Quote from NoDoji:
Yeah, not much downside left :eek:
Quote from traderNik:
Interesting. Here's an honest question, because I can't come up with a good example myself. Can either of you name an iBank that went through something like this where they get publicly pilloried with Senate hearings and the whole nine yards, end up paying a slap-on-the-wrist fine which wouldn't even register but eventually became a third class player because of the kind of reputational hit that you describe?
Ok, A Andersen and Salomon. I wasn't aware that Salomon's rep had taken that much of a hit. Thanks for the responses.Quote from Ghost of Cutten:
Salomon. Went from top dog to bit player in a few years due to reputational problems. Buffett was in there too, he's the main reason they didn't go from top dog to insolvent.
Quote from No.Heat:
Let me give you some advice assuming no daytrades.
It's one thing to buy a strong company when the whole market is at oversold levels.
It's another thing, to buy a company under serious accusation by the SEC when the market just finished doing a new 52 high.
GS right now is too speculative, forget about it, whether it goes back to 200+ or crashes down to 0, just forget about it, and in the future, don't let hindsight trick you into thinking you should have done this or that, this could misled you into thinking such trade was safe, when it's not.
There are far better and much safer trades out there.
This one spells uncertainty.
Best of luck to you.
Quote from corbel:
This.
Good advice by the way; I'm going to write this one down and post it on my wall
Quote from MarketMasher:
Is GS the next Drexel?
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Will-Goldman-Sachs-Become-etfguide-4244108459.html?x=0&.v=1
"Will Goldman Sachs Become Drexel Sachs?"
They in the news again for SemGroup and Basis Fund.
Lloyd needs to go out and do more PR.