Day Trading Stocks & Futures

mohan.sic

Well-Known Member
I think why should depend govt for everything...

I think there could be numerous opportunities if we do proper research. Basically what these IT consultant companies do is, customers contact them with their problems, which could be difficulties they face in their business, and the consultant companies would derive a technological solution for it. If we research we could find out many such difficulties, profit leaking holes, gap in technology etc in big businesses. So giving them that service also is a business.
it is not about small business in service industry .... i am giving issues with start up small & semi mid level manufacturing industry..
things wont work like IT industry in the example:) .. someone gives a work from newyork and i do it here....its not the case with manufucturing.....

govts and authorities should create a system and environment and only then it happens...
 

DanPSup

Hedge Strategy Trader in Options and Futures
How Covid-19 could trigger the next step for a may possible world wide financial crises. Some thoughts and fundamentals to my question:

Corporate Bonds

A corporate bond is a type of debt instrument that is issued by a firm and sold to an investor. The company gets the cash it needs for capital and in return the investor is paid a pre-established number of interest payments at either a fixed or variable interest rate. When the bond expires, or "reaches maturity," the payments cease and the original investment is returned.

The backing for the bond is generally the ability of the company to repay, which depends on its future revenues and profitability. In some cases, the company's physical assets may be used as collateral.


Understanding corporate bonds

In the investment hierarchy, high-quality corporate bonds are considered a relatively safe and conservative investment. Investors building balanced portfolios often add bonds in order to offset riskier investments such as growth stocks. Over a lifetime, these investors tend to add more bonds and fewer risky investments in order to safeguard their accumulated capital. Retirees often invest a larger portion of their assets in bonds in order to establish a reliable income supplement.

In general, corporate bonds are considered to have a higher risk than U.S. government bonds. As a result, interest rates are almost always higher on corporate bonds, even for companies with top-flight credit quality. The difference between the yields on highly-rated corporate bonds and U.S. Treasuries is called the credit spread.


The full source you will find here: https://www.investopedia.com/terms/c/corporatebond.asp

Rating agencies did put down the level for many such companies in the past to junk bonds. As today world economies are going down because of the trigger "Covid-19", all kind of such companies could start to lose attractive to investors, as they no longer will hold such bonds in their portfolio. And here it starts. Investors start to sell those bonds, those companies do no more get money. Next those companies have to close and send there workers at home. And so on.

Following a very actual video about this topic, even it was made one year ago:

Corporate Bond Market: Catalyst For The Next Financial Crisis


DP
 

travi

Well-Known Member
Does anyone ever look at the Shanghai composite charts ? :DD

I don't understand where's all the so called growth gone.
I mean, look at any other markets chart from 2008 and we see the index would've more than doubled from those highs and multi-fold increase from the bottom.

But this is Shanghai Composite - SSE Composite Index - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SSE_Composite_Index

1585662740445.png



And this is the Shanghai SE 50 (SSE50), 50 top Bluechips - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SSE_50_Index

1585662614705.png


so can someone explain the mystery ?
 

TraderRavi

low risk profile
A coronavirus vaccine in 18 months? Experts urge reality check

By James Paton

As a young researcher in the late 1980s, Michael Kinch wanted to solve the biggest medical puzzle of the day: how to design an HIV vaccine. But dozens of well-funded labs were attacking the problem, a solution seemed easily within reach, and Kinch moved on.

More than 30 years and 30 million deaths later, there’s still no approved HIV vaccine -- a cautionary tale for anyone expecting a Covid-19 (coronavirus) vaccine within the next year, according to Kinch, a former drug developer who’s now associate vice chancellor at Washington University in St. Louis.

“There’s a built-in assumption that there will be a vaccine,” Kinch said. “We just have to go into it very sober.”

As worldwide cases surge past 750,000, governments, investors and the public are keenly watching the breakneck race to deliver coronavirus vaccines that could prevent future infections. Researchers are seen as the saviors who will deliver therapies and vaccines needed to defeat the coronavirus, and President Donald Trump has urged drugmakers to “get it done.”

Among the majority of the public, vaccines are embraced as safe and straightforward: show the virus or a key piece of it to the immune system to remember so that it’s ready when a real infection occurs. They’re typically far cheaper than drugs and can offer protection for decades, virtually for life.

But getting there is far from easy. Most vaccines go through years of tests before they hit the market; 12 to 18 months would be extraordinarily fast. The coronavirus shots moving most rapidly are made with brand-new technologies that have never proven useful in humans.

Even vaccines based on tried-and-true methods often have side effects that would limit, or prohibit, their use. SanofiNSE -0.05 %’s dengue vaccine can worsen symptoms in some people who haven’t yet been infected, restricting use, and a vaccine against Lyme disease developed by SmithKline Beecham, now GlaxoSmithKlineNSE 5.55 % Plc, was pulled in 2002 amid concerns about links to arthritis.

The world’s foremost experts in the field have seen the perils of predicting the arrival of a vaccine. In 1984, then U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Margaret Heckler said a shot to prevent HIV would be ready for testing within two years. Researchers have chased that goal ever since.

Vaccine specialists this time are turning to technology aimed at speeding up a process that has traditionally taken 10 years or more. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Director Anthony Fauci and others have predicted a coronavirus vaccine could be ready in a year to 18 months. Dozens of companies and universities around the world are pursuing a vaccine, among them Sanofi, Johnson & Johnson and Moderna Inc.

One of the front-runners, backed by the U.S. institute, is the approach used by Moderna that involves adding viral genetic material to human cells, inducing them to make proteins that spur an immune response. The U.S. company said March 16 that it treated its first patient in an early study.

The novel method is largely untested, and Holden Thorp, editor in chief of the Science family of journals, points out there are no guarantees that such messenger RNA vaccines, and others like it, will achieve their ambitious targets. Falling short could cost both society and faith in science, he said.

Double-Time

The concern is “people would get their hopes up and think that we’re going to achieve something sooner than we are, which will be demoralizing if we aren’t able to do that,” Thorp said. “Long-term, I’m worried that if science is portrayed as not coming through fast enough, that could have lasting damage.”

While similar concerns apply to new drugs, test results from Gilead Sciences Inc.’s remdesivir, first aimed at Ebola, are due next month. Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc. said earlier this month its efforts to develop a drug are ahead of schedule and it could start testing in humans this summer.

Vaccine makers will have to work double-time to try to hit their targets. The Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations, which has said it needs almost $2 billion to carry on coronavirus work, is funding at least eight potential vaccines. It’s already moving to set up a range of manufacturing platforms so they’ll be ready if one approach pans out, said Melanie Saville, director of vaccine research. Even if a shot is ready in the desired time frame, it probably won’t be formally approved and will only be available on an emergency-use basis, she said.

Vaccines must clear a higher bar than drugs to show they are safe because they’re injected into healthy individuals with the goal of preventing a disease that may never occur, Kinch said. Companies will likely push for exemptions from liabilities in case safety problems arise with coronavirus vaccines, and governments under pressure will probably acquiesce, he said. People should be “cautiously optimistic, with an emphasis upon the word cautious,” he said.

Still, the companies in the hunt are fueling optimism among investors, with Moderna shares gaining about 50% this year and another company relying on DNA-based technology, Inovio Pharmaceuticals Inc., more than doubling. Inovio plans to begin human trials in the U.S. in April, while Tianjin-based CanSino Biologics Inc. said this month that it received Chinese regulatory approval to start similar tests.

Catching Up

“People are way more optimistic than they should be,” said Dmitry Kuzmin, managing partner at 4BIO Capital, a London-based venture capital firm.

There are positive signs, as Kuzmin acknowledges. Drug companies are pushing ahead with different technologies, including more conventional methods, improving the odds and expanding the industry’s knowledge.

The mutation rate of the coronavirus also appears to be relatively low, unlike HIV, suggesting the pathogen could be “better behaved” and a vaccine could be durable, said Kinch, author of “Between Hope and Fear: A History of Vaccines and Human Immunity.” A big question is whether a shot is rendered essentially obsolete if most people are exposed to the virus before a vaccine is deployed, he said.

“I am a 100% believer in vaccines, but there’s a reality that we’re in a race against a virus and we are starting four or five laps behind,” he said. “We have to catch up.”

In the long run, an effective vaccine will likely arrive on top of therapies, but it may be intervention measures that defeat the coronavirus, said Andrew Ward, a professor and virus expert at the Scripps Research Institute. Governments around the world have imposed lockdowns and other measures in a bid to slow the spread as the death toll climbs to more than 36,000.

“This is a public health emergency, and it’s actually going to be overcome with public health measures, not with science,” he said.

https://economictimes.indiatimes.co...s-urge-reality-check/articleshow/74906798.cms
 

iwillwin

Well-Known Member
Does anyone ever look at the Shanghai composite charts ? :DD

I don't understand where's all the so called growth gone.
I mean, look at any other markets chart from 2008 and we see the index would've more than doubled from those highs and multi-fold increase from the bottom.

But this is Shanghai Composite - SSE Composite Index - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SSE_Composite_Index

View attachment 41291


And this is the Shanghai SE 50 (SSE50), 50 top Bluechips - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SSE_50_Index

View attachment 41290

so can someone explain the mystery ?
May be someone who trades foreign market and is on traderji can answer
 

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