Why the market went down in 2002 and 2008 and do not go down in 2023?

It's clear that there is a harder economic situation at least one year ahead, but the market is pricing in the better times that come after: 2025, 2026,... (due to the FED cuts) and I understand it and that is a fair trade.

I just don't understand why the market was not pricing in the better times ahead and fell down a lot in 2002 and 2008, when they knew that eventually the FED will cut and the stocks will go up again?

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2 Stocks with 10% or more short interest now

Recent economic data, including the cooling labor market and slowing service sector, and a string of bank collapses are raising the odds of a recession. Amid a challenging macro environment, investors should stay away from risky stocks.

Shift4 Payments, Inc. (FOUR), ChargePoint Holdings, Inc. ($CHPT), which possess a relatively high short interest.

Generally, short interest as a percentage of flo

$FISV stock price rises by 2.34%

On April 11, 2023, Fidelity National Information Services ($FISV) opened at $114.53, up from its previous close of $113.69. The stock had a day’s range of $113.89 to $115.09 and a trading volume of 100,549 shares. FISV’s market capitalization was $70.4 billion.

FISV’s earnings growth for the last year was 95.65%; this year, it is expected to grow by 12.92%. Over the next five years, FISV’s earnings growth is projected to be 13.28%. The company’s revenue g

Thoughts on ELF Beauty?

I've been watching this stock for a couple of months now looking for an entry point, but it just keeps going higher. Does anyone else own this stock or have done any dd on this company? Thoughts on whether I should nibble now or wait and hope it goes lower?

submitted by /u/assetguru
What are some "obvious" trades based on news/events/themes that you currently hold?

There are times in the market where it seems in retrospect obvious which stocks to buy: for example, Zoom and Microsoft early in the pandemic, $CALM during the egg price stories and oil producers when Russia invaded Ukraine. Right now, what are your "obvious" trades that you are doing ? For me, I think the Fed will cut rates later this summer so I am long TLT but curious but what everyone else is doing for their obvious trades.

What website/app do you use to see full historical charts of ETFs?

Most search results show only 3 or 5 years. Is there any source where I can see the full historical charts, like 30 years (for ETFs or for the underlying index, like the various MSCI indexes).

Also is it possible to see historical charts of PE ratio of the ETFs or indexes? Or see other metrics like aggregated net income over the years?

What sites or apps do you use to see these charts?

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Health and long term listing of ETNs

Since banks were in a slump, I thought it might be a good time to go all in on a 3x leverage major bank ETN. However, it seems even popular ETNs can go to zero or at least be delisted. As I understand it, if the bank issuing ETNs doesn't make any money off issuing them, they'll just pull the product from the market. So an important question is, do banks publish the profitability of their ETNs?

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News Articles Summary and Things to Monitor for Next Earnings by ChatGPT

I wrote a script that complies news articles discussing stocks with upcoming earnings this week. I scrapped articles spanning back to 2 or 3 months ago and asked ChatGPT to summarise key information, recommend things to monitor in their next earnings and select most interesting headlines.

This helped me quickly get some context on upcoming earnings but in no way is enough due diligence.

Here are the results for some of this week ea

Basic questions about brokerage accounts.

*Yes, I'll probably use terms incorrectly: -I have a brokerage account from which I am contributing to a total market index fund and some selected stocks as well as I deem fit. I plan to not sell my assets/cash out for at least 25 years. 1. I have my account set to reinvest dividends automatically. Does that sound right? 2. I'm not a good candidate for an employer based 401k etc., what are the BASIC things I should be doing to minimize tax liability with

Debt to Equity Ratio

Someone smarter than me please help. I am creating my own stock screening/filtering spreadsheet. I want to sort by D/E ratio. My understanding is that D/E is Total Liabilities/Shareholder Equity. However, sites like Zacks and Finviz both use Current Liabilities/Shareholder Equity. Personal research says that anything over 2 is high. So can someone please explain to me the best values to use?

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