2015 the year of GREEK HOPE RALLYS.....Google it, you will see news head lines going back to February....... MARKETS SURGE ON HOPE OF GREEK DEAL.....I guess it's a way to create market movement....trouble for us in America is it happens overnight......I just need to get a team in Europe.
And is that it...once Greece gets its bailout this weekend everything is back to.normal again? Markets will surge back to historical highs like nothing even happened...so I guess that 350 point drop in the Dow was the last buying opportunity for the next year and half ...the next rally should take it to Dow 20,000 and any dip from there will be the next buying opportunity since the market is going straight up after this no such thing as failure central bank will stimulate anything and everything and bailout anyone with cheap worthless money scheme
If you add up all the Dow points in the ralliess that led to the HOPE of Greece bailouts it has to be at least 1500 points....
Anyone know why with all the trillions of debt the US is in that markets make new continuous highs ....is it because we raise our debt ceiling every few years by trillions of dollars to pay what's due?????? If you look at how much trouble Greece is in and now Puerto Rico is in why don't they just do what we do here in the US. I mean the US is completely worthless with all the trillions of debt were in and a debt to gdp that's off the fucking charts ....how are we able to prop up our economy and markets ....something is very fishy about this
After showing the public the big surge in the overnight futures and sending the masses out the door believing in a big market rally today....They can't and will not let the market close red today. It will with out a doubt close green to keep the HOPE alive. It may not close up big like the futures where suggesting, but it will close green.
ES Now at 2067.00 well off the opening highs, they can't tell the lunch crowd that. So look for a push back up as we near the lunch hour.
Different day, same story line. Wednesday 15:20 BST. Aside from another sell-off in China, most stock benchmarks are rallying, while core bond yields are higher, as fresh hopes for a Greek deal and some positive economic data get the second quarter off to a bullish start.
They should dedicate this article to BUBBLE ben bernanke, the reason why manhattan real estate prices are breaking records is because stocks have continued to rally to record highs, and the reason we have record highs on wall street is because of BUBBLE ben bernanke and his QE printing and ZERO interest rates, BUBBLE ben bernanke has created these Manhattan record real estate prices, if the markets were still near 2009 lows that average sales price of a manhattan apartment at $1,872,000 would probably be around $750,000, yes about 50% lower, so keep in mind the ONLY ONLY ONLY ONLY reason manhattan real estate prices are at record highs is because of BUBBLE ben bernanke, not anywhere in this entire article do I see any mention of BUBBLE ben bernanke getting any kind thank you....he is the reason for this headline today...remember that..... Manhattan real estate prices hit record Robert Frank | @robtfrank 2 Hours Ago The average sales price for a Manhattan apartment hit $1,872,000 in the second quarter—an all-time high, according to data from Douglas Elliman. The median sales price was the second highest of all time, at $980,000. The average co-op price hit a record $1.5 million and so did resales. That's significant since the plethora of high-priced, new condo towers have been the main drivers of prices in recent years. Now co-ops, which make up the bulk of the Manhattan market and are sold mainly to U.S. buyers, are gaining ground. Read MoreWealthy foreigners bought $100B in US real estate Still, they have a long way to go—the average sale price for new developments topped $4.1 million, or $2,011 per square foot in the quarter. But those skyrocketing prices may be getting too rich—even for the rich. Total sales volume fell by 20 percent year over year. That marked the fourth straight quarter of declines. Inventory is not budging, with about a six-month supply. So what do you get for $1.87 million? A Douglas Elliman listing for that figure on Broad Street, in the Financial District, has one bedroom, two baths, around 1,400 square feet, hardwood floors and high ceilings.