Listening To Market Volume- Barrons Mike Santoli has more…
Listening To Market Volume 3/8/2010 2:43:45 PM
Light trading volume has accompanied the market’s latest rally. Should investors worry, or care? Barron’s Mike Santoli has more.
Light trading volume has accompanied the market’s latest rally. Should investors worry, or care? Barron’s Mike Santoli has more.
Robert Weissenstein, CIO at Credit Suisse Private Banking Americas, tells CNBC volume has made the rally more viable.
Insight on BP CEO Hayward’s testimony, with Daniel Becnel, Becnel Law Firm and Andrew Ross Sorkin, New York Times.
The financial challenges states face could be the next systemic risk within the financial markets, according to Meredith Whitney, CEO of the Meredith Whitney Advisory Group.
Chinese automaker Geely agreed to buy Ford’s Swedish car brand Volvo for $1.8 billion Monday. Stephen Odell, CEO of Volvo, told CNBC that China is a growth market for Volvo.
Starting today, underwater homeowners will be permitted under a government program to sell their homes for less than they owe and basically force the lender to take the loss rather than foreclose on the home. Shari Olefson, of Fowler White Boggs, and Susan Wachter, a real estate professor at Wharton, discuss.
“As far as I’m concerned the technicals are in tact, says Guy Adami. We said the S&P would over-correct to the upside and trade up to 1130 and then turn lower — and it did. Now we’re likely in the next leg lower. We have to see what happens as the S&P trades down to the lower end of the range – around 1040 – will it hold next time we test it?
The patterns in the S&P suggest that support will not hold this time, adds Oppenheimer’s Carter Worth. My persumption is we break lower. I think we go to 980. I don’t think a great crash is coming but we are clearly entering a period when the downside should be the focus of investors.”