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Cramer: Some Gray Amid the Black-and-White Thinking

Espaço dedicado a todo o tipo de troca de impressões sobre os mercados financeiros e ao que possa condicionar o desempenho dos mesmos.

Re: Cramer: Some Gray Amid the Black-and-White Thinking

por atomez » 9/2/2010 19:59

Jim Cramer Escreveu:"A couple of observations of what this market likes:

It likes stimulus and feared that the Europeans -- the weakest part of the globe, if you ask me -- were about to withdraw it.


Ninguém lhe perguntou nada, mas tem toda a razão...

Por este caminho a UE está a tornar-se numa espécie de União Soviética em câmara lenta.
As pessoas são tão ingénuas e tão agarradas aos seus interesses imediatos que um vigarista hábil consegue sempre que um grande número delas se deixe enganar.
Niccolò Machiavelli
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Cramer: Some Gray Amid the Black-and-White Thinking

por Ulisses Pereira » 9/2/2010 18:53

"Some Gray Amid the Black-and-White Thinking"

By Jim Cramer
RealMoney Columnist
2/9/2010 12:30 PM EST


"A couple of observations of what this market likes:


It likes stimulus and feared that the Europeans -- the weakest part of the globe, if you ask me -- were about to withdraw it.

The market loves a weaker dollar, if only because a tremendous number of very-high-profile stocks are linked to it: Exxon (XOM - commentary - Trade Now), Pfizer (PFE - commentary - Trade Now), Chevron (CVX - commentary - Trade Now), Merck (MRK - commentary - Trade Now), McDonald's (MCD - commentary - Trade Now), Coke (KO - commentary - Trade Now), General Electric (GE - commentary - Trade Now), Procter (PG - commentary - Trade Now), Intel (INTC - commentary - Trade Now), Cisco (CSCO - commentary - Trade Now) and Johnson & Johnson (JNJ - commentary - Trade Now) to name a few obvious ones in the Dow, as well as some favorite lapdogs of the hedge funds, Potash (POT - commentary - Trade Now), Freeport (FCX - commentary - Trade Now), BHP Billiton (BHP - commentary - Trade Now) and Transocean (RIG - commentary - Trade Now).

The market needs oil to create a higher low, which it seems like it is doing, and then break out to the $80s, not because it is good for the economy -- it is terrible, especially for the consumer -- but because it is a sign of no double-dip, which is what this decline was about anyway.

The market needs Washington closed and the president not talking in any way, shape or form about the economy, because he is now perceived as the enemy of capital (except in the media, where he is viewed as a friend of the common man).

The market loves copper going higher and believes that every tick down in copper means a Chinese bubble burst and worldwide recession.
The market has a black-and-white thinking complex. What is the reality? The dollar doesn't matter that much to earnings, and we have had some big rallies with the dollar getting stronger. A breakout to the upside in oil would lead to $3 gasoline, which would put a severe crimp on the American consumer, two-thirds of the GDP. Greece was never going to go down. Neither is Spain or Portugal. (If Iceland, which was totally bankrupt didn't go down, then these other places weren't. They can't file chapter 11, you know. We learned a lot about what to do during the 1980s crisis in Latin America, and one of the things you don't do is let these countries default.) Copper's all about hedge-fund buying and has nothing to do with China, which is growing at 8% and still needs a lot of copper. There is a cyclical bust involving commercial property and a secular boom involving 400 million people joining the middle class. Finally, Obama's still busy trying to kill the market by paying lip service to jobs while actually stabbing the economy in the back with the endless chatter for a health plan that he still doesn't realize no one wants except his best pal Nancy Pelosi. You don't know this, because who in the guilt-ridden media's going to say it? How come I can? Because I lived in my darned car and I had no health care plan and I didn't like it one bit, but I wasn't trying to jump-start the economy, which would have ultimately expanded the workforce and given people like me a chance.

Everything else is oversold. So that's the tinder for this ridiculous set of what looks to be spontaneous combustions.

At the time of publication, Cramer was long Cisco, Chevron, Intel and Procter & Gamble. "

(in www.realmoney.com)
"Acreditar é possuir antes de ter..."

Ulisses Pereira

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