The down market favours the small two-, three-, four-person company, not the huge company with 100 people losing half a million dollars a month.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Just because a stock is down doesn't mean it's a great buy.
A lot of companies have chosen to downsize, and maybe that was the right thing for them. We chose a different path. Our belief was that if we kept putting great products in front of customers, they would continue to open their wallets.
There's a lot of companies that profit from a weak dollar.
The corporate killer downsizing is directly responsive to what the mutual funds have wanted.
If a few companies were less greedy, the people at the bottom woud have a lot more.
In the larger companies, you have this tendency to get top-down direction.
Shareholders share in the downside and not necessarily in the upside; that's the whole story.
The chief problem with the individual investor: He or she typically buys when the market is high and thinks it's going to go up, and sells when the market is low and thinks it's going to go down.
Relatively few people should start companies.
The trend of the market is up, not down. Shorting stocks puts you against that trend and thus makes it more difficult to make money.
No opposing quotes found.