A financial crisis is a great time for professional investors and a horrible time for average ones.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Not every business cycle has a financial crisis. Frequently they do.
Financial crises are like fireworks: they illuminate the sky even as they go pop.
The main thing during a crisis is discipline, to begin investing in time again after the crisis subsides.
Financial crises are an unfortunate but necessary consequence of modern capitalism.
There is a basic lesson on financial crises that governments tend to wait too long, underestimate the risks, want to do too little. And it ultimately gets away from them, and they end up spending more money, causing much more damage to the economy.
Some things never change - there will be another crisis, and its impact will be felt by the financial markets.
Today the financial market is no good, but the money is there.
On Wall Street, financial crisis destroys jobs. Here in Washington, it creates them. The rest is just details.
Individual investors beware: If you're constantly worried about a crash, you're probably making some big mistakes - and losing a lot of money in the process.
The only reason investors haven't run screaming from an obviously corrupt financial marketplace is because the government has gone to such extraordinary lengths to sell the narrative that the problems of 2008 have been fixed.
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