Go to the Amazon.com link below for TIMING THE MARKET by Deborah Weir (Wiley, 2005).
Email: DebWeir@WealthStrategies.bz
Take her class at the NY Institute of Finance: nyif.com/courses/fimk_1014.html.
Friday, January 20, 2006
Recent yield curve inversion and weak profit reports continue to depress stocks. It's hard to imagine a recession with interest rates this low, but investors usually sell when the curve is inverted.
Deborah, I read your book after hearing you on 'Financial Sense'. It was excellent - thank you. With regard to the recent yield curve inversion, although rates are low they have risen from very low levels. Are you aware of any historical precedent to this or do you have a personal opinion on whether the base level they have risen from could impact the outcome in addition to the absolute level?
Deborah, I don't remember seeing a buy/sell decision point in your book based on a situation similar as we have today. Not knowing the outcome, how would you decisively decide our current inversion...buy, sell, or hold?
4 comments:
Maybe this is an opportune time to buy?
Light crude oil's weekly close of $68.48 superceded the prior cyclical weekly close high of $66.57 on 9-2-05.
Crude bottomed 9-weeks ago (11-18-05) closing that week at $57.21.
Deborah, I read your book after hearing you on 'Financial Sense'. It was excellent - thank you.
With regard to the recent yield curve inversion, although rates are low they have risen from very low levels. Are you aware of any historical precedent to this or do you have a personal opinion on whether the base level they have risen from could impact the outcome in addition to the absolute level?
Deborah,
I don't remember seeing a buy/sell decision point in your book based on a situation similar as we have today. Not knowing the outcome, how would you decisively decide our current inversion...buy, sell, or hold?
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