Garpal Gumnut
Ross Island Hotel
- Joined
- 2 January 2006
- Posts
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from my ( limited ) experience it is difficult to predict big moves in MQG , sure i was lucky and moved in during the downtrend in 2011 , and reduced shortly after the SYD divestment ( but before the BHP spin-off of S32 )( swapping a slab of MQG for BHP )Been thinking seriously of shifting my pot from one bank to another since XD. However MQG is still price high, maybe I shld wait for the low 190 - 180 to enter.
getting thereBeen thinking seriously of shifting my pot from one bank to another since XD. However MQG is still price high, maybe I shld wait for the low 190 - 180 to enter.
I would agree. I'd treat MQG like a US trading bank/fund as it has a full suite of investments, advice and other add-ons that Australian "banking" stocks don't have. It may have further to fall than $180.getting there
... but maybe wait as more sweeping Trump "actions are due on 02 April with plans for broad-ranging reciprocal tariffs on all sorts of goods around the world. China is a prime target.."
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and yes it fell as low as $20 in 2011 ( and i bought some WBC @ $19.90 on the same day )I would agree. I'd treat MQG like a US trading bank/fund as it has a full suite of investments, advice and other add-ons that Australian "banking" stocks don't have. It may have further to fall than $180.
gg
That was my earlier March entry in the yearly comp for MQG @mullokintyre .I would agree. I'd treat MQG like a US trading bank/fund as it has a full suite of investments, advice and other add-ons that Australian "banking" stocks don't have. It may have further to fall than $180.
gg
Now that TDS (Tariff Disruption Shock) has been around since late 2nd April, as expected certain sectors are doing better than others.divergiberation day
close $191.27
i hope the ABC and the Albo crew don't think MQG is a soft target because Nick Moore has goneMacquarie Bank's dodgy trading may be tip of 'iceberg' for industry motivated by 'greed'
"Several sources have told the ABC that financial market participants regularly circumvent the law to improve the "bottom line", motivated by "greed".
"In the minds of the people doing it, it's probably not consciously 'we're going out to break the system' or be bad but financial people are, by their nature, innovative," professional investor and writer Danielle Ecuyer said.
"The motivation of greed — that's humanity, that's the way it works.
"If there's a more simple way to get to an optimal bottom line then they will probably pursue it.
"You see it in financial products that constantly come to the market and the industry will always look for an easier way, a better way to do something that avoids the rules.""
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