Tony Hayes CFA | TalkMarkets | Page 1
Analyst at Ashton Consultancy Inc.
Phone: 905-468-0130
Tony is an all-round investment professional with a broad range of credentials, skills, contacts and work experience in Canada, England, the United States and Australia. His career spanning four decades has been in the investment and mining industries as a corporate director, president, executive ...more

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Dividend-Discount Values & Prices: Abstract Of Hayes Quarterly Blog
The price of the DJII continues to move toward equilibrium with its dividend-discount value of almost 30,000 as the return of the Santa Claus rally approaches. This should speed up the ascent of the market.
Market Panic Selling Overdone - "Buy And Take No Prisoners"
Dividend discount value of DJII near a record high as investors panic.
Dividend Discount Values & Market Prices
Since March 2009 the U.S. economy has struggled to be anemic as economists, pundits and the media have worried themselves silly about every groan, blip and burp emanating from the entrails of every government economic pronouncement.
In The Age Of The Internet Media, Opinions About The Future Change As Quickly As Share Prices.
I love the mass media, they are such chameleons, changing colour with the ebb and flow of stock prices. A bearish story published at 9.15 am today was totally revamped by 11.15 am. One wonders what might happen by the closing bell.
FED Pushes On Proverbial String But Commercial Banks Unwilling Or Unable To Attract Borrowers
The U.S. monetary base has increased 400% in less than 6 years, from $0.8 trillion in 2008 to almost $4 trillion today. Meanwhile commercial banks have, for the first time, built up huge surplus reserves of $2.6 trillion at the FED.
Dividend Discount Value Of DJII
In order to know where the DJII is going, it is of the utmost importance to know where the DJII is and, furthermore that value and price are not always the same.
Has Anybody Noticed The Huge Level Of Excess Bank Reserves Held At The FED ?
The US monetary base has grown 5 fold in 5 years from $0.8 trillion in 2008 to $4 trillion today. Considering that it took 232 years to reach $0.8 trillion and 5 years to grow 5 times, the supply of money may be more than adequate for the remainder of the millennium.
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