We thought you might enjoy seeing this interview we did with Linda at our Dallas conference a few years back.
You can take one of Linda's seminars on INO TV. It's well worth it in my opinion.
Enjoy,
We thought you might enjoy seeing this interview we did with Linda at our Dallas conference a few years back.
You can take one of Linda's seminars on INO TV. It's well worth it in my opinion.
Enjoy,
There were 184 eligible entries (excluding duplicates) for the February Trader’s Blog Contest. Thank you for everyone who participated. Everyone had a strong view of which market would be 2009's "hot mover." So check back with us to see if you were the one with most market intuition.
The lucky winner of 6 seminars from our INO TV digital library was comment number 57…
Manisha S. of Irvine, California
Congrats,
The INO TV Team
WIth the markets closing on or close to their lows on Friday, this news is like pouring water on a drowing man. In other words, this is not the sort of news that is going to bolster the market.
Fasten your seat belts, it's going to be a bumpy ride.
President, INO.com
Co-creator, MarketClub
This from our business news partner AP.
By IEVA M. AUGSTUMS
AP Business Writer(AP:CHARLOTTE, N.C.) Struggling insurer American International Group Inc. will receive up to $30 billion in additional federal assistance in the fourth government rescue of the company, people familiar with the matter told The Associated Press on Sunday.
The new infusion is intended to prop up AIG _ once the world's largest insurer _ as it is expected to announce $60 billion in quarterly losses early Monday, a person said on the condition of anonymity because the discussions are still ongoing.
The company, which is considered too large to be allowed to fail, previously received about $150 billion in loans from the government, which currently holds an 80 percent stake in the company.
Under the new deal, the U.S. Treasury and the Federal Reserve would provide about $30 billion in fresh capital to AIG from the government's Troubled Assets Relief Program, or TARP. The money would be provided as a standby line of equity that AIG could tap as its losses mount, the person said.
AIG has already received $40 billion from TARP.
The new plan also calls for the Federal Reserve to take stakes in two international units, the person said.
Instead of paying back $38 billion in cash with interest that it has used from a Federal Reserve credit line, AIG now will repay that amount with equity stakes in Asia-based American International Assurance Co. and American Life Insurance Co., which operates in 50 countries.
The $20 billion to $25 billion remaining on the Federal Reserve credit line will be available for borrowing, the person said.
In order to strengthen the company, AIG also plans to combine its U.S. and foreign property-casualty insurance operations into a new unit, with a new name and separate management, the person said. About 20 percent of the property-casualty business would be taken public.
To further reduce its debt, AIG will turn $5 billion to $10 billion worth of debt into new securities backed by life insurance assets.
The decision to approve a third revision of the AIG bailout is a continued bet by the federal government that there would be even greater risk to letting AIG fail, a person familiar with the Treasury's decision told The Associated Press on Sunday.
Federal officials feared that a bankruptcy of AIG could be disastrous for the global economy, which is in worse shape than it was six months ago, the person said, requesting not to be named because the talks are ongoing. Talk of the new rescue package has been going on for several weeks, as the Treasury gained insight of AIG's quarterly performance, the person added.
AIG spokesman Nick Ashooh declined to comment on the rescue package. The Federal Reserve Bank of New York, which is handling the government loan, did not return requests for comment Sunday evening. Treasury Department spokesman Isaac Baker also declined to comment.
The company's board met Sunday to vote on the revised bailout plan.
Major credit rating agencies have already signed off on the deal, according to media reports. Without the support of the credit rating agencies, AIG would have faced crippling cuts to its ratings.
AIG has been forced to seek more help in part because of the ongoing recession and its falling stock price, now well under $1. Among its biggest problems: It can't sell assets to pay back government loans because the credit crisis is preventing would-be buyers from getting financing to complete such deals.
As of Feb. 13, AIG had sold interests in nine businesses.
In November, the U.S. government restructured previous loans provided to AIG, giving the company about $150 billion in total as part of a rescue package to help the insurer remain in business amid the worsening credit crisis. That package replaced earlier loans, including the original $85 billion lent in September, after it became apparent the insurer needed more funds.
Problems at AIG did not come from its traditional insurance operations, but instead from its financial services units, and primarily its business insuring mortgage-backed securities and other risky debt against default.
Shares of AIG closed at 42 cents on Friday. The stock, which traded at $49.50 a year ago, has lost nearly all of its value since the market meltdown began in September.
One of the oldest and most reliable of all chart formations is the Head and Shoulders Formation. This formation takes place usually after a trend has been established and in place for some time. It can in rarer instances take place in a continuation pattern and still be effective. The two formations we are going to look at today are a Head and Shoulders Top (HAST) and a Head and Shoulders Base (HASB). Both of these formations have a high degree of accuracy and usually portend a major change in direction for a market.

A normal Head and Shoulders Top (HAST) or Head and Shoulders Base (HASB) has a right shoulder, a head, a left shoulder, and a neckline. More complicated formations have double heads or double shoulders and, in some rare instances, triple shoulders. Both a Head and Shoulders Top (HAST) and a Head and Shoulders Base (HASB) have a neckline, and a Head and Shoulders formation should only be considered completed when the neckline is broken.
Once the neckline is broken, it is possible that prices can set back and retest the neckline. It is perfectly normal and healthy for a market to do this. Care must be taken that the retest of the neckline does not exceed by too much the original neckline and thereby abort the formation.
As a general rule, if the market sets back through its neckline and violates the left shoulder formation, it should be viewed as invalidating the original buy or sell signal. In order to predict the extent of a move a measurement is taken from the top part of the head to the neckline. The Head and Shoulders Target Zone (HATSZ) is created when you add or subtract this distance from the neckline, depending on whether it’s a Head and Shoulders Top (HAST) or a Head and Shoulders Base (HASB).
See how many chart formations show up in MarketClub. This type of formation occurs in stocks, futures, forex, metals and mutual fund markets.
Every Success,
President, INO.com
Co-creator, MarketClub
Jack Schwager is the kind of man that has had a career that would would fill a 20 page resume. He's done it all, and all signs point that he's not anywhere close to stopping. Currently, Schwager is the executive director of the board of Fortune Group. He is also the senior portfolio manager for the Global Fund Analysis team at Fortune and the principal investment manager of the Market Wizard Funds.
Schwager is probably best known for the many books he published in the 80s and 90s, which became classics in the financial community. With over 10 titles to his name, Schwager's books were well received and continue to sell as timeless guides to financial success.
His titles include:
A Complete Guide to the Futures Markets: Fundamental Analysis (1984)
Market Wizards: Interviews with Top Traders (1993)
The New Market Wizards: Conversations with America's Top Traders (1994)
Schwager on Futures: Fundamental Analysis (1995)
Schwager on Futures: Technical Analysis (1996)
Schwager on Futures: Managed Trading (1996)
Getting Started with Technical Analysis (1999)
Stock Market Wizards: Interviews with America's Top Stock Traders (2003)
Market Wizards: Interviews with Top Traders (2006)
Wall Street Stories: Introduction by Jack Schwager (2008)
The Market Wizard series allows individual traders to look over the shoulders of some of the world's most successful traders, investors and CEOs. These in-depth interviews explore each expert's trading career, trading philosophy and market anecdotes. Schwager attempts to identify similar characteristics and traits among this group of successful individuals.
If you haven't read the Market Wizard series, then you just have to watch the Jack Schwager's free presentation of “Market Wizard Insights,” on INO TV Free.
In this complimentary 85-minute video, Jack Schwager will talk about the Market Wizard series and give you an inside view of his finding throughout the years. Remember, you can pause, stop or replay the video anytime... so watch it at your own leisure.
If you've already signed up for our INO TV free version, just enter your email address and password and you're good to go.
Click here to watch Jack Schwager's, “Market Wizard Insight” right now.
Enjoy,
Lindsay Thompson
Director of New Business Development
INO.com & MarketClub
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