Zizek???Zizek is probably planning a book right now, entitled "I Told You So" — Landru Guide Us
This is quite naive even from you, Landru.In short, if the market disappeared tomorrow it would have almost zero impact on 90% of Americans. The stock market is owned by the superwealthy and the wealthy. Nobody else has a stake in it. — Landru Guide Us
A crash means the bottom has dropped out of confidence in the economy. There's usually something gravely wrong that precipitates a crash. These days, a sign that a crash is trying to happen is that markets halt trading. If they're doing that.. that's a bad sign. — Mongrel
Of all the people that are or have been saying that this bull market is over, you refer to Zizek??? — ssu
You say that stock markets don't have anything to do with the liquidity of industries. That's true when the stock market is characterizes by what's called a "speculative bubble." That means the market has become a casino. — Mongrel
If the market dissappeared tomorrow, we would have a recession. The prices of stock actually have a meaning to the corporations and companies. If you don't understand that, here's an article that explains that in simple term: "Why Do Companies Care About Their Stock Prices?". So what happens in the Stock Market, especially if the trend is longer than the occasional panic or frenzy, it does have consequences. It will affect employment. A recession or an economic depression would affect even the ordinary guy that has never ever owned any stock. — ssu
Well, no - it means that the rich have put their money somewhere else. It's not like they care about the US economy or the glories of the stock market. — Landru Guide Us
Landru logic again as you seem not to understand how it goes. Stock market crashes accelerate the recession and are the catalyst. As I said earlier, not all rapid moves in the stock market come in tandem with recessions, but there is a logic why the two are related.Of course you have it backwards. Recessions cause stock prices to fall, not the other way round. But I suspect you're going to persist in your cliches. — Landru Guide Us
I cannot say that this crisis has been more than a small bump for my life. — Mayor of Simpleton
Your idea of first their being a recession and only then afterwards somehow the stock market noticing it creates a crash is persistent with your illogical Landru-kool aid views. — ssu
↪Landru Guide Us Landru, are you seriously suggesting that a stock market crash has no effect on poor people? Even when banking systems are so interlocked with the stock market itself? — discoii
Typical. Start with your incredible and condescending strawman arguments of what you assume people to think.More whacky economics from somebody who doesn't understand what the stock market does. SSU probably thinks that when he buys IBM stock the money goes to IBM. Invincible ignorance. — Landru Guide Us
This is the biggest piece baloney for a long time to come of out you and tells about utter ignorance of basic facts.Working people have very little credit issued to them, at least not the kind that has anything to do with the market, like corporate bonds. — Landru Guide Us
Companies get money through their IPOs. Yet the value of the stock isn't unimportant. Yeah, those with stock options or investors are one thing, yet that the value of the company itself. Assume you have a company that is in the stock exchange. If the total company share values value is 1 million or 1 billion, the difference affects a wide variety of things the company can do... and not only for the management to give itself lucrative options (assuming they can control the owners).I read that article. It seems to agree with Landru; stock prices are only really of interest to the investors and the management. — Michael
Well, you could similarly say that real estate prices going down is an effect / a barometer also. Here's a bit longer answer than dicoii.It also explicitly says "the stock market is to act as a barometer for financial health", which again seems to agree with Landru; a failing marketing is an effect of a bad economy (or at least a perceived bad economy) rather than its cause. — Michael
When stock markets plunge, it makes more difficult for companies to make successfull IPO's or to issue new stock. — ssu
That means that fewer companies can get the money for investments, especially if the market crash results in a banking crisis.
Then there is the wealth effect for those that own shares. And a lot of people actually do in the form of pension funds (you in the US have your 401k's).
When stock markets plunge, it makes more difficult for companies to make successfull IPO's or to issue new stock. — ssu
Landru, you do know that when people play the market, they are basing their buy and sell decisions off of the most current information about the economy, right? — discoii
If you don't understand the stock market, then at least you should understand how financial institutions with the real estate market creates these boom and bust cycles every now and then. — ssu
...plus deregulation of credit default swaps... — Landru Guide Us
When and by whom were credit default swaps ever regulated? My understanding was that CDS were outside regulation jurisdictions (in practice, if not by rules — Bitter Crank
. Economists don't all agree on these things. — Bitter Crank
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