
This (7:19) video contrasts the Swinging Jazz era and the Stock Industry Crash amid social upheaval for the duration of the late 1920s. Pay a visit to MY Internet site / NEW Image STORY BOOK www.biodisc-media.com THANK YOU JOE Audio medley consists of clips by Jan Garber, Amos and Andy, Helen Kane, Hal Kemp, Amelia Earhart, Gracie Fields, Fred Waring, Cecil and Sally, Duke Ellington, Bessie Smith, Jimmy Rodgers, Carter Household, Louis Armstrong, Eddie Cantor, Annette Hankshaw, Nick Lucas. FOR EDUCATIONAL, NONPROFIT, NONCOMMERCIAL USE ONLY.
Video Rating: 4 / five
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Thank you for your assistance!,News post: stock market for novices ..
Stock Market place Crash Pit Audio As The Market Goes Into Meltdown 2010 This guys is going completely NUTS! FFT Site : bit.ly


July 22nd, 2011 - 14:24
I was in the Good News musical!
Loved it
July 22nd, 2011 - 15:20
Superb film, and great soundtrack to that amazing decade.well done, faved
July 22nd, 2011 - 15:22
I KNOW THE FIRST SONG, BUT CANT REMEMBER THE NAME! and who recorded it , Can You tell me? And is there any way of posting the whole song? AWESOME VIDEO BY THE WAY!
July 22nd, 2011 - 15:29
Loved Helen Kanes Part Then right after Helens part the Charlston played
July 22nd, 2011 - 15:40
Brilliant love this thanks so much.
July 22nd, 2011 - 16:16
Can’t say why I’m surfing flash crash today. Very few credit Ben Lichtenstein, founder of Traders Audio for this squawk. He has long experience on the trading floor but is not a pit trader.
For help with terminology, find the Traders Audio site and read the Glossary. They have a youtube channel too – check it out and you will see Ben was easier to understand during the flashcrash than during slower times.
BTW, I would love to have Ben as a neighbor – he’s a bit hyper but an ethical guy.
July 22nd, 2011 - 16:53
how do u understand and learn the lingo?
July 22nd, 2011 - 17:35
@JP5466,
what are you talking about? the guy is a pit trader. don’t be so ignorant.
July 22nd, 2011 - 18:04
you think thats bad watch what is coming soon the black swan is about to rear it head for a far bigger move down trust me ….. al trader from london
July 22nd, 2011 - 18:33
laughing my head off
July 22nd, 2011 - 18:57
Yes, I have talking about the fall of American markets & the USD for over a decade This video is scary!!!
July 22nd, 2011 - 19:53
@eighteenin78 – Thank you for taking the time to try to explain
this stuff for us “simple folk”. It’s all Greek to me (no pun intended).
And I was eighteen in 80. : )
July 22nd, 2011 - 20:45
Though I don’t understand what this guy was saying (does “traded” mean selling or sold and “handles” are????), regardless, you sure can hear the hysteria in his voice. I’m surprised he didn’t have a stroke on the spot!!
July 22nd, 2011 - 20:58
@jamesandhoa I have given a quick lesson today in the language of futures trading.
July 22nd, 2011 - 21:52
@aoxomoxoadead A Handle – explained in my posting today
July 22nd, 2011 - 22:13
This trader will be totally spooked when THERE ARE NO BIDS at all. Or if last trade was 1070.00 and the highest bid price is 800, or 600 or 200. When the markets are in a super panic, there are no bids at the support side of the market. If this condition persists for an hour, the markets would close, and they may not reopen. Day’s limit is the maximum spread a contract can trade above or below the previous day’s close. This limit amount is set by the futures exchange.
July 22nd, 2011 - 23:05
this guy is quoting full 100 point gaps 96 even bid AT 98 even offered which means here 1096.00(Bid) AT1098.00 (Offered)… A Handle is the full prefix number before the decimal point. 1076, 1077, 1078 … 1164. When the future is trading down 64 handles he means the index contracts are trading at say 1099 from the previous day’s close which were 1163.00.
July 22nd, 2011 - 23:28
Continued) Normally, index futures are bid E.g. 1165.20 and the offered quote is usually a couple of cents higher E.g. Offered at 1165.22 Orderly trading occurs when the bid and offer is within a few “cents” above the bid price. But in panic sells, (or panic short covering buys) the market can become seriously non liquid, when the gap between bid and asked expands to 20 or 40 basis points. In this case…
July 22nd, 2011 - 23:31
I think this is a futures contract on the S&P 500 index – probably the most liquid which would be either the May10 or June10 contract.. The S&P 500 index stood at 1163 at the start of trading on May 6th. It fell throughout the day to about 1140 by 2pm EDT. This would have been the ten minutes from 2:40pm to 2:50pm when the S&P 500 index plunged to 1065, and then recouperated to end the day at about 1123. Cont’d..
July 23rd, 2011 - 00:16
@skazhiprivet This guy doesn’t have a voice left by the time he gets home.
July 23rd, 2011 - 00:23
Lets PRAY for USA Economics
July 23rd, 2011 - 00:29
i don’t really understand this stuff… does this mean a lot of people lost a lot of money and won’t get it back?
July 23rd, 2011 - 00:38
They bailed out the Euro today and guaranteed Greece to the tune of a trillion dollars – the market (Dow) went up by over $400. Are people nuts??!!! How could this have been good news? Fixing a debt problem by going farther in Debt??? What do you think it means?
July 23rd, 2011 - 00:45
Does anyone know what a handle is?
July 23rd, 2011 - 01:13
@imcontraire I want to know the answer to this question also.
July 23rd, 2011 - 01:40
@germans1 preparation is great. Prepare for the worst, expect the best…
its a win win situation.
July 23rd, 2011 - 02:08
Is this the new version of ‘Ten green bottles’?
July 23rd, 2011 - 02:40
Shouldn’t you credit the original source of the audio rather than passing this off as your own?
Tyler Durden at Zero Hedge posted this audio on 7 May 2010..
July 23rd, 2011 - 03:09
@JP5466 Thanks for your response; what you’ve said makes as much sense as anythiing I’ve come across. I agree with you that something bad is on the horizon, but am not certain whether it will be high inflation as the money-printing machine keeps working faster, or a huge crash because no amount of money printing can outrace an impending collapse in value of the worthless assets (derivatives & bad debt, mainly) now bolstering so many balance sheets. What do you think?
July 23rd, 2011 - 03:14
I would like your opinion. I have a 401k with up matching funds (100%) up to a 5% contribution at work. I’m in gold/silver mining mutual funds and stocks, and an oil mutual fund. When this happened I lost approx. 3% in one day. Is it better to just take out a loan and invest in hard assets–silver eagles gold coins and stash it someplace so I have possession, or continue investing in the market as is? Thanks,