Co dalej? Co myślicie?
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Odp:Co dalej? Co myślicie?
o jest i aniolek.dobry wieczor
REKLAMA
Odp:Co dalej? Co myślicie?
Walentynko .szkoda ze zaczelas..Przykro mi ze sie znizylas do takiego poziomu.
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Odp:Co dalej? Co myślicie?
walentynka i ptysio to ta sama osoba na tym samym IP i stracily majuntek na gieldzie i sie rozladowuja bez wibratora i to im starcza glupie krowy z starego PGR
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Odp:Co dalej? Co myślicie?
no to na co naganiacie?kobiety zmieniasz nicek ze nie ma cie?
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Odp:Co dalej? Co myślicie?
Nie ma co zawracać sobie głowy grą na giełdzie, jeśli nie potrafi się opanować emocji.
Co z tego, że może nastąpić krach, że ceny polecą w dół, itp.
Jeśli nie masz na to przygotowanej długoterminowej strategii postępowania, to zasilisz kieszeń lepszego gracza, a za jakiś czas jakiegoś lekarza od chorób psychosomatycznych.
Po hossie zawsze jest bessa i na odwrót.
Luzik po prostu
Co z tego, że może nastąpić krach, że ceny polecą w dół, itp.
Jeśli nie masz na to przygotowanej długoterminowej strategii postępowania, to zasilisz kieszeń lepszego gracza, a za jakiś czas jakiegoś lekarza od chorób psychosomatycznych.
Po hossie zawsze jest bessa i na odwrót.
Luzik po prostu
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- Porucznik
- Posty: 33302
- Rejestracja: 01 sty 1970 01:00
- Lokalizacja: ZERNICA-ZERNIKI
Odp:Co dalej? Co myślicie?
ameryka duze up
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- Porucznik
- Posty: 26558
- Rejestracja: 05 lip 2005 11:08
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Odp:Co dalej? Co myślicie?
hej ***** analki taka recesja?http://www.bankier.pl/inwestowanie/narz ... &indicator
Odp:Co dalej? Co myślicie?
No prosze.Wizjonerzy.sic...bo znowu blotem obrzuca.
Odp:Co dalej? Co myślicie?
Nie zamierzam wypowiadać się w tej nitce więc tylko podam kilka faktów. Sami sobie tłumaczcie!
PS Laptop! To, że Nasty idzie ładnie do góry nie oznacza że pod koniec roku nie będzie ostrej jazdy w dół. Im wyżej zajdziemy, tym bardziej bolesny będzie upadek!!!
___________________________________________________________
Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI)
An indicator of the economic health of the manufacturing sector. The PMI index is based on five major indicators: new orders, inventory levels, production, supplier deliveries, and the employment environment.
A PMI of more than 50 represents expansion of the manufacturing sector, compared to the previous month. A reading under 50 represents a contraction, while a reading at 50 indicates no change. Prior to September 1, 2001, the acronym (PMI) stood for Purchasing Managers' Index. The Institute of Supply Management (ISM) now uses only the acronym, PMI.
Although the ISM publishes numerous indexes, the PMI is the most widely followed and so is sometimes referred to as the ISM index.
Background:
The PMI is a composite index that is based on five major indicators including: new orders, inventory levels, production, supplier deliveries, and the employment environment. Each indicator has a different weight and the data is adjusted for seasonal factors. The Association of Purchasing Managers surveys over 300 purchasing managers nationwide who represent 20 different industries.
A PMI index over 50 indicates that manufacturing is expanding while anything below 50 means that the industry is contracting.
What it means for Investors:
The PMI report is an extremely important indicator for the financial markets as it is the best indicator of factory production. The index is popular for detecting inflationary pressure as well as manufacturing economic activity, both of which investors pay close attention to. The PMI is not as strong as the CPI in detecting inflation, but because the data is released one day after the month it is very timely.
Should the PMI report an unexpected change, it is usually followed by a quick reaction in stocks. One especially key area of the report is growth in new orders, which predicts manufacturing activity in future months.
Strengths:
extremely timely, data is one day old.
the PMI is often used to help predict the Producer Price Index which is released later in the month.
by many it is considered to be the best snapshot of the factory sector.
Weaknesses:
the survey gives three possible responses - fast, same, slower. Therefore results are not that specific.
the index leaves out employment costs, which are a large portion of manufacturing costs.
........
Chicago business gauge plunges
Purchasing index, at 2003 low, raises some questions
By Rachel Koning, MarketWatch
Last Update: 4:44 PM ET Aug. 31, 2005
CHICAGO (MarketWatch) - A measure of business in and around Chicago unexpectedly contracted this month to its lowest reading since April 2003.
The National Association of Purchasing Management-Chicago said its business barometer, known in financial markets as the Chicago purchasing managers index, or PMI, fell to 49.2% in August. The gauge hit 63.5% in July.
It was the biggest one-month drop in the report's history.
In fact, the fall was so dramatic, it left some economists in disbelief. Some pointed to a necessary, if even overdone, correction after a strong reading in July. Others suggested the region's ties to the volatile auto industry is behind the huge one-month fluctuation.
Still, the report sent benchmark Treasury yields to their lowest since June 9, at 4.01%. The major stock averages were lower intially then managed slim gains. The dollar extended its decline. See Bond Report. See Market Snapshot. Read more on the dollar in Currencies.
Readings below 50% indicate a majority of businesses reported declining conditions. The Chicago index had topped this level for 27 straight months.
"Given the healthy readings of other regional manufacturing reports (from the New York and Philadelphia Federal Reserve branches), today's outsized drop is almost certainly noise," said Daniel Jester, analyst with Economy.com.
"That said, the details of the report were quite soft."
Production remained in expansionary territory, but at 56.2%, the index was well below its previous reading of 70.5%.
New orders plunged to 46.5% from 69.6%. Employment growth slowed to 51.7% after rebounding to 56.1% in July.
Prices paid rose to 62.9% from 61.3%.
High energy prices continue to drive input prices higher, but rampant inflation has not yet been pushed through to consumers. Still, the Federal Reserve revealed its intensifying watch of inflation flare-ups in minutes from its Aug. 9 meeting released this week.
"The [PMI] decline is alarming, but must be seen in the context of the unusual volatility in the Chicago figures since October of last year, as well as the odd surge in the index to a 63.5 level in July," wrote economists at Action Economics in an intraday update to clients.
"Perhaps the big swings in the auto sector are having an amplified effect on this report, which tends to be sensitive to auto industry developments."
The hefty Chicago PMI decline in August translates to a smaller, but still impressive, drop in the Institute for Supply Management adjusted index to 51.7 from 62.8 in July, they said. That report, a closely tracked snapshot of national manufacturing activity, will be released Thursday morning.
"Back in late 2000 the Chicago PMI weakened a month ahead of the ISM survey. The weakness then also came quite unexpectedly and soon afterwards the Fed abruptly reversed course," said Mark Vitner, senior economist with Wachovia Securities.
"So even if tomorrow's ISM report does not show anywhere near the weakness the Chicago report does, we could still see some follow through in the next month's numbers."
Many economists question the direct correlation between the two reports.
Action Economics thinks the ISM might now read 55% for August, following July's 56.6%. The group still thinks the ISM non-manufacturing index, a separate report due next week, will come in at 60%.
The economists have also scaled back their projections for third-quarter economic growth to 3.8% from 4.6% earlier following Wednesday's revisions to second-quarter GDP and ongoing reports of damage from Hurricane Katrina. See the Economics and Politics page.
PS Laptop! To, że Nasty idzie ładnie do góry nie oznacza że pod koniec roku nie będzie ostrej jazdy w dół. Im wyżej zajdziemy, tym bardziej bolesny będzie upadek!!!
___________________________________________________________
Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI)
An indicator of the economic health of the manufacturing sector. The PMI index is based on five major indicators: new orders, inventory levels, production, supplier deliveries, and the employment environment.
A PMI of more than 50 represents expansion of the manufacturing sector, compared to the previous month. A reading under 50 represents a contraction, while a reading at 50 indicates no change. Prior to September 1, 2001, the acronym (PMI) stood for Purchasing Managers' Index. The Institute of Supply Management (ISM) now uses only the acronym, PMI.
Although the ISM publishes numerous indexes, the PMI is the most widely followed and so is sometimes referred to as the ISM index.
Background:
The PMI is a composite index that is based on five major indicators including: new orders, inventory levels, production, supplier deliveries, and the employment environment. Each indicator has a different weight and the data is adjusted for seasonal factors. The Association of Purchasing Managers surveys over 300 purchasing managers nationwide who represent 20 different industries.
A PMI index over 50 indicates that manufacturing is expanding while anything below 50 means that the industry is contracting.
What it means for Investors:
The PMI report is an extremely important indicator for the financial markets as it is the best indicator of factory production. The index is popular for detecting inflationary pressure as well as manufacturing economic activity, both of which investors pay close attention to. The PMI is not as strong as the CPI in detecting inflation, but because the data is released one day after the month it is very timely.
Should the PMI report an unexpected change, it is usually followed by a quick reaction in stocks. One especially key area of the report is growth in new orders, which predicts manufacturing activity in future months.
Strengths:
extremely timely, data is one day old.
the PMI is often used to help predict the Producer Price Index which is released later in the month.
by many it is considered to be the best snapshot of the factory sector.
Weaknesses:
the survey gives three possible responses - fast, same, slower. Therefore results are not that specific.
the index leaves out employment costs, which are a large portion of manufacturing costs.
........
Chicago business gauge plunges
Purchasing index, at 2003 low, raises some questions
By Rachel Koning, MarketWatch
Last Update: 4:44 PM ET Aug. 31, 2005
CHICAGO (MarketWatch) - A measure of business in and around Chicago unexpectedly contracted this month to its lowest reading since April 2003.
The National Association of Purchasing Management-Chicago said its business barometer, known in financial markets as the Chicago purchasing managers index, or PMI, fell to 49.2% in August. The gauge hit 63.5% in July.
It was the biggest one-month drop in the report's history.
In fact, the fall was so dramatic, it left some economists in disbelief. Some pointed to a necessary, if even overdone, correction after a strong reading in July. Others suggested the region's ties to the volatile auto industry is behind the huge one-month fluctuation.
Still, the report sent benchmark Treasury yields to their lowest since June 9, at 4.01%. The major stock averages were lower intially then managed slim gains. The dollar extended its decline. See Bond Report. See Market Snapshot. Read more on the dollar in Currencies.
Readings below 50% indicate a majority of businesses reported declining conditions. The Chicago index had topped this level for 27 straight months.
"Given the healthy readings of other regional manufacturing reports (from the New York and Philadelphia Federal Reserve branches), today's outsized drop is almost certainly noise," said Daniel Jester, analyst with Economy.com.
"That said, the details of the report were quite soft."
Production remained in expansionary territory, but at 56.2%, the index was well below its previous reading of 70.5%.
New orders plunged to 46.5% from 69.6%. Employment growth slowed to 51.7% after rebounding to 56.1% in July.
Prices paid rose to 62.9% from 61.3%.
High energy prices continue to drive input prices higher, but rampant inflation has not yet been pushed through to consumers. Still, the Federal Reserve revealed its intensifying watch of inflation flare-ups in minutes from its Aug. 9 meeting released this week.
"The [PMI] decline is alarming, but must be seen in the context of the unusual volatility in the Chicago figures since October of last year, as well as the odd surge in the index to a 63.5 level in July," wrote economists at Action Economics in an intraday update to clients.
"Perhaps the big swings in the auto sector are having an amplified effect on this report, which tends to be sensitive to auto industry developments."
The hefty Chicago PMI decline in August translates to a smaller, but still impressive, drop in the Institute for Supply Management adjusted index to 51.7 from 62.8 in July, they said. That report, a closely tracked snapshot of national manufacturing activity, will be released Thursday morning.
"Back in late 2000 the Chicago PMI weakened a month ahead of the ISM survey. The weakness then also came quite unexpectedly and soon afterwards the Fed abruptly reversed course," said Mark Vitner, senior economist with Wachovia Securities.
"So even if tomorrow's ISM report does not show anywhere near the weakness the Chicago report does, we could still see some follow through in the next month's numbers."
Many economists question the direct correlation between the two reports.
Action Economics thinks the ISM might now read 55% for August, following July's 56.6%. The group still thinks the ISM non-manufacturing index, a separate report due next week, will come in at 60%.
The economists have also scaled back their projections for third-quarter economic growth to 3.8% from 4.6% earlier following Wednesday's revisions to second-quarter GDP and ongoing reports of damage from Hurricane Katrina. See the Economics and Politics page.
Odp:Co dalej? Co myślicie?
NO tak..poslizg informacyjny...Dzis juz to slyszalem jak jeden *** tlumaczyl ze jazda na KGHM byla zwiazana z opozniona reakcja rynku......Albo gram albo inwestuje ..trzeba rozgraniczyc te dwa pojecia.Pozdrawiam.
REKLAMA
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