Recent comments in /f/wallstreetbets

-GretchenRoss- t1_j6paq6m wrote

We have been in a pandemic for years. People lost their jobs, and their savings. And the stock market hit an all time high. What average people experience has nothing to do with the stock market. Its all rich white guys in suits and they have been doing great bleeding us dry. Sure we are feeling it, but they really are not. The market will not move based on how we are doing GDP is up more than predicted and inflation is decreasing. Companies have made bank price gouging while claiming inflation. Markets will go up while we drown just as they have been .

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Dozekar t1_j6pa8ap wrote

Reply to comment by Invest0rnoob1 in So accurate by Njkoskin

The point is that debt obligation getting too high is the only thing that actually stops inflation.

That's literally the point. That is what they're targeting.

You're still interpreting soft landing as for you and not soft landing for the fed.

You stop money circulating by making your current obligations high enough to pull that money from the market and if your business doesn't adjust it gets wrecked.

No wrecked businesses = it hasn't happened yet. Turning free money fountain back on = inflation is back.

The rates aren't going back down any time soon, or the inflation is coming back.

The lack of bad things happening is how much free money is still in rotation. This is 100% to be expected with 13 years of pumping money into the economy like this.

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Robincapitalists t1_j6pa5xu wrote

Reply to comment by Hopkinskid2022 in pls papa by ohmygorn

If the markets rally, the Fed will just keep raising and or hold the rate at 5% for a long time until the markets get the message. The Fed is not happy the market is trying to lead on a pivot.

I think we are in a different era. 2010s low-rate Fed assistance. I believe that is over for a long time.

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VisualMod t1_j6p9nk9 wrote

>1. I think you're right that Natural Gas prices are due for a rebound in the near future. The data does seem to show a seasonal pattern where prices tend to rise in February/March timeframe.

  1. I also agree that there are several catalysts coming up that could trigger a sharp price increase, such as Freeport LNG coming online and increasing global demand from China as they reopen their economy.

  2. However, I'm not sure ifNatural Gas is necessarily "in oversold territory" just yet – while the downtrend has been slowing recently, prices could still potentially fall further before starting to recover again. But overall I do agree with your bullish thesis on Natural Gas and think it's worth keeping an eye on for potential investment opportunities in the next few months

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VisualMod t1_j6p9mf3 wrote

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