The Principle of History. Knowing one’s history gives us guidelines and a basis to work from. So yesterday I began to compare the last Papa Bear market we lived through, 1973-1974, which encompassed the first really oil crisis, to today’s ongoing bear market and oil shock. I said I was printing...
Posted to
Principles of the Stock Market
by
Richard Schwartz
on
05-22-2008
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Filed under: Principles of the Stock Market, Richard Schwartz, Trading, Shorting, Technical View, Stagflation, Inflation, Keys to the Market, The Principle of Primary Trend, Seven Principles, Day to Day Action, Daily Update, 4-Day Rule, Macroeconomics, Portfolio Strategy, Historical Perspectve, Perspective, Oil, Extended Bear Markets, Crashes, Market Corrections, Tops, Mama Bears, The Principle of History, Papa Bears, Trades, The Principle of Technical Analysis, Rallies, Rising Wedge, Trading Rules, Trends, Stock Market Lessons, The Principle of Proper Money Management, 1974, 1973
The Principle of Relative Strength. Just checked some on where this rally now stands applying one of my principles. One sound fundamental to practice for near and intermediate term performance is to favor those stocks and sectors doing well and then shy away from those sectors underperforming. In fact...
GLOBAL VIEW . Especially Important View Today! I’m looking around at as many global stock markets as possible this morning. To refresh myself as to exactly where they stand and what that bodes for the future. Broad brush thinking-wise, I want to confirm a global uptrend has now started if at all possible...
Posted to
Principles of the Stock Market
by
Richard Schwartz
on
04-08-2008
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Filed under: China, Principles of the Stock Market, Richard Schwartz, Investing Strategies, Keys to the Market, The Principle of Primary Trend, Seven Principles, Brazil, Global Investing, Latin America, Macroeconomics, Schwartz Rules, Historical Perspectve, Perspective, The Big Picture, Global Trend, The Principle of Relative Strength
CHINA again and again. I write about China so much that I get bored with it. But China is the new global power and thus very important. Plus commodity advocate and long term perspective guru, who I haven’t seen call much wrong, Jim Rogers believes so strongly in China that he sold his NYC townhouse and...
Posted to
Principles of the Stock Market
by
Richard Schwartz
on
03-31-2008
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Filed under: China, Principles of the Stock Market, Richard Schwartz, China View, The Coming China Wars, The Principle of Primary Trend, Seven Principles, Global Investing, Commodity Bull Market, Historical Perspectve, Jim Rogers
The Principle of Understanding History (one of my seven stock market principles). The 1930s Vs. Today . I just started reading another stock market book. This time it’s 100 YEARS OF WALL STREET (2000) by Charles R. Geisst. Turns out it’s a fast and easy read. Thank goodness because that other book on...
Posted to
Principles of the Stock Market
by
Richard Schwartz
on
03-31-2008
Filed under:
Filed under: Principles of the Stock Market, Richard Schwartz, Seven Principles, The Fed, Bubbles, Portfolio Strategy, Historical Perspectve, Perspective, Federal Reserve, Extended Bear Markets, Crashes
Bear Market BOTTOM or Bear Market RALLY ? I say a bear market rally . But it may look solid enough and get investors excited enough to really rally the stock market for some time. And if all the upside doesn’t come too fast and furious, say yesterday’s big gain of +417 Dow points, followed up today and...
PRINCIPLES OF THE STOCK MARKET A learning, teaching, always evolving stock market letter and advisory service Seventeenth Consecutive Year of Publication ; Letter #1; Sept 18, 1990 Mon day, March 3 rd , 2008: Three people yesterday told me they were sick of winter. They weren’t angry, just tired of fighting...
Posted to
Principles of the Stock Market
by
Richard Schwartz
on
03-03-2008
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Filed under: Principles of the Stock Market, Richard Schwartz, Clean Energy, ETFs, Shorting, Technical View, Green Energy, Value View, Commodities, Investing Strategies, Hedging, Alternative Energy, Soft Commodities, GDP, Inflation, US Dollar, US Economy, Charting, Personal Remarks, Keys to the Market, Economic Data, The Principle of Primary Trend, Seven Principles, Global Investing, Plunge Protection Team, The Fed, Update On The Stock Market, Stock Market Weekly, Weekly Letter
I heard on CNBC yesterday that this January’s S&P 500’s performance was the worst start to a year, ever. I don’t know how to check that but I do know it was a very rough start, the S&P losing -6.12% . That’s much worse than the average monthly decline during past extended, big bad bear markets...