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[闲谈] 八月,终于过去了。

阿康跌百分之零点九。

真不容易。

快虚脱了。

期待一切从1200开始。
没跑?


秋之皓月 发表于 2011-8-31 20:55



    九月又来了
没跑?

Don't under-estimate the market's strength to recover from steep losses.... I will hold for pretty long time this round, especially FED gives us QE3.

RLX became the first index to recoup the 200DMA and NDX will follow in, the strength in retailers was impressive during the sharp drop.


这个女人的话你也留意?

回复  大傻_
sweettomato 发表于 2011-8-31 19:41
全世界现在也就只能找到她这样看牛的分析师了。。。
大傻_ 发表于 2011-8-31 19:43


搞了不好
她就變成
star
全世界现在也就只能找到她这样看牛的分析师了。。。



这个女人的话你也留意?

回复  大傻_
sweettomato 发表于 2011-8-31 19:41
这个女人的话你也留意?

回复 2# 大傻_
有心侯德到年底。。


September Might Not Be So Bad for Stocks: Cohen
Published: Wednesday, 31 Aug 2011 | 5:44 PM ET Text Size By: Margo D. Beller
Special to CNBC.com
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September may not be as bad as it has been traditionally because August has already been so volatile, Abby Joseph Cohen told CNBC Wednesday.


CNBC
Abby Joseph Cohen
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Cohen, senior investment strategist at Goldman Sachs [GS  116.22    1.04  (+0.9%)   ] and a longtime market bull, told CNBC "geopolitical factors," including the turmoil in Europe over sovereign debt and in the U.S. over the debt ceiling, contributed to a volatile August that led economists and industry analysts to revise their growth and earnings estimates a month earlier than usual.

"As we know, most economists did dramatically reduce their growth expectation not just for 2011 but also for 2012, and they did it in the month of August," Cohen said.

But not all the economic news has been bad, Cohen said.

She noted improvement in private-sector hiring, strong durable goods orders and strong corporate balance sheets. She also reiterated her forecast for the Standard & Poor's 500 reaching 1450. The S&P [.SPX  1218.89    5.97  (+0.49%)   ] closed Wednesday around 1219.



Another possible indicator of better days: The head of the European Central Bank has indicated the ECB is "perhaps is not as concerned as they were about inflation, which means they may be friendlier in terms of interest rate policy," Cohen said, which will allays some U.S. concerns.

"The U.S. economy is very much linked to Europe," she said. "Outside of our close-by neighbors in North America, most U.S. exports go to continental Europe. So if continental Europe is weak, they will not be demanding the same level of exports."

She noted that "over the last decade, the single strongest sector of the [U.S.] economy was not the consumer but it was exports, which grew on an annualized basis of 8 percent to 10 percent."
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