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repu market expected to dive up 300+ points...... Blood Mode


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Just now, k2s said:

Almost 16% down in last 2-3 weeks lo. Dec 2018 lo it was 13% down correction annaru

now inka ilagey 25% down ayitey recession 

avvakunda undalantey em cheyyali

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4 minutes ago, k2s said:

Almost 16% down in last 2-3 weeks lo. Dec 2018 lo it was 13% down correction annaru

now inka ilagey 25% down ayitey recession 

Anyone - Aasalu market fall ki recession ki relation chepandi koncham ?

certain number of points padithene recession ani ela ... may be previous recession stats ?

basic question yee dow point ela determine chestaru ? Also price per share fall itenapudu aa fall price money yevariki veltundhu ? As people invest real money kadha so that should be  a gain to some one right who will that be 🤔🤷🏾‍♂️

Ps: teliyaka adugutunna ... telusukovalani adugutnna

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1 minute ago, MeetFriendz said:

Anyone - Aasalu market fall ki recession ki relation chepandi koncham ?

certain number of points padithene recession ani ela ... may be previous recession stats ?

basic question yee dow point ela determine chestaru ? Also price per share fall itenapudu aa fall price money yevariki veltundhu ? As people invest real money kadha so that should be  a gain to some one right who will that be 🤔🤷🏾‍♂️

Ps: teliyaka adugutunna ... telusukovalani adugutnna

i think stock brokerage companies /big banks

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The U.S. May Already Be in a Recession

 

The coronavirus could be the fatal blow to the longest economic expansion in history.

 

Let’s just say it: The longest economic expansion in U.S. history may already be over, killed by Covid-19.

 
 

It might seem crazy to talk about a recession when jobs are plentiful. Today the Bureau of Labor Statistics announced a decline in the February unemployment rate to 3.5%, tying a 50-year low.

 
 

But a recession isn’t when things are bad. It’s when they aren’t quite as good as they were at the peak. (Conversely, an “expansion” begins when the economy hits bottom and starts back up.)

 
 
 

When economic historians look back, they may pick February as the peak of the expansion that began in June 2009. That would give it a longevity of 128 months, the longest in records maintained by the National Bureau of Economic Research going back to 1854.

 
 
 

This wouldn’t be the first time the U.S. was in a recession without knowing it. In the summer of 2008 policymakers of the Federal Reserve were still predicting decent economic growth for that year and the next—even though a recession had begun the previous December, as later determined by the business cycle dating committee of the National Bureau of Economic Research.

The February jobs report that just came out is based on household and business surveys conducted in the week containing the 12th of the month. A lot has changed since then. On Feb. 12 there were still almost no cases of Covid-19 reported in the U.S. By March 5 there were 99, including 10 deaths, reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

New research from State Street Associates and Massachusetts Institute of Technology indicates that the U.S. economy was vulnerable to a recession even before Covid-19 struck. In January the chance of recession over the next six months was about 70%, even though the stock market was then up about 22% over the previous year, it says.

The stock market’s sharp decline since January damages growth by making households feel poorer and businesses more pessimistic. The chance of a recession with stock prices where they were this week is around 75%, according to Will Kinlaw, a senior managing director and head of Cambridge, Mass.-based State Street Associates, the research unit of financial giant State Street Corp. If stocks give up all of their gains over the past 12 months, Kinlaw says, the likelihood of a recession will grow to 80%.

In addition to the stock market, the State Street Advisers forecasting model takes into account industrial production, the shape of the Treasury yield curve, and jobs. It’s based on a statistical concept called the Mahalanobis distance, which was developed to compare human skulls in India.

 

Covid-19 hit an economy that was less robust than it might have appeared. Nonfarm payroll employment was up 1.4% in January from a year earlier, which is OK. But industrial production was down 0.8% in January from a year earlier. And the Treasury yield curve was perilously close to inversion in January. (Inversion of the yield curve—in which long-term interest rates are lower than short-term ones—is a strong indicator of recession.)

The only strong indicator in January was the stock market, and now, thanks to the coronavirus, that indicator is flashing red as well.

While few economists have said the economy may already be in recession, some are beginning to say one is probably imminent. Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Analytics, says the chance of a recession this year is at least 50%.

In the financial markets, in contrast, recession talk is rampant. “This is what the start of a recession after a long bull market feels like,” John McClain, a portfolio manager at Diamond Hill Capital Management, told Bloomberg News today. “This is the first day of seeing some panic in the market.”

Kissing is frowned upon in the age of the coronavirus, but you might want to think about kissing goodbye to the longest economic expansion in U.S. history.

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I think thatha ni ee media and other source tension pedadamani  chusthunnaru idigicorona virus adigo economy down ani but tatha matram picha strong vunnaru anipistundi

What u say guys?

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Just now, karna11 said:

I think thatha ni ee media and other source tension pedadamani  chusthunnaru idigicorona virus adigo economy down ani but tatha matram picha strong vunnaru anipistundi

What u say guys?

its the REVERSE......nijamgane virus is growing and concerning and kits are not available to test  and thatha is saying nothing to worry about and trying to say economy is good to boost the reelection....

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Ninna midnight nuchi phone mogi poyindhi about the shut down. Had put my orders in on Friday except some small positions. Got them filled before the shut down too. Everything else is long until June.

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23 minutes ago, MeetFriendz said:

Anyone - Aasalu market fall ki recession ki relation chepandi koncham ?

certain number of points padithene recession ani ela ... may be previous recession stats ?

basic question yee dow point ela determine chestaru ? Also price per share fall itenapudu aa fall price money yevariki veltundhu ? As people invest real money kadha so that should be  a gain to some one right who will that be 🤔🤷🏾‍♂️

Ps: teliyaka adugutunna ... telusukovalani adugutnna

You bought a car for 50000 but next day emergency vochi amesthunav .... Buyer 40000 teesukunta annadu , ante nee car value 40000 kadha.... Ippudu 10000 ekkadiki vellinattu? Money don't go to anyone , equity appreciation and depreciation process ... 

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1 hour ago, MeetFriendz said:

Anyone - Aasalu market fall ki recession ki relation chepandi koncham ?

certain number of points padithene recession ani ela ... may be previous recession stats ?

basic question yee dow point ela determine chestaru ? Also price per share fall itenapudu aa fall price money yevariki veltundhu ? As people invest real money kadha so that should be  a gain to some one right who will that be 🤔🤷🏾‍♂️

Ps: teliyaka adugutunna ... telusukovalani adugutnna

good qochen. 

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1 hour ago, MeetFriendz said:

Anyone - Aasalu market fall ki recession ki relation chepandi koncham ?

certain number of points padithene recession ani ela ... may be previous recession stats ?

basic question yee dow point ela determine chestaru ? Also price per share fall itenapudu aa fall price money yevariki veltundhu ? As people invest real money kadha so that should be  a gain to some one right who will that be 🤔🤷🏾‍♂️

Ps: teliyaka adugutunna ... telusukovalani adugutnna

There is no set value to a stock, antha shivayya agna Ani @Spartanchepamannadu.

 

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2 hours ago, sri_india said:

You bought a car for 50000 but next day emergency vochi amesthunav .... Buyer 40000 teesukunta annadu , ante nee car value 40000 kadha.... Ippudu 10000 ekkadiki vellinattu? Money don't go to anyone , equity appreciation and depreciation process ... 

yee case lo iyethe buyer kee kadha profit vachi nattu.

as same car market lo vunte 40k ki iyethe radhu kadha bhayaa, say 1 days used car iyena sare.

 

nenu stock konna 1k per stock. padipoyindhi aa share value ante market lo daniki aa roju value ledani kadha ardam, but not like same day naku avasaram money ani kadhu kadha so that i want to sell.... yekado naku logica ardam kavadam ledhu .. but nvu chepinatu equity appreciation and depreciation process might be ani anipistundhi but unable find a good example for it

 

 

PS: i never invested in stocks and dont know much other than anadaru vade words tappa ... but trying to learn about it.

 

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4 minutes ago, MeetFriendz said:

yee case lo iyethe buyer kee kadha profit vachi nattu.

as same car market lo vunte 40k ki iyethe radhu kadha bhayaa, say 1 days used car iyena sare.

 

nenu stock konna 1k per stock. padipoyindhi aa share value ante market lo daniki aa roju value ledani kadha ardam, but not like same day naku avasaram money ani kadhu kadha so that i want to sell.... yekado naku logica ardam kavadam ledhu .. but nvu chepinatu equity appreciation and depreciation process might be ani anipistundhi but unable find a good example for it

 

 

PS: i never invested in stocks and dont know much other than anadaru vade words tappa ... but trying to learn about it.

 

lets say you own a company and its total value is $100.

You sell a portion of your company to raise the capital for expansion. lets say the portion value is $40 - 40 shares of $1 each. Keep in mind the 40 shares are constant and that wont change.

Now I bought those 40 shares and my friend comes to know about it and he thinks that the value of the company would be 500$ in an year. He will be willing to pay 2$ per share. So he pays 80$ to me and buys the 40 shares. Now he needs money he sells it for more money.

So everyday someone earns money only when someone loses it.

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