Cramer: "We Need to Open Down"
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@ Ertai - Lá está, posições contrárias (mantenho os meus curtos até ser conclusiva a quebra dos 1255) e podemos ambos ganhar € com isso, basta termos time frames diferentes e/ou pontos de entrada que o permitam. Assim seja, assim ninguém se queixa.
Disclaimer - Já agora além de curto no SPX estou longo no Ouro.
Disclaimer - Já agora além de curto no SPX estou longo no Ouro.
Shenron Escreveu:Já percebi tudo. O Cramer anda a ler os posts do Ulisses e percebeu que precisamos de um "Sell-Off Brutal" para entrar longos...![]()
Disclaimer - Curto em CFD's sobre o SPX.
Não acredito que o mercado precise mesmo de um Sell-Off para entrar num swing ascendente.
Hoje já estamos a ter mais uma subida e um novo ataque À LT descendente no SPX.
Shenron, tal como a minha opinião é contrária da tua, também a minha posição no SPX que tenho é contrária
Disclaimer - Longo no SPX
Cramer: "We Need to Open Down"
"We Need to Open Down"
By Jim Cramer
RealMoney.com Columnist
6/21/2006 8:51 AM EDT
"Tough to hate a market that is so hated. I can't go anywhere, walk anywhere or talk anywhere without hearing about how much this market is despised. We have bull-bear numbers on the Chartcraft Investors Intelligence survey that are off the chart. We have an incredibly negative oscillator. Yet still we have these sickening declines after nice rallies.
What really has to happen to get things going? For once, we need to open down and open down hard. We keep sucking people into this market the wrong way, the up way, and then they get their heads handed to them when the market whips down. We almost never open down, though, as hopeful traders come in and think, "This is the day."
Why is that? Why is there optimism about a market that is hated? I think the optimism is bottoms-up in nature. Let's face it, other than Intel (INTC:Nasdaq - commentary - research - Cramer's Take) and a couple of homebuilders, everyone's making the numbers. We simply have one of the greatest earnings booms I can recall. FedEx (FDX:NYSE - commentary - research - Cramer's Take), which just reported beautiful earnings, typifies the pattern.
But it isn't numbers that's driving this market, it's redemptions, margin calls and higher interest rates. I keep reading that higher interests rates are drawing money away from emerging markets. That's nonsense, of course; the kind of money attracted to emerging markets isn't headed to cash, that's too boring. The money is simply being margined out or being returned to angry investors.
I continue to think that the only way to handle this market is to sell strength and buy weakness until we wash out all the weak hands and get closer to that Fed meeting. And by the way, we do get closer.
The time will come when strength doesn't need to be sold.
We just aren't there yet. "
(in www.realmoney.com)
By Jim Cramer
RealMoney.com Columnist
6/21/2006 8:51 AM EDT
"Tough to hate a market that is so hated. I can't go anywhere, walk anywhere or talk anywhere without hearing about how much this market is despised. We have bull-bear numbers on the Chartcraft Investors Intelligence survey that are off the chart. We have an incredibly negative oscillator. Yet still we have these sickening declines after nice rallies.
What really has to happen to get things going? For once, we need to open down and open down hard. We keep sucking people into this market the wrong way, the up way, and then they get their heads handed to them when the market whips down. We almost never open down, though, as hopeful traders come in and think, "This is the day."
Why is that? Why is there optimism about a market that is hated? I think the optimism is bottoms-up in nature. Let's face it, other than Intel (INTC:Nasdaq - commentary - research - Cramer's Take) and a couple of homebuilders, everyone's making the numbers. We simply have one of the greatest earnings booms I can recall. FedEx (FDX:NYSE - commentary - research - Cramer's Take), which just reported beautiful earnings, typifies the pattern.
But it isn't numbers that's driving this market, it's redemptions, margin calls and higher interest rates. I keep reading that higher interests rates are drawing money away from emerging markets. That's nonsense, of course; the kind of money attracted to emerging markets isn't headed to cash, that's too boring. The money is simply being margined out or being returned to angry investors.
I continue to think that the only way to handle this market is to sell strength and buy weakness until we wash out all the weak hands and get closer to that Fed meeting. And by the way, we do get closer.
The time will come when strength doesn't need to be sold.
We just aren't there yet. "
(in www.realmoney.com)
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