cos. or Home Depot Inc.); Big Pharma stocks Merck & Co. Inc. and Bristol-Myers Squibb Co., each trading at little more than half their 2003 price and boasting outsized dividends; and Cisco Systems Inc., the world's best-run supplier of telecom and Internet gear trading 45 per cent below its five-year high.
"There are probably some great buying opportunities emerging in the stock market as a consequence of all this panic," economist Stephen Harper, whose day job is running Canada, said earlier this month. "When stock markets go down people end up passing on a lot of things that are underpriced."
Harper was excoriated, of course, for real or perceived insensitivity to those with paper and locked-in losses, retirees in particular, during the admittedly cruel market of the past several months. But on this point, at least, Harper's empathy deficit doesn't make him wrong.