Word: indexation
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2000
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...credit cards out and shop yourself silly. George W. Bush will be grateful. But remember, you're on your own out there. Retail sales are down. Car buying is depressed. Consumer confidence is fading. Last week GM and Whirlpool announced big layoffs. In November the S&P 500 stock index finished its first 12-month period of negative returns in a decade, according to Bianco Research. In other words, people are getting squeamish...
...priced for a severe slowdown. They will fall further if a recession occurs. But if growth accelerates at the end of next year, as many expect, the market will lift off in advance. Stay diversified and mainly in blue chips. With mutual funds, consider those that invest in an index. Their lower fees help performance in a tough market. With bonds, longer maturities are best as rates fall...
...year, the Dow is down 10 percent, the biggest annual drop since 1977. The S&P 500 is off 14 percent, the most since 1974. After coughing up another 7 percent Wednesday, the NASDAQ's losses have hit 43 percent, which makes 2000 quite simply the tech index's worst year ever. For tech stocks, we're not talking bear, we're talking crash - a steady slide that started in March and is only picking up speed at year's end. All fall, traders talked about the need for "capitulation"; now they're calling it panic, and it's going...
Here's how it works: a betting firm offers a spread--the range from the buy quote to the sell quote offered by the bookmaker--on, say, what the level of London's Financial Times Stock Exchange 100 Share Index will be three months hence. Let's say the spread is 6,700 to 6,710. You think it will be a bearish market, so you sell at 6,700, at $15 an index point (the bet amount can, of course, vary). The market does indeed drop 150 points, to 6,550, and you collect $2,250 in the example...
...profit by adjusting their spreads and by constantly trading in the underlying markets to hedge clients' bets. More often than not, they come out ahead. "Last year our clients made more than they lost, yet we had a record year as well," says Michael Murray, associate director at IG Index, a London-based firm that pioneered financial spread betting 26 years ago and remains the market leader. IG Index set up shop as a financial spread-betting bookmaker, initially offering spreads on gold futures, hence its name...