DividendGrowth.ca Subscribers
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subscribers [2012/01/30 19:24] tom |
subscribers [2021/07/03 18:23] admin |
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+ | ====== Subscribers ====== | ||
+ | Once your account has been set up by Denise or I, click [[subscribers: | ||
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+ | Please read this before you log in for the first time or your login might not work: | ||
+ | * **username** is all in lower case with first and last name joined by a period (tom.connolly or john.m.connolly or e.c.connolly). Use the Tab key to enter (not the enter key). | ||
+ | * **password** - Your initial password is your postal code. It is case sensitive (caps are needed) and there is a space between the first three and the last three characters. EG: K7L 2Y7. Hit the Tab key | ||
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+ | * Once you have logged in you may change your password, if we know your e-mail address. When you are changing your password, as is typical, you are asked to enter your new password twice and then confirm by entering your ' | ||
+ | * Good luck logging in: you might need it. Be patient and try again if it does not work the first time. I had to, more than once:-) Your real name, by the way, shows up in the log out area. We have a record of your real name and your username in case they are not similar. We do not know your password. | ||
+ | After entering your ' | ||
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+ | The Connolly Report PRINT edition is closed to new subscribers. | ||
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+ | Charles Ellis, author of //Winning the Loser' | ||
+ | Hope the great giving back period began in 1998. That's roughly when the yield of the stock I follow reached their nadir. If so, and we are 14 years into the bear, it will all be over sooner. | ||
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+ | Here's what I mean about behaviour control, courtesy of John Bogle speaking to the New York Society of Security Analysts. When the stock market was " | ||
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+ | It's happening all over again. Stock prices fell in 2008: valuations were below par again in early 2009. What were market participants doing, or being told to do by their advisors? Buying bonds. They think bonds are safe. There was a flight from equities. Oh my! Safety comes from the price you pay, not the instrument you buy. | ||
+ | Think. Interest rates are low. What happens to bond prices when interest rates rise? They fall. It's an inverse relationship. Read [[Financial Epochs]]. |