REC SILICON - Falling down? ??????????????

Slettet bruker
REC 25.12.2018 kl 08:31 4555

Vil det påvirke REC SILICON aksjekursen (RT 0.6150,-) negativt at Nikkei er ned nesten 5%? Skal vi reise ned 10 øre i romjulen og teste årets laveste REC kurs på 0.5135,-? Eller ned mot REC ATH - 0.5135,- ? (du tok den?) :-) REC SILICON aksjekursen og endring siden nyttår er på dessverre minus -55.43%. Kan det bli falling down nå i romjulen?

Eller vil ikke REC aksjekurs bli påvirket at det som nå skjer? Jeg vet ikke - jeg er bare opptatt av å tjene mest mulig på min REC trading :-) Jeg har jo et svært kortsiktig fokus på min trading i REC som dere vet (motsatt er de av dere som sitter long i REC). Og all respekt til dere - her er det ingen fasit før 19. januar 2019 :-)

Men det er lenge til 19. januar 2019 og resultatet på Kina caset og jeg kan jo ikke kjøpe før jeg vet om vi får en REC SILICON - Falling down? ??????????????situasjon i romjulen :-(

Eller hva mener du? Det er jo alltid dumt å kjøpe i REC nå dersom kursen skal videre ned :-(

Kjør debatt :-)

Og her er det ingen fasit før vi har sett de første timene av første OSE handelsdag.

Jeg solgte alt av REC før jul (som vanlig før hver jul når det gjelder min REC trading) :-)
Det var etter det siste REC rally (ja når det gjelder REC er det lov å kalle det rally selv under 10% rally definisjonen) da vi gikk 8% på intra etter å ha kjøpt like før :-) men har jo tenkt meg å trade i REC i romjulen da :-)

Les denne med kopi under:
https://www.cnbc.com/2018/12/25/asia-markets-japans-nikkei-hits-20-month-low.html

Dette ser stygt ut og jeg lurer på om OSE går i bear marked i romjulen :-(


ASIA MARKETS
Japan’s Nikkei drops 5 percent after Wall Street slide deepens
PUBLISHED 5 HOURS AGO | UPDATED 23 MIN AGO

Reuters
Reuters with CNBC
KEY POINTS

Japan’s Nikkei declined about 5 percent on the day,
The Topix brushes its lowest since November 2016.
Japanese blue chips fall, as defensive shares prove unable to resist rout
Japan’s Nikkei retreated to a 20-month low on Tuesday after a slide on Wall Street deepened with a series of unnerving U.S. political developments.

The Nikkei share average ended the day down 5.01 percent at 19,155.74 after brushing 19,117.96, its lowest since late April 2017. The day’s performance put the index well into bear market territory — off more than 20 percent since its October high.

Japan’s broader Topix closed 4.88 percent lower at 1,415.55 after touching 1,412.90, its weakest since November 2016.

Meanwhile, in China, the Shanghai Index posted losses of more than 2 percent by mid-day, but then gained some ground back into the afternoon. Chinese sectors lost ground across the board, led by financial shares and energy firms as oil prices slumped.

So far this year, the Shanghai stock index is down about 24 percent.

Those Asia moves followed Wall Street stocks extending their steep sell-off on Monday, with the S&P 500 down nearly 15 percent so far this month, as investors were rattled by the U.S. Treasury secretary’s convening of a crisis group and by other political developments.

Many financial markets in Asia, Europe and North America are closed on Tuesday for Christmas Day.

“Negative sentiment has replaced logic, as is often the case during a sell-off. A third of the selling is induced by panic, another third by loss-cutting and the remaining third by speculators trying to make a profit from the market rout,” said Takashi Hiroki, chief strategist at Monex Securities in Tokyo.

“The sell-off is triggered almost entirely by developments in the U.S. markets, rather than by negative factors unique to the domestic market.”

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin called top U.S. bankers on Sunday amid the pullback in stocks and said he was calling a meeting of financial regulators to discuss ways to ensure “normal market operations.”

Wall Street also grappled with the U.S. federal government shutdown and reports that President Donald Trump privately discussed the possibility of firing the Federal Reserve chairman.

Japan’s blue chip shares fell across the board, with Toyota Motor Corp falling 5.25 percent, Sony Corp shedding 5.55 percent, Nintendo down 4.3 percent and Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group losing 4 percent.

Defensive shares such as consumer staples, healthcare and utilities were unable to withstand the selling pressure.

Convenience store operator Familymart UNY Holdings dropped 4.1 percent, healthcare product maker Kao Cor declined 4.6 percent and Tokyo Electric Power Co Holdings retreated 3.4 percent.

All of the Tokyo Stock Exchange’s 33 subsectors were in the red, led by precision machinery and pharmaceuticals

—CNBC’s Everett Rosenfeld contributed to this report.

https://www.cnbc.com/2018/12/25/asia-markets-japans-nikkei-hits-20-month-low.html

------

Eller denne;
Oljeprisen falt 6,7 prosent
Det ble den verste julaften på børsene i New York noensinne
Det ble en kort, stygg og hektisk og handel på børsene i New York julaften. Oljeprisen stupte og flukten fra aksjer fortsatte. Tesla falt 7,6 prosent.

https://www.hegnar.no/Nyheter/Boers-finans/2018/12/Det-ble-den-verste-julaften-paa-boersene-i-New-York-noensinne

PS - se Michael Douglas and Barbara Hershey in Falling Down (filmen fra 1993) - en flott film. Derfor den herlige overskriften på denne tråden :-)

Lenke under til filmomtalen:
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0106856/
Redigert 21.01.2021 kl 08:07 Du må logge inn for å svare
Slettet bruker
25.12.2018 kl 11:23 4327

Hvem bryr seg.

Jeg tjener 10-20% på denne hver dag, selv om kursen går enten opp eller ned.

hmmm
Redigert 21.01.2021 kl 08:07 Du må logge inn for å svare
Aldara
25.12.2018 kl 13:54 4128

Hei Grisetryne!
Du stikker alltid frem når det er noe negativt på gang..,
Kan ikke du stikke trynet ditt inn i bingen hvor du kommer fra....?
Hadde vært nydelig å slippe de unødvendige kommentarene dine!!
Redigert 21.01.2021 kl 08:07 Du må logge inn for å svare
Slettet bruker
25.12.2018 kl 14:35 4051

Som jeg har prøvd å fortelle dere gang på gang nå skal REC ned til 40 øre. Vi kommer ikke dit i julen, men i løpet av de to første ukene i januar bør vi kunne se 40 tallet. Dette før meldingene om stenging av ML og EMI kommer. Vi rekker nok ikke å se 0,30 før spleis.
Redigert 21.01.2021 kl 08:07 Du må logge inn for å svare
Slettet bruker
26.12.2018 kl 09:06 3552

Det har snudd opp i Japan og det er jo bra for REC kursen når OSE åpner i morgen :-)

ASIA MARKETS
Japanese stocks partially rebound from Christmas Day rout
PUBLISHED TUE, DEC 25 2018 • 7:11 PM EST | UPDATED 41 MIN AGO


Lenke og kopi under:
https://www.cnbc.com/2018/12/26/asian-markets-the-nikkei-the-fed-wall-street-currencies-in-focus.html

Japanese stocks partially rebound from Christmas Day rout


Japanese stocks partially rebound from Christmas Day rout
PUBLISHED TUE, DEC 25 2018 • 7:11 PM EST | UPDATED 41 MIN AGO
Eustance Huang
KEY POINTS
Japan’s Nikkei 225 ended the day higher by 0.89 percent, a partial rebound from its steep losses in the previous session.
The Japanese share average plummeted around 5 percent on Tuesday, putting the index well into bear market territory — more than 20 percent off its recent high.
U.S. President Donald Trump on Tuesday once again said the Federal Reserve was hiking interest rates too quickly, continuing his open criticism of the central bank.
Japanese stocks saw gains on Wednesday following a Christmas Day plunge of both the Nikkei 225 and Topix.

The Nikkei 225 gained 0.89 percent to close higher at 19,327.06, while the Topix index saw gains of 1.12 percent to finish its trading day at 1,431.47. Shares of index heavyweight Fast Retailing, the company behind the Uniqlo chain of apparel stores, bucked the overall positive trend in Japan as they slipped 0.92 percent on the day.

The moves came after the share average plummeted around 5 percent on Tuesday, putting the index well into bear market territory as it was more than 20 percent off its high in October. The broader Topix index also ended more than 4.8 percent lower.

Over in South Korea, however, the Kospi slipped 1.31 percent to close at 2,028.01 as shares of industry heavyweight Samsung Electronics shed 1.16 percent.

The mainland Chinese markets, watched in relation to the trade spat between Beijing and Washington, slipped on the day. The Shanghai composite fell around 0.26 percent to close at about 2,498.29. The Shenzhen composite also slipped 0.42 percent to close at about 1,279.79, and the Shenzhen component slipped 0.584 percent to finish its trading day at around 7,289.55.

The Australian and Hong Kong stock markets were closed for a public holiday.

Trump again takes aim at the Fed
U.S. President Donald Trump on Tuesday continued his spate of open criticism of the Federal Reserve, saying the central bank was hiking interest rates too quickly.

“They’re raising interest rates too fast because they think the economy is so good. But I think that they will get it pretty soon,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office, referring to the Fed.

Still, the U.S. president suggested that investors should now be buying into the ongoing sell-off.

“I have great confidence in our companies. We have companies, the greatest in the world, and they’re doing really well. They have record kinds of numbers. So I think it’s a tremendous opportunity to buy,” Trump said after speaking with U.S. troops deployed abroad via video conference.

Trump’s comments came on the back of a recent steep decline in the U.S. stock markets amid concerns over weaker economic growth. The president himself has often attributed the fall to the Fed, tweeting on Monday that the central bank is “the only problem” with the U.S. economy.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average and S&P 500 saw their worst Christmas Eve performance in history on Monday. The Dow plunged more than 650 points to fall below 22,000 while the S&P 500 dropped 2.7 percent and slipped into bear market territory. The Nasdaq Composite also fell 2.2 percent.

Futures on Wednesday afternoon pointed to a continued tumble for the three major indexes stateside.

Currencies
The U.S. dollar index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of its peers, was at 96.580 after seeing a high of 96.66 earlier.

The Japanese yen, widely viewed as a safe-haven currency, traded at 110.46 after touching an earlier high of 110.12.The Australian dollar was at $0.7050 after touching an earlier low of $0.7030.

— Reuters contributed to this report.
Redigert 21.01.2021 kl 08:07 Du må logge inn for å svare
Slettet bruker
26.12.2018 kl 09:11 3539

Denne er fra Bloomberg og det ser straks mye bedre ut før OSE åpner i morgen :-) Kansje ikke REC faller i morgen men isteden styrker seg - det hadde vært bra :-)

- lenke og kopi under fra Yhahoo Finance:

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/futures-tip-gains-japan-shares-223837042.html

Business
Asia Stocks Trade Mixed, U.S. Futures Fluctuate: Markets Wrap
Bloomberg
Christopher Anstey
,Bloomberg•December 26, 2018

(Bloomberg) -- Asian stocks saw a volatile session Wednesday, with Japanese equities closing higher on a wave of late buying after rising and falling through the session. U.S. stock futures also swung as investors gauge how much selling pressure remains after this month’s rout.

Contracts on the S&P 500 Index slumped earlier after CNN reported that President Donald Trump’s frustration with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin is rising. Korean shares tumbled after a holiday there, and Shanghai stocks fell for a second day. Markets in Australia and Hong Kong were closed. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index traded near a 22-month low, with a small bounce today doing little to ease the pain of what’s been the most brutal month for global equities since 2008. The dollar was flat, Treasury yields ticked lower.

Elsewhere, West Texas Intermediate crude traded below $43 a barrel. The offshore yuan was little changed after China released new rules promising to treat all companies equally, the latest positive step on the trade and investment front since U.S. and Chinese tariff hikes were set on pause.

While economic indicators suggest the world is in the midst of a slowdown, much of the market turbulence this month appeared to stem from tumbling confidence in policy makers. Mnuchin unsettled investors at the weekend by revealing he’d reached out to the heads of top American banks to confirm they have adequate liquidity. Trump expressed confidence in Mnuchin Tuesday, but the Treasury chief could be in serious jeopardy after his attempts to shore up confidence failed, CNN said, citing a source close to the White House.

A steady outflow of U.S. cabinet members, including the Defense secretary, and a partial shutdown of the federal American government have also proved unnerving. Potentially more constructive for investors were comments by Trump on Tuesday about his belief the U.S. central bank will “get it pretty soon.” He spoke days after Bloomberg reported he had discussed firing Chairman Jerome Powell out of frustration over interest-rate hikes.

“These are incredibly tricky markets to decipher, as the outsized moves are not reflective of the current U.S. economic landscape,” said Stephen Innes, head of Asia-Pacific trading at Oanda Corp. in Singapore. “But that seems to matter little so far as fear mongering continues to permeate every pocket of global capital markets.”

Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda said Wednesday that stocks continue to be somewhat unstable, though the Japanese and overseas economies have grown more resistant to shocks. The BOJ will be carefully monitoring global financial market developments, he said in a speech in Tokyo.

Here are some events investors may focus on in coming days:

India’s central bank releases a financial-stability report Wednesday.U.S. new-home sales are due Thursday.

And these are the main moves in markets:

Stocks

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index was up 0.2 percent at 3:33 p.m. Tokyo time, halting a four-day decline. The gauge fell as much as 0.5 percent earlier.The Topix Index rose 1.1 percent at the close, paring an advance of as much as 2 percent. It slumped 4.9 percent Tuesday. Futures on the S&P 500 fluctuated after falling as much as 1.1 percent at one point. The underlying gauge is 7 points away from completing a full-blown bear-market drop.The Kospi Index was down 1.3 percent.Shanghai Composite was flat after swinging between a gain of 0.4 percent and a drop of 0.5 percent.

Currencies

The Japanese yen was little changed at 110.40 per dollar.The euro was up 0.1 percent at $1.1406.The offshore yuan was little changed at 6.8972 per dollar.The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index was little changed.

Bonds

Japan’s 10-year bond yield was little changed at 0.019 percent.Ten-year Treasury yields edged lower to 2.724 percent.

Commodities

West Texas Intermediate crude was up 0.5 percent at $42.7 a barrel.Gold gained 0.3 percent to $1,272.51 an ounce.

To contact the reporter on this story: Christopher Anstey in Tokyo at canstey@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Christopher Anstey at canstey@bloomberg.net, Ravil Shirodkar, Divya Balji

For more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.
Redigert 21.01.2021 kl 08:07 Du må logge inn for å svare
Slettet bruker
26.12.2018 kl 09:34 3493

Garanja: Denne Asia forbedringen gir bedre utsikter for OSE og REC når dørene åpner i morgen :-) Bra

Garanja: jeg deler ikke ditt noe mer negative bilde på REC - men du kan ha rett - hvem vet :-)


Garanja
I går kl 14:35
498
Som jeg har prøvd å fortelle dere gang på gang nå skal REC ned til 40 øre. Vi kommer ikke dit i julen, men i løpet av de to første ukene i januar bør vi kunne se 40 tallet. Dette før meldingene om stenging av ML og EMI kommer. Vi rekker nok ikke å se 0,30 før spleis.
Redigert 21.01.2021 kl 08:07 Du må logge inn for å svare
Slettet bruker
26.12.2018 kl 09:45 3464

Les denne fra Bloomberg under - lenke og kopi - det er vel det vi kaller BEAR MARKED nå :-)

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-12-25/whiff-of-extinction-blows-in-bull-market-that-outlived-them-all

Markets
Whiff of Extinction Blows in Bull Market That Outlived Them All
By Sarah Ponczek , Elena Popina , and Vildana Hajric
25. desember 2018, 23:00 CET Updated on 26. desember 2018, 07:57 CET

Longest stock rally on record within a hairline of its end
Investors point to a disconnect between stocks and the economy

SHARE THIS ARTICLE
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In this article
SPX
S&P 500
2,351.10USD-65.52-2.71%
INDU
DJIA
21,792.20USD-653.17-2.91%
MSFT
MICROSOFT CORP
94.13USD-4.10-4.17%
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233.88USD-12.51-5.08%
It’s been derided as a house of cards, a gift to the one-percent, an experiment in monetary policy taken way too far.

Now a bull market that for 10 years has confounded and chastened its detractors -- by outlasting all its predecessors -- is staggering up to death’s door. And haters and admirers alike are turning out to pronounce last rites.

The fall has been swift, a spasm of nearly uninterrupted selling that dragged the S&P 500 down 19.8 percent in the space of three months. The Dow Jones Industrial Average has plunged 5,036 points since its record, poised for its worst December since 1931. For the men and women who sold stocks and investment advice while the rally raged, it’s made Christmas a time of nostalgia.

“It was a remarkably long run,” John Carey, managing director and portfolio manager at Amundi Pioneer Asset Management, said in a phone interview. “Overall, it was a very, very strong market up until the last couple of months. It’s been a very good period, the last decade, for money management.”

Worst December Ever
Down 14.8%, the S&P is poised for the worst December on record


Source: Bloomberg

Note: The chart shows 10 worst Decembers for the S&P since inception

Not that it’s over -- necessarily. The S&P 500 is still 7 points away from completing a full-blown bear market drop. Futures on the index fell as much as 1.1 percent before rebounding to trade little changed as of 6:56 a.m. London time Wednesday.

Stranger things have happened than a recovery from here -- the index came roughly as close only to rebound in 1998 and 2011. And even if the threshold does break, there’s nothing magical about a 20 percent decline. Donald Trump could right his ship, the Federal Reserve could stop raising rates -- maybe the bear will go back into hibernation.

As you may have heard: the fundamentals look strong. Gross domestic product is rising, profits keep going up, and economic data gives no obvious evidence of a recession. Things look particularly sturdy compared with past episodes of tumult that the bull withstood, periods like 2011, when quarterly GDP growth twice turned negative, or 2016, when corporate earnings fell.

“One of the beautiful ironies of this whole situation is that in 2018 you finally feel like the economy is normalizing to what we knew before the crisis,” said Michael Purves, chief global strategist at Weeden & Co. “Until you got to this tax and spending deal a year ago, it was one of the most hated bull markets. The markets steadily climbed one wall of worry after another, and the problem was that the economic data did not confirm it.”


Hated it was, and for many the rally represented a moral quandary, particularly in the early years, when stocks served as a kind of daily referendum on actions by the Fed to end the financial crisis. In that role, buoyant markets became a target for those who saw a charity program for the very people who laid the economy low, while at the other end of the spectrum critics accused the Fed’s Ben Bernanke of engineering gains to hide economic wounds that never healed.

Profits rose, fueling the bull, but wages stayed stagnant. Most of the time since 2009, gains in the S&P 500 have surpassed gains in GDP and worker pay by gaping margins.

“The market surprised everyone both in when it bottomed out and how quickly it rose off those lows,” said Chris Zaccarelli, chief investment officer at the Independent Advisor Alliance. “The problem with looking at the stock market as a way of saying the financial crisis is over is that it’s only one piece of the puzzle,” he said. “As far as an economic recovery, it’s been very sluggish.”

Now stocks are plunging as the stimulus Bernanke enacted is being withdrawn by a new Fed chairman, Jerome Powell. Inevitably, it’s spurring debate over whether the financial crisis ever ended.

“The reason I’d say it’s still with us is look at the Fed’s balance sheet,” Zaccarelli said. “This year has been impacted by quantitative tightening. As the Fed continues to run off its balance sheet, it’s a vestige of the crisis and it’s still with us today. Investors remain very scarred by what happened in 2007, 2008 -- you can see it in investor anxiety.”


From the financial crisis bottom in March 2009, the S&P 500 had more than quadrupled by its September high, paying a total return of 19 percent annually. Investors made more money owning stocks in 2013 than in any year since the dot-com bubble -- and anyone who sold when it was over has foregone gains of 151 percent in Microsoft, 237 percent in Amazon.com, and 345 percent in Netflix. One company, Nvidia, tripled in 2016, nearly doubled again last year, and was up 49 percent in early October. Now it’s down 34 percent and headed for the worst return since the financial crisis.

So while it may be hard to see things in the future that justify a hammering as painful as this one, a few things in the past suggested there was reason for worry.

“The biggest names just got bigger and bigger and the leadership became very narrow and we became reliant upon a handful of names to generate returns. And then when some of those names had some fundamental stumbles, the market was ill-equipped to deal with that,” Michael O’Rourke, JonesTrading’s chief market strategist, said by phone. “The bottom line is markets are supposed to go in both directions.”
Redigert 21.01.2021 kl 08:07 Du må logge inn for å svare
Slettet bruker
26.12.2018 kl 09:46 3459

Store sprik garanja 0,3kr Anton Berg 3kr
Redigert 21.01.2021 kl 08:07 Du må logge inn for å svare
Slettet bruker
26.12.2018 kl 09:51 3441

Major1 - ja det er sprik i hva folket her inne mener om REC kursen - men det er det også i REC sin inntjeningsestimater også har jeg sett. Alt fra meglere som skriver internet memos etter å ha møter med REC sin ledelse om at "de er snart tomme for cash" til andre meglere som håper på gode Kina nyheter den 19. januar 2019 om at det blir lettelser og da at REC kan gå rett opp til EMI nivå igjen (1,50,-)

Andre meglere trekker frem skattekrav saken der REC skal i retten og hvis de taper den saken så er REC konkurs.

Major1 som du ser så er det mange usikkerhets faktorer i REC og derfor en veldig spennende trading aksje (synes jeg da)


Major1
I dag kl 09:46
1
Store sprik garanja 0,3kr Anton Berg 3kr
Redigert 21.01.2021 kl 08:07 Du må logge inn for å svare
Slettet bruker
26.12.2018 kl 11:53 3266

Greeny du klarer å tjene penger på denne aksjen i motsetning til mange andre,tror personlig mer på konkurs en
Anton Berg sine sinnsforvirrende kursmål.
Redigert 21.01.2021 kl 08:07 Du må logge inn for å svare
Slettet bruker
26.12.2018 kl 12:34 3196

Major1: ja jeg tjener godt i å daytrade i REC med rundt pluss 400% i år også. Har de siste årene ligget stort sett mellom 300 til 400% pluss i REC gevinst. Men REC er bare en av de 3 til 5 til enhver tid OSE øres aksjene jeg trader i og så er jeg nå i tillegg long i andre 9 stk på hhv OSE 5 og Stockholm 4.

Jeg tror faktisk det kan gå begge veier for REC - rett opp mot EMI nivå på 1,50 dersom Kina mann sier null tariff den 19. eller 20. januar 2019. Hvis ikke det skjer og det blir nye år med Kina tariff så ryker REC til ATL og derfra kan det bli ille. Og ny EMI. Men la oss nå ikke ødelegge stemningen her inne med slikt negativt prat :-) Skattekravet mot REC har jeg ingen tro på. REC har et godt case der.

Jeg er jo ute nå av REC og skal bare fremover daytrade i REC. Jeg er heller ikke X-BEAR eller X-BULL -REC nå om dagen.

Det skal uansett utfall opp eller ned fortsatt presses endel saft ut av REC mandarinen fremover :-)

Fortsatt god jul til deg og dine Major1

G

Major1
I dag kl 11:53
55
Greeny du klarer å tjene penger på denne aksjen i motsetning til mange andre,tror personlig mer på konkurs en
Anton Berg sine sinnsforvirrende kursmål.
Redigert 21.01.2021 kl 08:07 Du må logge inn for å svare
Slettet bruker
26.12.2018 kl 14:29 3044

Du er artig du Greeny. +400% bare i år ja...

Dere kan gjerne poste positive og negative saker om verdensøkonomien, men dere bør ha fått med dere at REC-kursen ikke har noen sammenheng med den. Børsene har vokst i flere år nå og REC har gått motsatt vei. Er børsen grønn én dag så kan REC like godt falle 5-6%. Det samme gjelder motsatt vei. Det dere bør fokusere på er at REC kursen har falt, falt, falt og falt. Hvorfor har den gjort det? Hvorfor ville dette snu nå?

Angående Anton så har vel han knapt truffet en eneste gang med sine spådommer.
Redigert 21.01.2021 kl 08:07 Du må logge inn for å svare
Slettet bruker
26.12.2018 kl 18:51 2841

Garanja: ja du har helt rett i det du skriver .-)

Og ja du har helt rett i at jeg er artig :-)

Garanja jeg ønsker deg og dine en fortsatt god romjul.


Garanja
I dag kl 14:29
202
Du er artig du Greeny. +400% bare i år ja...
Redigert 21.01.2021 kl 08:07 Du må logge inn for å svare
Slettet bruker
27.12.2018 kl 09:19 2515

RT 0,6050 og ned bare 1,65% det er det jeg kaller stabilt sideleie for REC - så da antar jeg gulvet ligger her i dag dvs ned mot 0,6000 som er laveste på intra :-) Men siden vi snakker om REC så kan jo alt skje :-) opp eller ned :-)
Redigert 21.01.2021 kl 08:07 Du må logge inn for å svare
Slettet bruker
27.12.2018 kl 09:34 2441

Nyhet fra solsektoren etter kursraset rett over jul men det tar seg opp igjen :-)
Lenke og kopi under

https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2018/12/26/solar-stocks-dragged-down-as-market-falls/

Solar stocks dragged down as market falls
The biggest crash in the stock market in the last 10 year has hit solar stocks, but for the solar coaster this is nothing new.

DECEMBER 26, 2018 CHRISTIAN ROSELUND
FINANCE
MARKETS
MARKETS & POLICY
UNITED STATES

Image: Jaime Silva

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December has not been a pretty month for the U.S. stock market. After years of continued rising values, the S&P 500 is on track to fall 14.8% over the month December. This would mark its worst December since the nadir of the Great Depression in 1931.

Solar has not been spared in the carnage. On Christmas Eve the Invesco Solar ETF (NASDAQ: TAN) closed at 18.01 per share, a 17% fall since it peaked at $21.85 in late November. Individual stocks fared worse. Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) has taken a hammering, falling to 22% from December 13 to 24th, but even worse came for JinkoSolar (NYSE: JKS), Sunrun (NASDAQ: RUN) and SunPower (NASDAQ: SPWR), all of which fell at least 25% from December 12-13 to their close on the 24th.



However, while the market crash over the last two weeks has been unprecedented for the last decade, for solar this is not that unusual. TAN saw similar falls in October of this year, as well as in late May/early June and the end of January through early February. And each time the exchange traded fund (ETF), which carries many of the big names in solar, has rallied.

JKS’ fall in the last two weeks is only one of many the stock has seen, losing nearly 2/3 its value since a peak last November, and SPWR’s decline is not nearly as bad as it saw in the first three quarters of 2016. As for Tesla, its stock was all over the map even before Elon Musk’s $40 million tweet in August. And while TSLA has fallen and rallied in quick succession, it has stayed above $250 per share since January of last year.

And not every stock has suffered. Hanwha Q Cells (NASDAQ: HQCL), which is poised to become the 2nd-largest solar module maker in the Western Hemisphere when its Georgia factory comes online, has shown no sign that is was affected by the market slowdown – despite the spread of the collapse to Asian markets.

It is unclear how the end of the month will play out. The S&P 500 was showing signs of rallying this morning, but it is not clear yet whether this is a “dead cat bounce”, or a real recovery. Many observers are citing the government shutdown and uncertainty in the federal government due the unconventional and seeming erratic behavior of President Trump, but Bloomberg also notes that the dip is in contrast to generally strong macroeconomic signals.

And for those in solar PV, this may be just another ride on the solar coaster. It is also definitely not yet the worst fall to date for solar, as anyone who remembers the decimation in 2011 will attest to. During a nine-month period in 2011, TAN lost 70% of its value – after losing 3/4 of its value over a 5-month period during the last market collapse in late 2008.



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CHRISTIAN ROSELUND
Christian Roselund serves as Americas editor at pv magazine, and joined in 2014. Prior to this he covered global solar policy, markets and technology for Solar Server, and has written about renewable energy for CleanTechnica, German Energy Transition, Truthout, The Guardian (UK), and IEEE Spectrum.
More articles from Christian Roselund

roselund@pv-magazine.com
Redigert 21.01.2021 kl 08:07 Du må logge inn for å svare
Slettet bruker
27.12.2018 kl 09:40 2411

REC TA vister støtte på 0,57 og motstand på 0,64 :-)

Technical analysis trends
Short Term Mid-Term Long Term
Trend Bearish Neutral Bearish
Resistance 0,64 0,92 0,87
Spread/Res. -4,6% -34% -30%
Spread/Supp. 6,6% 18% 17%
Support 0,57 0,51 0,52

https://www.marketscreener.com/REC-SILICON-1413255/charts/
Redigert 21.01.2021 kl 08:07 Du må logge inn for å svare
Slettet bruker
27.12.2018 kl 10:38 2270

REC klarer seg bra og er bare ned drøye prosenten. Likevel er 20% av fredagens oppgang borte allerede. Et par tre fager med 1-2% nedgabg og vi har rykket tilbake til start akkurat slik som det pleier å være.
Redigert 21.01.2021 kl 08:07 Du må logge inn for å svare