#ClosingPosition #CoverBUY #February14 #Year2018 #NCR #TwentyBrandedStocksClub NCR ›
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NCR Corporation
-31,281.0000 $33.8500 $31.7500 $993,171.75 ROI 6.2% GAINS/Profit: $65,690.10 Congratulations!
You’ve just placed a cover market order for:
NCR
31281
Shares
$31.75
Price/Share
Traded for a total of:
$993,181.75
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George Palaganas is
celebrating Valentine's Day.
Love is in the air! #LOVEISINTHEAIR #AGLABOSINTHEEND #JennyWright #Year2018 #february14 #PaulYoung https://youtu.be/NNC0kIzM1Fo
Love Is in the Air!
Happy
Valentine's Day, from all of us at Facebook. We thought you might like
to send a card to someone who lifts you up and makes you smile!
Browse Cards
Happy Valentines Day 2018!
#WhitneyHouston #GlennisGrace #JenniferHudson #TheFaceofAnnabellaScioriWithTheVoiceofWhitneyHouston
#RunToYou #DidntWeAlmostHaveItAll #TheGreatestLoveofAll #IWillAlwaysLoveYou
Whitney Houston's Jennifer Hudson must be Glennis Grace , with Didn't We Almost Have It All
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q5Vy9hlAjDA
#RunToYou #DidntWeAlmostHaveItAll #TheGreatestLoveofAll #IWillAlwaysLoveYou
Whitney Houston's Jennifer Hudson must be Glennis Grace , with Didn't We Almost Have It All
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q5Vy9hlAjDA
Run To You
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3tzDpP05_YQ
The Greatest Love of All
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s7ot33gsQhs
I Will Always You
https://www.youtube.com/watch…
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3tzDpP05_YQ
The Greatest Love of All
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s7ot33gsQhs
I Will Always You
https://www.youtube.com/watch…
Glennis Grace - Didn't we almost have it all Uit het programma 'De beste zangers unplugged' - de akoestische sessie van…
youtube.com

George Palaganas shared a memory.
#EightYearsAGO #Facebook #Twitter #Year2018 #Didyouknow
DID YOU KNOW?: Despite the current SLUMP on most stocks' prices on DOW
JONES(NYSE), NASDAQ, etc. , Facebook and TWITTER brought in more than
US$10Million in GAINS/Profit during first 2 weeks of the slump on my
stock trading game accounts!
I
was surprised to learn US President Obama is now following me on
twitter... only to find an ensign on it... LOL! No it's not
Mulronic.LOL!

George Palaganas shared his photo.
#SLUMP #FARFROMOVER #CORRECTION #Year2018 #January #February #FALLINGSTOCKPrices
The SLUMP on WALL STREET(NYSE), NASDAQ, and most of major indexes is
far from over. Apparently, you won't see your ROIs turn green again on
most BOUGHT stocks prior to the slump not until another two months or
so. A CORRECTION was admitted by DOW JONES, reason why most stocks keeps
on falling-off the edges and they are not optimistic for an early
turn-around. Here is why. https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10211697599341980&set=a.10210779818918043.1073741852.1427450153&type=3&theater
Comments
George Palaganas History suggests the correction isn’t near over, as this chart demonstrates
Published: Feb 11, 2018 9:52 p.m. ET
278
‘There is no hard and fast rule when it comes to corrections, and that’s what can make them so terrifying when you go through one’
Courtesy Everett Collection
By
RYAN
VLASTELICA
MARKETS REPORTER
Perhaps the biggest question on Wall Street right now is whether the recent pain in the U.S. stock market is over. If history is any indication, the answer is no.
Both the Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, +1.38% and the S&P 500 SPX, +1.49% entered correction territory on Thursday, defined as a 10% drop from a recent peak—in this case, record highs that were hit in late January. According to Bespoke Investment Group, which analyzed the 95 corrections the S&P has seen since 1928, investors might want to brace themselves for more pain.
Per Bespoke’s data, the median decline for the S&P in a correction is 16.4%, and the median length of a pullback is 64 days. Were the S&P to hit that median in the current selloff, it would bottom around 2,400, or roughly 7.8% below current levels.
Courtesy Bespoke Investment Group
“Keep in mind, though, that these are median levels. There have been a number of corrections (13) that saw declines of less than 11%, while several saw deeper declines of more than 20%,” the research group wrote in a blog post. A decline of 20% would put the index into bear-market territory, where nearly one-fifth of S&P components currently trade. “In terms of length, prior corrections have also been all over the map. Some have lasted as little as three days, while others have stretched on for well over a year.”
Don’t miss: How low will the Dow go? Brace yourself, this is the worst-case scenario
Even with the recent losses, stocks have shown a pronounced upward bias over the past several months. The Dow is up nearly 20% over the past 12 months, while the S&P is up 13.4% over the same period, and the Nasdaq COMP, +1.44% , boosted by the outperformance of large-capitalization internet and technology names, is up 20.5%.
This correction marks Wall Street’s first 10% pullback since early 2016, and, according to financial blog SentimenTrader, Thursday’s drop marked the Dow’s fourth fastest decline into correction territory from an all-time high, based on data that go back to 1897.
Don’t miss: Investor pessimism hits three-month high as FOMO turns to ‘oh, no’
The speed of the drawdown points to how stocks, prior to the correction, had largely been bereft of retreats or much volatility in either direction. The S&P recently ended an unprecedented streak without a pullback of 5%, something that is historically quite common.
Corrections are also quite common, occurring about once every 11 months, on average, although that statistic is skewed historically by their heavy distribution near the Great Depression. That Wall Street went about twice that length without one has some analysts pointing out that the long absence of a correction—rather than the appearance of the current one—was the real historical anomaly.
“If we look just at the post-WWII period, there have been 55 corrections in the span of 73 years, reducing their frequency to once about every 16-17 months. In any event, the market was still overdue for a correction heading into the current one, but maybe not by as much as it seemed on the surface,” Bespoke wrote.
The research firm didn’t give any indication about when it expected indexes to return to record levels, writing, “Unfortunately, there is no hard and fast rule when it comes to corrections, and that’s what can make them so terrifying when you go through one. You never know when it will end.”
ManagePublished: Feb 11, 2018 9:52 p.m. ET
278
‘There is no hard and fast rule when it comes to corrections, and that’s what can make them so terrifying when you go through one’
Courtesy Everett Collection
By
RYAN
VLASTELICA
MARKETS REPORTER
Perhaps the biggest question on Wall Street right now is whether the recent pain in the U.S. stock market is over. If history is any indication, the answer is no.
Both the Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, +1.38% and the S&P 500 SPX, +1.49% entered correction territory on Thursday, defined as a 10% drop from a recent peak—in this case, record highs that were hit in late January. According to Bespoke Investment Group, which analyzed the 95 corrections the S&P has seen since 1928, investors might want to brace themselves for more pain.
Per Bespoke’s data, the median decline for the S&P in a correction is 16.4%, and the median length of a pullback is 64 days. Were the S&P to hit that median in the current selloff, it would bottom around 2,400, or roughly 7.8% below current levels.
Courtesy Bespoke Investment Group
“Keep in mind, though, that these are median levels. There have been a number of corrections (13) that saw declines of less than 11%, while several saw deeper declines of more than 20%,” the research group wrote in a blog post. A decline of 20% would put the index into bear-market territory, where nearly one-fifth of S&P components currently trade. “In terms of length, prior corrections have also been all over the map. Some have lasted as little as three days, while others have stretched on for well over a year.”
Don’t miss: How low will the Dow go? Brace yourself, this is the worst-case scenario
Even with the recent losses, stocks have shown a pronounced upward bias over the past several months. The Dow is up nearly 20% over the past 12 months, while the S&P is up 13.4% over the same period, and the Nasdaq COMP, +1.44% , boosted by the outperformance of large-capitalization internet and technology names, is up 20.5%.
This correction marks Wall Street’s first 10% pullback since early 2016, and, according to financial blog SentimenTrader, Thursday’s drop marked the Dow’s fourth fastest decline into correction territory from an all-time high, based on data that go back to 1897.
Don’t miss: Investor pessimism hits three-month high as FOMO turns to ‘oh, no’
The speed of the drawdown points to how stocks, prior to the correction, had largely been bereft of retreats or much volatility in either direction. The S&P recently ended an unprecedented streak without a pullback of 5%, something that is historically quite common.
Corrections are also quite common, occurring about once every 11 months, on average, although that statistic is skewed historically by their heavy distribution near the Great Depression. That Wall Street went about twice that length without one has some analysts pointing out that the long absence of a correction—rather than the appearance of the current one—was the real historical anomaly.
“If we look just at the post-WWII period, there have been 55 corrections in the span of 73 years, reducing their frequency to once about every 16-17 months. In any event, the market was still overdue for a correction heading into the current one, but maybe not by as much as it seemed on the surface,” Bespoke wrote.
The research firm didn’t give any indication about when it expected indexes to return to record levels, writing, “Unfortunately, there is no hard and fast rule when it comes to corrections, and that’s what can make them so terrifying when you go through one. You never know when it will end.”
George Palaganas Actually,
if you are a daytrader, you will be most likely uneffected by the slump
in most of prices of stocks since you are honed to look at your chart
before casting your trade, only the swing traders are effected by it
since not all charts suggests a...See More
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