Yes, indeed... As I have been saying all along (I think), I am just expressing my personal preferences. You may choose to disagree (as you and Maverick have) and we can have a discussion (as we had), at the end of which we have agreed that our respective preferences are as they are. I don't know about you, but I have also learned something in the process and clarified my own thinking about some things. So it has been useful, which pleases me.Quote from Tsing Tao:
To each his own whom they prefer to view. My point was simply that there really aren't all that many inaccuracies in Rick's commentary.
The rest of CNBC, however, now that's a laugh-riot.
I would love to be proven wrong about Rick. Until I am, I have to base my preferences on the information that is available. And so I do.Quote from Maverick74:
I wouldn't let you off the hook that easy. LOL. You could say that about ANYBODY on TV. So that makes the focus on Rick irrelevant. I doubt you watch Fast Money, but last Thursday Dr. J was responding to a question about Gold and I couldn't believe my ears when he called all the longs who got stopped out pussies!!!!! I kid you not, he actually said that live on the air. It just came out. But that's the nature of live TV when there is no tape delay. For Rick it's even harder because he gets like a two minute segment and and sometimes the question to him itself takes up 1:30 which leaves him little to no time to respond or even say exactly what he had scripted to say. Surely you understand this Martin as I'm sure your IQ is above average. When Rick has had longer segments to talk, for example when he is live in the studio and gets to spend two hours on the air, you get a much more subdued Rick where he has time to articulate his thoughts much more.
EDIT: Now that is disappointing, TT. I have gone to great lengths to explain EXACTLY why I don't like to watch Rick. So I daresay it was a wee bit more than just me stating that I don't like watching Rick.Quote from Tsing Tao:
My comment was to Ricter. The only thing I got out of Martin's 20 or so posts was that he doesn't like to watch Rick. *shrug* Ok, it's certainly his TV set.
Quote from Martinghoul:
Yes, indeed... As I have been saying all along (I think), I am just expressing my personal preferences. You may choose to disagree (as you and Maverick have) and we can have a discussion (as we had), at the end of which we have agreed that our respective preferences are as they are. I don't know about you, but I have also learned something in the process and clarified my own thinking about some things. So it has been useful, which pleases me.
I would love to be proven wrong about Rick. Until I am, I have to base my preferences on the information that is available. And so I do.
And yes, my views and preferences I have described are in no way limited to Rick. Financial media is full of people who are mostly good at talking and very little else. But that's just a sad fact of life more broadly, innit?
Quote from Martinghoul:
EDIT: Now that is disappointing, TT. I have gone to great lengths to explain EXACTLY why I don't like to watch Rick. So I daresay it was a wee bit more than just me stating that I don't like watching Rick.
Right, do you want me to respond to this, TT?Quote from Tsing Tao:
Martin, I apologize if I came off a little pissy (not in the English sense, but the American one) with you. Your opinions are your own and no one has any right to tell you otherwise.
I do, however, get a little testy when defenders of the Fed rise up and say what a good thing continued QE is, etc., oblivious to the harm that is being inflicted on the average American (or in a more macro sense, the average citizen of the world).
Quote from Martinghoul:
Yes, indeed... As I have been saying all along (I think), I am just expressing my personal preferences. You may choose to disagree (as you and Maverick have) and we can have a discussion (as we had), at the end of which we have agreed that our respective preferences are as they are. I don't know about you, but I have also learned something in the process and clarified my own thinking about some things. So it has been useful, which pleases me.
I would love to be proven wrong about Rick. Until I am, I have to base my preferences on the information that is available. And so I do.
And yes, my views and preferences I have described are in no way limited to Rick. Financial media is full of people who are mostly good at talking and very little else. But that's just a sad fact of life more broadly, innit?
EDIT: Now that is disappointing, TT. I have gone to great lengths to explain EXACTLY why I don't like to watch Rick. So I daresay it was a wee bit more than just me stating that I don't like watching Rick.
Quote from Martinghoul:
Right, do you want me to respond to this, TT?
It's an entirely different discussion, obviously. Well, maybe not entirely, as it has something to do with one of my earlier post, directed at Maverick, where I asked a question. I fear it might have been left behind.
So be it, Maverick. Or as the French say it, such is c'est la vie. Like I told TT, our discussion was useful for me and that's good enough in my book.Quote from Maverick74:
Martin, old chap, I would not limit that just to financial media but ALL media. You are not a very good salesmen Martin (probably a good thing). You have not convinced me of anything. LOL.
As to the joys of live TV, anyone who frames the discussion of risk using terms like "pussy" etc is just a waste of time.BTW, here is the blurb about Dr. J and the joys of live TV:
Doc says âpussiesâ on air
Jon Najarian is occasionally (snicker) prone to the Brag Trade. Apparently not satisfied with just that, Najarian on Thursday's Fast Money introduced a colorful term we haven't heard on the show.
Najarian said he likes gold miners but in particular liked the GLD at 114.68 in late June.
"That was a gift ... from all the folks that didn't have the stomach to hold that particular ETF ... now it's 10 points higher," Najarian said, also pointing to the AGQ.
"I think gold has just gotten back to fair value," he continued, defining "fair value" for Tim Seymour as the price you get when the "weak hands" have been washed out, weak hands which Najarian was happy to buy from, "because they're quite frankly pussies ... those are the guys that I feast on."
Anyone who sold GLD the last week of June, you've been called out.
Tim Seymour stressed that coal and ore prices have been up. Jon Najarian said energy, CAT and JOY have all surged. But guest host Brian Sullivan said it looked to him like short covering in the stocks.
Guy Adami suggested LL as a better trade now than the homebuilders, in part because of "monster short interest."