Edited by xD&Cox, 03 February 2007 - 09:50 AM.
Shanghai balloon revisited
#1
Posted 03 February 2007 - 09:49 AM
#2
Posted 03 February 2007 - 10:13 AM
#3
Posted 03 February 2007 - 10:18 AM
the chart looks just like the dow did before it tripled in value back in the mid nineties.......back then Neely called the dow in a dangerous parabolic in Barrons...i saved the article...that was as dow 4000.........you really awta get ur stuff together........
That chart so looks like the previous tops Cheif. I think your friend Neely is calling for a move up here.
Edited by Tor, 03 February 2007 - 10:19 AM.
The future is 90% present and 10% vision.
#4
Posted 03 February 2007 - 10:27 AM
Edited by da_cheif, 03 February 2007 - 10:28 AM.
#5
Posted 03 February 2007 - 11:39 AM
Do you have a downside target, xD?http://xtrends.blogspot.com/2007/02/chines...-imploding.html
#6
Posted 03 February 2007 - 11:58 AM
Out in the lobby, Lu Chao, 24, wore a fashionable leather jacket and helped a friend register to trade. Mr. Lu is a day trader who shares a home computer with his mother, another day trader. He said his investments were up 170 percent since July 2005. He researches companies on the Internet and says he and his mother do not always agree on where to put their money. But they are both confident about the future.
“Of course, the market in China is not as regulated as in America or Britain,” Mr. Lu said. “The Chinese market is much younger, so you are going to have risk. But I think the government is trying to straighten things out so that the market will become stronger.”
His goal was simple. “I want to get rich,” he said.
NY Times - full story
YEEEEEEEEEEEHAW!!!!
Edited by jawndissedi, 03 February 2007 - 12:01 PM.
#7
Posted 03 February 2007 - 12:01 PM
http://www.zimbio.co...Veyron Crashing
#8
Posted 03 February 2007 - 05:15 PM
#9
Posted 03 February 2007 - 05:52 PM
Do you have a downside target, xD?http://xtrends.blogspot.com/2007/02/chines...-imploding.html
I really didn't spent time on this but I expected minimum %30 correction at the time.
#10
Posted 03 February 2007 - 05:57 PM
The first Chinese hotel chain—Home Inns—went public last fall with an ADR in the U.S. The HMIN chart is doing its’ best to mirror the U.S. hotel charts.
HMIN went public at $12 in Oct. Bonered up to $26 on the first day of trading and has risen ever since. Now at $45. Up 275% since the late Oct IPO—just three months ago. Not too shabby. The forward P/E ain’t too shabby either: 124x.
http://wallstreetexa...s/wheeler/?p=65