(Disclaimer: All I know about the Motley Fool is that I tried to get a job there last year.)
― j.lu (j.lu), Monday, 24 May 2004 18:35 (twenty-two years ago)
― kyle (akmonday), Monday, 24 May 2004 18:36 (twenty-two years ago)
I really like Ken Kurson's book. I think it was the first book I read on the subject. Although it's, what, a good 6 years old now. I don't know if it's been revised or anything. But it's a good intro to a lot of financial type stuff (also has lots of info on home-buying and so forth), written in a style definitely geared towards young people without being patronizing.
And of course, the Peter Lynch books are widely regarded as investing classics, though I've never read them.
― Broheems (diamond), Monday, 24 May 2004 20:20 (twenty-two years ago)
Brilliant.
― ___ (___), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 07:59 (twenty-two years ago)
― EisbΓ€r (llamasfur), Saturday, 16 September 2006 07:37 (nineteen years ago)
― A-ron Hubbard (Hurting), Saturday, 16 September 2006 13:40 (nineteen years ago)
― Hurting 2, Tuesday, 8 May 2007 02:53 (nineteen years ago)
jesus christ, the era of 24-hour news and twitchily updated newspaper 'front pages' online has really found its level with this crash. a couple of hours ago the guardian main story was "FTSE rebounds after blah blah blah". i went to the opticians, came back, and now its "FTSE dips in red". what is the fucking point of this minute-by-minute analysis, especially for a non-specialist paper.
― That one guy that hit it and quit it, Friday, 17 August 2007 11:04 (eighteen years ago)
Surely there's more point in minute-by-minute analysis for things that are acutely time-sensitive like this? As opposed to, say, 'factory blows up in Stoke, police still don't know anything'.
Not that the Guardian website would exactly be the first point of call for anyone seeking up to date financial information but still...
― Matt DC, Friday, 17 August 2007 11:15 (eighteen years ago)
So tits up or not?
― Tom D., Friday, 17 August 2007 11:17 (eighteen years ago)
well now it says:
"Markets brace for more turmoil Last updated 11 minutes ago Investors and pensions holders should prepare for further stock market volatility, traders warn."
i think the 'volatility'-ness of it is the clue that the headline should be 'volatile market is volatile' until it can be called.
― That one guy that hit it and quit it, Friday, 17 August 2007 11:19 (eighteen years ago)
Making a song and dance about everything and anything is what the meeja's all about these days
― Tom D., Friday, 17 August 2007 11:20 (eighteen years ago)
word on the street is there's a RECESSION on the horizon (this sib-prime thing being the straw breaking the camel's back) and d!ck all we can do about it...
― CarsmileSteve, Friday, 17 August 2007 11:33 (eighteen years ago)
sub-prime
i'd like it very much if prime-rib caused recessions ...
also, urgent & key -- DON'T PAY ANY MIND TO 24/7 FINANCIAL JOURNALISM. it's even more useless than 24/7 political journalism or even celebrity journalism!
― Eisbaer, Friday, 17 August 2007 11:40 (eighteen years ago)
-- CarsmileSteve, Friday, August 17, 2007 12:33 PM (11 minutes ago) Bookmark Link
indeed. who could have seen it coming?
― That one guy that hit it and quit it, Friday, 17 August 2007 11:45 (eighteen years ago)
There's always a recession somewhere...usually when you are trying to find a good new job or ask for a pay rise.
― suzy, Friday, 17 August 2007 11:47 (eighteen years ago)
I like how the government has said absolutely dick all so far.
― Matt DC, Friday, 17 August 2007 11:51 (eighteen years ago)
Not much they can do about it... or say about it
― Tom D., Friday, 17 August 2007 11:53 (eighteen years ago)
yeah, brown needs to put on some wellies, get over to threadneedle street, and burn some of mopes responsible.
― That one guy that hit it and quit it, Friday, 17 August 2007 11:55 (eighteen years ago)
ooh! ooh!
Markets surge after US cuts key interest rate Last updated four minutes ago Federal Reserve steps in to calm world stock market jitters.
― That one guy that hit it and quit it, Friday, 17 August 2007 13:21 (eighteen years ago)
pfft, they already effectively did that by releasing all of those reserves over the past week.
it won't save anything, IMHO.
― Eisbaer, Friday, 17 August 2007 13:26 (eighteen years ago)
We're doomed to fuck.
― Pete W, Friday, 17 August 2007 13:29 (eighteen years ago)
but pete the guardian says 'markets surge' four minutes ago! what could possibly go wrong?
― That one guy that hit it and quit it, Friday, 17 August 2007 13:31 (eighteen years ago)
and they're OFFFFFFFFF -- nasdaq opened up over 2%, s&p and the dow over 1%.
this shit is kinda like watching crackheads smoking it up.
― Eisbaer, Friday, 17 August 2007 13:33 (eighteen years ago)
Seems to me that the Fed is rly nervous
― Hurting 2, Friday, 17 August 2007 13:41 (eighteen years ago)
tripping over its words, knocking things over. buck up, fed!
― That one guy that hit it and quit it, Friday, 17 August 2007 13:42 (eighteen years ago)
i'm actually kinda pissed off about this -- if they make the deposit to my 401(k) today (as they should), then i'm buying HIGH ;_;
― Eisbaer, Friday, 17 August 2007 13:45 (eighteen years ago)
what's funny is that one day the dow does well, the papers all go "economy is great! ignore the naysayers!", then the next day it plunges 300 points and it's "1987 all over again??!?!??" then the next day it surges, etc. etc. etc.
― uhrrrrrrr10, Friday, 17 August 2007 13:48 (eighteen years ago)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bipolar_disorder
― That one guy that hit it and quit it, Friday, 17 August 2007 13:48 (eighteen years ago)
100% of what the financial presses say is designed to sell papers. Maybe 20% of this overlaps with what's actually useful and/or accurate.
― Hurting 2, Friday, 17 August 2007 13:50 (eighteen years ago)
And that's not even to mention the way the non-financial press covers the economy.
― Hurting 2, Friday, 17 August 2007 13:53 (eighteen years ago)
http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/crack-15.jpg
― Eisbaer, Friday, 17 August 2007 13:59 (eighteen years ago)
I only have 401ks and IRAs. I'm not going to see that money for 40 years.
― Jeff, Friday, 17 August 2007 14:00 (eighteen years ago)
fed reserve and european central bank = the cash money brothers.
― Eisbaer, Friday, 17 August 2007 14:03 (eighteen years ago)
i cant see how this, when it plays out, is merely a recession
― Filey Camp, Friday, 17 August 2007 14:30 (eighteen years ago)
In Praise of a Virtual Crash
The interesting element in the tragicomedy on the stock exchanges in recent months is the uncertainty as to whether a catastrophe has occurred. Has there been a 'real' catastrophe? Will there be one? The answer is: the catastrophe is a virtual one, and there will be no real catastrophe because we live under the sign of virtual catastrophe. This is connected with a state of affairs which was shown up strikingly here: the discrepancy between the fictional economy and the real economy. It is this discrepancy which protects us from a real catastrophe of the productive economies. Is this a good or a bad thing? It is exactly the same as the discrepancy between orbital wars and land wars. Land wars go on everywhere, but nuclear war has not broken out. If the two were not disconnected, the nuclear confrontation would have erupted long since. We are dominated by bombs and virtual catastrophes which do not explode: the international stock market crash (this has not really eventuated and it will not), nuclear war, the third-world debt, and even the demographic time-bomb. One could, of course, argue that all these things will inevitably blow up in our faces one day, just as there has long been a prediction that, within the next fifty years, an earthquake will surely see California slide into the Pacific. But the facts are clear: we are in the situation where the catastrophe does not eventuate; in a situation of virtual catastrophe -- eternally virtual catastrophe.
This is how things are for us; it is the only reality objectively facing us: a wild, orbital round-dance of capital which, when it breaks down, produces no substantial disequilibrium in real economies (unlike the 1929 Crash, when the fictional and the real economies were by no means as disconnected, and, as a result, the catastrophe within the one had an impact on the other), either because real economies are themselves so speculative that they absorb more easily today what they could not absorb in 1929, or because the sphere of virtual capital has become so autonomous, so orbitalized, that it can in some cases proliferate -- or even devour itself -- without leaving any trace. It does, however, leave at least one catastrophic trace: the crash that has occurred has not been so much in the economy as in economic theory, which is now at a total loss before this explosion of its object. For everything has become a problem of communication. In the orbital sphere of capital, there is wonderfully good communication (the perverse computers and the 'golden boys,' who are themselves computing machines). This is the reason why it is in a permanently catastrophic state: the communications are too good. On the other hand, between the two spheres (of the virtual and the real), there is no longer any communication. Fortunately or otherwise. For it is this break between the two, this loss of a referent on the part of the virtual economy, which enables it to produce prodigious effects, but it is also this which protects the real economy from the catastrophes which may occur in the other sphere.
...There was, admittedly, a crisis in 1929, and an explosion at Hiroshima, and hence there was a moment when these two worlds explosively contaminated each other, a moment when the economic slump and nuclear warfare were real, but we should not be misled by this as to what was to follow. Capital has not lurched from one crisis to another, each worse than the last (as Marx argued it would), nor have we lurched from one war to another. The event took place once and that is all. What came after was something quite different: it was the hyper-realization of big finance capital, the hyper-realization of overkill capacity, both orbitalized above our heads and of course quite beyond our grasp, and a course which is, fortunately, also beyond the grasp of reality itself. Hyper-realized war and hyper-realized money circulate in an inaccessible space, but in doing so they leave the world just as it is. In the end, the economies continue to produce, whereas the tiniest logical consequence of the fluctuations in the fictional economy would long ago have sufficed to wipe them out (let us not forget that in the daily figures for international trade, only 100 billion dollars goes on commercial transactions, while capital movements stand at 900 billion).
...When the debt becomes too burdensome we expel it into a virtual space, where it appears as a catastrophe frozen in orbit. The debt becomes a satellite of the earth, just as war has become a satellite of the earth, just as the billions of dollars of speculative capital have become a satellite-heap, revolving endlessly around the planet. And it is, no doubt, better that it should be that way. While they are revolving -- and even if they should explode in space (as the billions 'lost' in the 1987 crash did) -- the world is not changed by them, and this is the best we can hope for. The 'rational' hope of reconciling the fictional and real economies is entirely utopian: these billions of dollars exist only virtually; they cannot be transposed into the real economy. And a good thing too, for if they could by some miracle be re-injected into the production economies, that would spell real catastrophe. ...
-- Jean Baudrillard March 2, 1988
― tipsy mothra, Friday, 17 August 2007 14:33 (eighteen years ago)
wow he kind of recycled that "INVISIBLE CRASH/WAR" thing, no? baudrillard has the bullshitting skills that could have earned him serious bank in the city.
― That one guy that hit it and quit it, Friday, 17 August 2007 14:35 (eighteen years ago)
It's almost like you're looking forward to it ;)
― Matt DC, Friday, 17 August 2007 14:37 (eighteen years ago)
The Sun comments box on all this is very entertaining right now.
Sell hell on Black Thursday Why should people lose money because these spotty little stockbrokers have wet their nappies? These people are grossly overpaid parasites who have never done a day's work in their lives, so how on earth can they judge the performance of businesses where people really work?
― Matt DC, Friday, 17 August 2007 14:43 (eighteen years ago)
baudrillard has the bullshitting skills that could have earned him serious bank in the city.
he woulda been great on the stand too. "your honor my next witness will demonstrate conclusively that the money my clients lost did not even exist."
― tipsy mothra, Friday, 17 August 2007 14:55 (eighteen years ago)
recession????
woohoo i put loads of money in savings accounts and stuff
does that mean i'll be able to afford to buy a house soon?
― ken c, Friday, 17 August 2007 15:01 (eighteen years ago)
is that how it works?
i'm fascinated by this whole stocks/shares thing, esp the spate of articles in sunday papers about the horrors of it all. but i dont really understand what it is, or how it works - can someone recommend an idiots guide to the whole thing?
and also a good book by say some 80s wall street guy who lived highs/lows, made millions, lost it all, etc
― s.rose, Sunday, 9 March 2008 21:40 (eighteen years ago)
What's your most successful investment?
I've had my share of quick doubles and triples as a penny stock trader, but nothing that approaches a stock that I put my friend in, it was QBID, this was late '03, I got him in at .0001 and in 2 days it began moving up and was at .035 in a week. He invested a whopping $150 which would have been worth over $50,000 except he sold it the day after he bought it, for breakeven. I think in the entire index of pennies and pinksheet stocks there's only been like 2 that have exceeded that performance since.
― wanko ergo sum, Sunday, 9 March 2008 21:58 (eighteen years ago)
haha, if the dude didn't sell at the right time, that's not "performance" at all!
― Hurting 2, Sunday, 9 March 2008 21:59 (eighteen years ago)
I mean that's a little like saying "My most successful investment ever was that time I thought about buying IBM before it got huge"
― Hurting 2, Sunday, 9 March 2008 22:01 (eighteen years ago)
can someone recommend an idiots guide to the whole thing?
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/61W6GM8VD7L._AA240_.jpg
― Noodle Vague, Sunday, 9 March 2008 22:08 (eighteen years ago)
oh noodle you are a one.
anyone got better suggestions?
― s.rose, Monday, 10 March 2008 11:45 (eighteen years ago)
what a time 2 b alive pic.twitter.com/UxIa5lIv7Q— Liz Franczak (@liz_franczak) June 2, 2021
― π ππ’π¨ (caek), Wednesday, 2 June 2021 20:28 (five years ago)
Just the voice of uneducated, frustrated disgust: if the stock market managed a baseball team, they'd pinch-hit for Mike Trout in the 4th inning because he grounded out in the 2nd.
― clemenza, Tuesday, 13 September 2022 21:54 (three years ago)
("Uneducated" as in illiterate about monetary matters.)
― clemenza, Tuesday, 13 September 2022 22:02 (three years ago)
Oof, those meme stocks a few posts up, then vs. now. ^^
― The self-titled drags (Eazy), Wednesday, 14 September 2022 00:38 (three years ago)
Everything I hate about the stock market summed up in a single headline on CNN today: "Stocks tumble after better-than-expected jobs report."
I understand the dynamic: more jobs = inflation = stocks tumble. It's still intuitively bizarre.
― clemenza, Friday, 2 December 2022 16:07 (three years ago)
https://www.reddit.com/r/personalfinance/comments/zfj761/recently_discovered_the_majority_of_my_parents/
― π ππ’π¨ (caek), Saturday, 17 December 2022 22:44 (three years ago)
ILATF was renamed ILF
― sarahell, Sunday, 5 October 2025 17:47 (eight months ago)
I Love Finance?
― whimsical skeedaddler (Moodles), Sunday, 5 October 2025 17:55 (eight months ago)
Itβs a Latin American index fund that I bought because of its nameβ¦ itβs doing well rn.
― sarahell, Sunday, 5 October 2025 17:57 (eight months ago)
β π ππ’π¨ (caek), Saturday, December 17, 2022 4:44 PM (two years ago)
the stock the parents were invested in (KLAC) has nearly quadrupled in value since 10/7/22
― bulb after bulb, Sunday, 5 October 2025 18:00 (eight months ago)