Marchés US / Wall Street : S&P 500, NASDAQ, Dow Jones
Modérateur : Administrateurs
- Fabien LABROUSSE
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GAFAM : la capture de valeur s'accélère avec la crise [Olivier Passet]
Xerfi Canal
42,2 k abonnés
Avec la crise et la rechute pandémique, plus que jamais les GAFAM sont devenus les maîtres du monde. Mais bien plus largement, c’est toute l’économie des plateformes, de la tech et de la santé qui a renforcé son ascendant sur le reste de l’économie. [...]
42,2 k abonnés
Avec la crise et la rechute pandémique, plus que jamais les GAFAM sont devenus les maîtres du monde. Mais bien plus largement, c’est toute l’économie des plateformes, de la tech et de la santé qui a renforcé son ascendant sur le reste de l’économie. [...]

La Structure (par VideoBourse) : Formation sur mesure et évolutive pour optimiser compréhension et résultats en trading
- Fabien LABROUSSE
- Administrateur
- Messages : 17712
- Inscription : 17 mars 2008, 19:41
- Localisation : Paris, France
Re: Marches US / Wall Street : S&P 500, NASDAQ, Dow Jones

La Structure (par VideoBourse) : Formation sur mesure et évolutive pour optimiser compréhension et résultats en trading
- Fabien LABROUSSE
- Administrateur
- Messages : 17712
- Inscription : 17 mars 2008, 19:41
- Localisation : Paris, France
Re: Marches US / Wall Street : S&P 500, NASDAQ, Dow Jones

La Structure (par VideoBourse) : Formation sur mesure et évolutive pour optimiser compréhension et résultats en trading
- Fabien LABROUSSE
- Administrateur
- Messages : 17712
- Inscription : 17 mars 2008, 19:41
- Localisation : Paris, France
Les actions du S&P500 valent en moyenne 27 fois leurs bénéfices - Pour rappel il s'agit d'un ratio très élevé

La Structure (par VideoBourse) : Formation sur mesure et évolutive pour optimiser compréhension et résultats en trading
- Fabien LABROUSSE
- Administrateur
- Messages : 17712
- Inscription : 17 mars 2008, 19:41
- Localisation : Paris, France
Re: Marches US / Wall Street : S&P 500, NASDAQ, Dow Jones

La Structure (par VideoBourse) : Formation sur mesure et évolutive pour optimiser compréhension et résultats en trading
- Fabien LABROUSSE
- Administrateur
- Messages : 17712
- Inscription : 17 mars 2008, 19:41
- Localisation : Paris, France
Re: Marches US / Wall Street : S&P 500, NASDAQ, Dow Jones

La Structure (par VideoBourse) : Formation sur mesure et évolutive pour optimiser compréhension et résultats en trading
- Fabien LABROUSSE
- Administrateur
- Messages : 17712
- Inscription : 17 mars 2008, 19:41
- Localisation : Paris, France
Les déficits américains vont-ils nous mener dans le mur ? [Olivier Passet]
Xerfi Canal
50,3 k abonnés
Les États-Unis seraient-ils gagnés par l’ivresse des sommets en matière de dépenses publiques ? En cumul entre mars 2020 et mars 2021, les dépenses des administrations ont augmenté de 13,5 points de PIB sur un an. C’est considérable. [...]
50,3 k abonnés
Les États-Unis seraient-ils gagnés par l’ivresse des sommets en matière de dépenses publiques ? En cumul entre mars 2020 et mars 2021, les dépenses des administrations ont augmenté de 13,5 points de PIB sur un an. C’est considérable. [...]

La Structure (par VideoBourse) : Formation sur mesure et évolutive pour optimiser compréhension et résultats en trading
- Fabien LABROUSSE
- Administrateur
- Messages : 17712
- Inscription : 17 mars 2008, 19:41
- Localisation : Paris, France
Re: Marches US / Wall Street : S&P 500, NASDAQ, Dow Jones
Impressionnant vu sous cet angle :

La Structure (par VideoBourse) : Formation sur mesure et évolutive pour optimiser compréhension et résultats en trading
- Fabien LABROUSSE
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- Messages : 17712
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- Localisation : Paris, France
L'indice S&P 500 peut-il aller à 5.000 points ?
Boursorama
53,9 k abonnés
20% de hausse pour le S&P500 depuis le début de l'année, une cinquantaine de record battus. L'indice américain peut-il aller encore plus haut d'ici la fin d el'année ? Les explications de John Plassard, spécialiste en investissement chez Mirabaud. Ecorama du 3 septembre 2021, présenté par David Jacquot sur Boursorama.com
53,9 k abonnés
20% de hausse pour le S&P500 depuis le début de l'année, une cinquantaine de record battus. L'indice américain peut-il aller encore plus haut d'ici la fin d el'année ? Les explications de John Plassard, spécialiste en investissement chez Mirabaud. Ecorama du 3 septembre 2021, présenté par David Jacquot sur Boursorama.com

La Structure (par VideoBourse) : Formation sur mesure et évolutive pour optimiser compréhension et résultats en trading
- Fabien LABROUSSE
- Administrateur
- Messages : 17712
- Inscription : 17 mars 2008, 19:41
- Localisation : Paris, France
D'après le sondage réalisé par Deutsche Bank auprès de 600 institutionnels dans le monde

La Structure (par VideoBourse) : Formation sur mesure et évolutive pour optimiser compréhension et résultats en trading
- Fabien LABROUSSE
- Administrateur
- Messages : 17712
- Inscription : 17 mars 2008, 19:41
- Localisation : Paris, France
“mais à quoi joue le #NASDAQ100 , qui multiplie les pièges ?”, s'interroge Alexandre Baradez @ABaradez de @IGFrance

La Structure (par VideoBourse) : Formation sur mesure et évolutive pour optimiser compréhension et résultats en trading
- Fabien LABROUSSE
- Administrateur
- Messages : 17712
- Inscription : 17 mars 2008, 19:41
- Localisation : Paris, France
Analyse NASDAQ par Lionel DUVERGER de Portzamparc

La Structure (par VideoBourse) : Formation sur mesure et évolutive pour optimiser compréhension et résultats en trading
- Fabien LABROUSSE
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- Messages : 17712
- Inscription : 17 mars 2008, 19:41
- Localisation : Paris, France
L'évolution du S&P500 sur les 100 dernière année ainsi que les évènements marquants qui ont eu lieu

La Structure (par VideoBourse) : Formation sur mesure et évolutive pour optimiser compréhension et résultats en trading
- Fabien LABROUSSE
- Administrateur
- Messages : 17712
- Inscription : 17 mars 2008, 19:41
- Localisation : Paris, France
6 CHOSES à savoir avant d'investir sur le SP500
(
6 choses à savoir sur le SP500 avant d'investir.
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00:00 Introduction
00:06 Sujet
9:56 Conclusion
10:43 La formation sur les ETF
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Les trois plateformes que j'utilise pour investir chaque mois :
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(
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Les vidéos et le contenu distribués par ma chaîne « Julien - Investir en Bourse » sont créés à des fins exclusivement pédagogiques, éducatives et informatives et ne sont pas un conseil en investissement.
Toutes les informations que je donne dans mes vidéos représentent mon avis et ce que je pense à titre personnel.
Je ne suis pas un conseiller financier ou un professionnel et vous devez savoir qu'investir son argent comporte des risques de perte dont vous êtes le seul responsable.
Vous trouverez ci-dessous des études de l'AMF qu’il est pour moi nécessaire d’étudier avant de commencer à investir en bourse :
Certains liens dans la description sont des liens d'affiliation pour lesquels je peux recevoir une rémunération de la part de sites partenaires.
Lien de la vidéo bilan de la semaine au niveau des marchés : https://youtu.be/YqH4dfm22VE

La Structure (par VideoBourse) : Formation sur mesure et évolutive pour optimiser compréhension et résultats en trading
Faut-il acheter Nasdaq après le split ?
Hello, voici mon analyse sur le split de Nasdaq : faut-il acheter, et si oui, avant ou après le split ?
Michel de https://www.trading-attitude.com
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Re: Faut-il acheter Nasdaq après le split ?
en général je suis d'accord avec votre point de vue
- Fabien LABROUSSE
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Point de Marché SP500 - 17.10.2022
Analyse pré-ouverture du Futures SP500.
Revue complète des éléments techniques et fondamentaux : contexte éco, news, métriques optionnelles, niveaux de support et résistance, volatilité, price action, etc.
Abonnez-vous et likez si vous aimez !
Revue complète des éléments techniques et fondamentaux : contexte éco, news, métriques optionnelles, niveaux de support et résistance, volatilité, price action, etc.
Abonnez-vous et likez si vous aimez !

La Structure (par VideoBourse) : Formation sur mesure et évolutive pour optimiser compréhension et résultats en trading
Wall Street's Complexity versus Investors' Profits & Simplicity
Wall Street's Complexity versus Investors' Profits & Simplicity
“Any darn fool can make something complex; it takes a genius to make something simple.” -- Pete Seeger
As a long-time trader, I am living breathing proof that simplicity and profits are positively correlated while complexity and profits are inversely correlated. In other words, as my 25 year investing career has jettisoned multiple methodologies and numerous indicators, my profits have became more regular and predictable while my losing ratio has diminished. This is the absolute antithesis of what Wall Street wants you to believe.
Wall Street lives and breathes on complexity. They pitch derivatives of every variety and alternative funds for specific self-serving reasons.
1. They want to convince investors that it’s far too complicated for them to manage their own money – therefore, the wisest decision is for investors to just give it to Wall Street managers instead.
2. They try to assure you that with this complexity come “insider” rates of returns and big profits. But then can you explain to me why so many university endowments and retirement funds are closing out their hedge fund positions? Because the returns have not justified the risks, losses and complexity.
3. Wall Street loves to use the cliché, “you get what you pay for” as justification for higher fees. So then, can you explain to me again why so many academic studies have concluded that no load mutual funds outperform advisor-recommended loaded mutual funds? The fact is that investors often do not get what they pay for.
gold signal
The catalyst for this week’s rant is that I cleaned out a closet with my old trading binders from over 20 years ago and was stunned by two observations. The first thing I realized was that I had been so vulnerable to believing Wall Street’s siren song of complexity. The second thing was that it was obvious my trading methodology back then was unnecessarily complicated.
To most individual investors, it seems counterintuitive when I preach my doctrine of simplicity, but it is precisely this simplicity that empowers you to outperform the professional money managers. Layer on top of that my other sermon that no one will manage your money with the same passion and commitment as you yourself and you have the magic ingredients for achieving consistent success as a stock market investor.
gold signals
Wall Street is based on its own version of Yin & Yang as opposites and contrary forces are actually interconnected and interdependent. In simplest terms, the market is made up of buyers and sellers, load and no load funds, passive and managed strategies. The complexity and simplicity paradigm is just another example. Much like life, one must decide to embrace the light or the dark, the hot or the cold, the high or low. So too, as an investor, you must choose between the dichotomies that Wall Street offers you.
I am simply sharing the experiences of my own journey as an investor. As I embraced the mantra of simplification in my investment methodology and my trading tools, my net worth grew. My relatively small basket of 10 technical indicators and the Tensile Trading approach that I’ve written so much about are living testimonials to this mantra.
Albert Einstein famously said, “If I had one hour to save the world, I would spend 55 minutes defining the problem and five minutes implementing the solution.” If you were in a life threatening situation and had only one hour before it proved fatal, what would you do? Einstein said he’d spend his time wisely asking probing questions to understand the problem in depth. Having done that, he’d only need 5 minutes to address the issue.
Many new investors I meet in my classes totally flip around Dr. Einstein’s approach. They have an unstoppable inclination to jump right into the market, metaphorically speaking. They’ll trade impulsively for the first 55 minutes and then allocate the last 5 minutes trying to figure out what just happened.
Humor me, please. Just go with this. Place your hands on the table, turn down the lights and let’s invite Albert Einstein to our séance to give us his advice. If it was indeed possible to “channel” him, I suspect he would suggest approaching the market’s first 55 minutes more like this:
gold trading strategy
You have accumulated certain assets. Ask yourself if they are safe. Dr. Einstein would challenge you to address asset protection, first and foremost. Issues such as insurance, estate planning, identification theft, tax planning, record keeping and the like. You have to secure what you’ve got.
Next, he would ask if you had thought through personal money management questions and committed yourself to a personal trading plan in writing. It’s shocking how few investors actually do this. Einstein’s objective here would be to make certain you grasp the full scope of the problem.
“Any darn fool can make something complex; it takes a genius to make something simple.” -- Pete Seeger
As a long-time trader, I am living breathing proof that simplicity and profits are positively correlated while complexity and profits are inversely correlated. In other words, as my 25 year investing career has jettisoned multiple methodologies and numerous indicators, my profits have became more regular and predictable while my losing ratio has diminished. This is the absolute antithesis of what Wall Street wants you to believe.
Wall Street lives and breathes on complexity. They pitch derivatives of every variety and alternative funds for specific self-serving reasons.
1. They want to convince investors that it’s far too complicated for them to manage their own money – therefore, the wisest decision is for investors to just give it to Wall Street managers instead.
2. They try to assure you that with this complexity come “insider” rates of returns and big profits. But then can you explain to me why so many university endowments and retirement funds are closing out their hedge fund positions? Because the returns have not justified the risks, losses and complexity.
3. Wall Street loves to use the cliché, “you get what you pay for” as justification for higher fees. So then, can you explain to me again why so many academic studies have concluded that no load mutual funds outperform advisor-recommended loaded mutual funds? The fact is that investors often do not get what they pay for.
gold signal
The catalyst for this week’s rant is that I cleaned out a closet with my old trading binders from over 20 years ago and was stunned by two observations. The first thing I realized was that I had been so vulnerable to believing Wall Street’s siren song of complexity. The second thing was that it was obvious my trading methodology back then was unnecessarily complicated.
To most individual investors, it seems counterintuitive when I preach my doctrine of simplicity, but it is precisely this simplicity that empowers you to outperform the professional money managers. Layer on top of that my other sermon that no one will manage your money with the same passion and commitment as you yourself and you have the magic ingredients for achieving consistent success as a stock market investor.
gold signals
Wall Street is based on its own version of Yin & Yang as opposites and contrary forces are actually interconnected and interdependent. In simplest terms, the market is made up of buyers and sellers, load and no load funds, passive and managed strategies. The complexity and simplicity paradigm is just another example. Much like life, one must decide to embrace the light or the dark, the hot or the cold, the high or low. So too, as an investor, you must choose between the dichotomies that Wall Street offers you.
I am simply sharing the experiences of my own journey as an investor. As I embraced the mantra of simplification in my investment methodology and my trading tools, my net worth grew. My relatively small basket of 10 technical indicators and the Tensile Trading approach that I’ve written so much about are living testimonials to this mantra.
Albert Einstein famously said, “If I had one hour to save the world, I would spend 55 minutes defining the problem and five minutes implementing the solution.” If you were in a life threatening situation and had only one hour before it proved fatal, what would you do? Einstein said he’d spend his time wisely asking probing questions to understand the problem in depth. Having done that, he’d only need 5 minutes to address the issue.
Many new investors I meet in my classes totally flip around Dr. Einstein’s approach. They have an unstoppable inclination to jump right into the market, metaphorically speaking. They’ll trade impulsively for the first 55 minutes and then allocate the last 5 minutes trying to figure out what just happened.
Humor me, please. Just go with this. Place your hands on the table, turn down the lights and let’s invite Albert Einstein to our séance to give us his advice. If it was indeed possible to “channel” him, I suspect he would suggest approaching the market’s first 55 minutes more like this:
gold trading strategy
You have accumulated certain assets. Ask yourself if they are safe. Dr. Einstein would challenge you to address asset protection, first and foremost. Issues such as insurance, estate planning, identification theft, tax planning, record keeping and the like. You have to secure what you’ve got.
Next, he would ask if you had thought through personal money management questions and committed yourself to a personal trading plan in writing. It’s shocking how few investors actually do this. Einstein’s objective here would be to make certain you grasp the full scope of the problem.
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- Inscription : 02 déc. 2022, 10:41
Re: Faut-il acheter Nasdaq après le split ?
Je partage globalement votre point de vue. drift boss
Re: Faut-il acheter Nasdaq après le split ?
Bonjour,
Belle vidéo explicative et je suis également du même avis que vous
Belle vidéo explicative et je suis également du même avis que vous

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Re: Faut-il acheter Nasdaq après le split ?
Nicely done explanation, and I concur with you.
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- Inscription : 23 nov. 2019, 16:53
Top Companies by Market Cap
Top Companies by Market Cap
By market capitalization, as of January 2022, Apple (AAPL) is the biggest company at $2.652 trillion, followed by Microsoft (MSFT) at $2.222 trillion, Google (GOOGL) at $1.725 trillion, Amazon.com (AMZN) at $1.446 trillion, Tesla (TSLA) at $947.92 billion, and Meta (META), formerly Facebook, at $843.34 billion.
2
Back in 2007, Chinese energy giant PetroChina (PTR) reached an estimated market value of around $1 trillion. However, this valuation didn't stick. As of January 2022, PTR's market capitalization stood at just $146.95 billion.
3
Top Companies by Revenue
In terms of the biggest global companies by revenue, Walmart (WMT) comes in as number one—according to the Fortune 500 list. Walmart's revenues were $523,964 billion in 2021. Behind Walmart was State Grid with $383,906 billion in revenues, followed by Amazon with $280,522 billion, and China National Petroleum at $379,130 billion.
By market capitalization, as of January 2022, Apple (AAPL) is the biggest company at $2.652 trillion, followed by Microsoft (MSFT) at $2.222 trillion, Google (GOOGL) at $1.725 trillion, Amazon.com (AMZN) at $1.446 trillion, Tesla (TSLA) at $947.92 billion, and Meta (META), formerly Facebook, at $843.34 billion.
2
Back in 2007, Chinese energy giant PetroChina (PTR) reached an estimated market value of around $1 trillion. However, this valuation didn't stick. As of January 2022, PTR's market capitalization stood at just $146.95 billion.
3
Top Companies by Revenue
In terms of the biggest global companies by revenue, Walmart (WMT) comes in as number one—according to the Fortune 500 list. Walmart's revenues were $523,964 billion in 2021. Behind Walmart was State Grid with $383,906 billion in revenues, followed by Amazon with $280,522 billion, and China National Petroleum at $379,130 billion.
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Amazon Games Unveils New World Season 4: Frost Eternal
Amazon Games Unveils
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Re: Faut-il acheter Nasdaq après le split ?
J'ai été convaincue par votre partage. dinosaur game
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Regrets about Trump golf deal?
What were the circumstances surrounding the individual who brokered ?