Feb

11

is there one general factor, i.e., one market, which impacts all other markets? and does this general factor change within day and between days?

what is reason that the bulk of the consumer products companies - especially Disney, Amex, and Gillette, and the professional sports leagues - are uniformly agrarian? is it in their self interest? or just the training that their top execs get at Harvard and Yale?

a typical article. but i noticed this much earlier. their Hall of Presidents, e.g., has always been a platform against those who admire enterprise.

Disney World was our destination. What I found could be the end for a beloved American company
Massive layoffs at Disney are unsurprising.

a nice, archetypal way for the public to lose more than they have any rite to lose. On thur, crude was the least volatile of any commodity or itself. its total range was 50 pts from 77.50 to 78.00. and the moves between half hours was 20 pts. friday crude moved 250 pts from 77.50 to 80.00 from 2:30 TO 4 EST.

invaluable advice from the great Bill Tilden: (1) Keep your eye on the ball. (2) The body must be at right angles to the net and the shoulders parallel to the line of flight of the ball.

(3) The weight must always travel into the stroke that is from back foot to the front foot. (4) the shot must never be hurried or cramped. Match Play and the Spin of the Ball. Bill Tilden was considered the greatest tennis player ever as of 1930.

Some interesting market advice was given in his classic article, Pace and Speed. "Speed and pace are two very different things. Speed is measured by the time required by the flight of the ball thru the air. Pace is the momentum (speed plus weight) with which the ball comes off the ground from its bounce. It is the solidity of the stroke." one should compare this to the velocity of the price change of a market. that's speed. but pace is the volume behind the advance.

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