Hi folks,
Per earlier request, I'm creating this thread for general discussion of macroeconomic forces affecting the entire market or large segments of the market, from the perspective of and for the benefit of Tesla Motors investors.
I'll start with a few links I find useful (others, please feel free to suggest links you find useful for macroeconomic analysis):
First, here is an Economic Calendar for the markets that is worth paying attention to, as it displays important current and upcoming market indicators & reports and times of release.
Second, here is a decently-written market update link I check periodically from Yahoo via Briefing.com that provides updates pre-market, during the day, and post-market close.
Third, I wanted to share some market contra-indicators I track to gauge fear and/or flight to perceived safety on down days, including gold, treasuries, and expected market volatility. The tickers I often use for that are GLD, TIPS and VIX/VXX, the latter of which is often called the "fear index."
Looking forward to some good discussion.
Thanks,
Flux
Per earlier request, I'm creating this thread for general discussion of macroeconomic forces affecting the entire market or large segments of the market, from the perspective of and for the benefit of Tesla Motors investors.
I'll start with a few links I find useful (others, please feel free to suggest links you find useful for macroeconomic analysis):
First, here is an Economic Calendar for the markets that is worth paying attention to, as it displays important current and upcoming market indicators & reports and times of release.
Second, here is a decently-written market update link I check periodically from Yahoo via Briefing.com that provides updates pre-market, during the day, and post-market close.
Third, I wanted to share some market contra-indicators I track to gauge fear and/or flight to perceived safety on down days, including gold, treasuries, and expected market volatility. The tickers I often use for that are GLD, TIPS and VIX/VXX, the latter of which is often called the "fear index."
Looking forward to some good discussion.
Thanks,
Flux
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