Fannie Mae (Seite 2000)
eröffnet am 11.07.08 16:23:04 von
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ISIN: US3135861090 · WKN: 856099 · Symbol: FNM
1,3600
EUR
0,00 %
0,0000 EUR
Letzter Kurs 24.04.24 Tradegate
Werte aus der Branche Finanzdienstleistungen
Wertpapier | Kurs | Perf. % |
---|---|---|
0,6800 | +312,12 | |
0,5300 | +17,78 | |
12,300 | +14,37 | |
1,7235 | +14,33 | |
24,800 | +9,73 |
Wertpapier | Kurs | Perf. % |
---|---|---|
1,5000 | -23,08 | |
3,0000 | -24,91 | |
0,7500 | -25,00 | |
17,850 | -30,00 | |
1,5000 | -90,00 |
Beitrag zu dieser Diskussion schreiben
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 35.036.511 von Airwave72 am 09.09.08 15:09:08Dein Chart ist aber nicht RT..gell
856099 FRA 0,576 2.000 2.274.305 15:08
856099 FRA 0,576 2.000 2.274.305 15:08
Noch wer günstig rein??
RT Frankfurt...mal billiger mal teurer...wie immer gibt es keinen besten Zeitpunkt...
856099 FRA 0,56 24.370 2.262.305 15:05 09.09.
856099 FRA 0,56 24.370 2.262.305 15:05 09.09.
So jetzt sind wie erst mal auf Fast Schlußkurs gestern...alles andere bleibt abzuwarten...high Risk
Pre-Market
Last: $ .793 Pre-Market
High: $ .96
Pre-Market
Volume: 2,786,854 Pre-Market
Low: $ .79
Pre-Market
Time (ET) Pre-Market
Price Pre-Market
Share Volume
09:05 $ .793 1,000
09:05 $ .793 1,000
09:05 $ .7922 4,950
09:05 $ .79 300
09:05 $ .79 300
09:05 $ .7921 2,000
09:05 $ .7921 5,050
09:05 $ .79 100
09:05 $ .79 1,000
09:05 $ .79 5,000
09:05 $ .79 100
09:05 $ .79 100
09:05 $ .79 300
09:05 $ .79 5,000
09:05 $ .7921 4,900
09:05 $ .791 19,350
09:05 $ .79 15,000
09:05 $ .79 2,000
09:05 $ .79 22,950
09:05 $ .79 2,550
09:05 $ .79 5,000
09:05 $ .79 100
09:05 $ .79 5,000
09:05 $ .79 300
09:05 $ .79 1,000
09:05 $ .79 3,500
09:05 $ .79 950
09:04 $ .80 665
09:04 $ .80 100
09:04 $ .80 300
09:04 $ .80 100
09:04 $ .80 1,000
09:04 $ .80 19,000
09:04 $ .80 1,000
09:04 $ .80 1,500
09:04 $ .80 100
09:04 $ .80 5,000
09:04 $ .793 1,000
09:03 $ .792 600
09:03 $ .792 400
09:03 $ .792 4,600
09:03 $ .80 1,900
09:03 $ .799 6,100
09:03 $ .80 4,000
09:03 $ .80 4,000
09:03 $ .80 4,000
09:03 $ .80 400
09:03 $ .80 2,000
09:03 $ .80 100
09:03 $ .80 1,500
Pre-Market
Last: $ .793 Pre-Market
High: $ .96
Pre-Market
Volume: 2,786,854 Pre-Market
Low: $ .79
Pre-Market
Time (ET) Pre-Market
Price Pre-Market
Share Volume
09:05 $ .793 1,000
09:05 $ .793 1,000
09:05 $ .7922 4,950
09:05 $ .79 300
09:05 $ .79 300
09:05 $ .7921 2,000
09:05 $ .7921 5,050
09:05 $ .79 100
09:05 $ .79 1,000
09:05 $ .79 5,000
09:05 $ .79 100
09:05 $ .79 100
09:05 $ .79 300
09:05 $ .79 5,000
09:05 $ .7921 4,900
09:05 $ .791 19,350
09:05 $ .79 15,000
09:05 $ .79 2,000
09:05 $ .79 22,950
09:05 $ .79 2,550
09:05 $ .79 5,000
09:05 $ .79 100
09:05 $ .79 5,000
09:05 $ .79 300
09:05 $ .79 1,000
09:05 $ .79 3,500
09:05 $ .79 950
09:04 $ .80 665
09:04 $ .80 100
09:04 $ .80 300
09:04 $ .80 100
09:04 $ .80 1,000
09:04 $ .80 19,000
09:04 $ .80 1,000
09:04 $ .80 1,500
09:04 $ .80 100
09:04 $ .80 5,000
09:04 $ .793 1,000
09:03 $ .792 600
09:03 $ .792 400
09:03 $ .792 4,600
09:03 $ .80 1,900
09:03 $ .799 6,100
09:03 $ .80 4,000
09:03 $ .80 4,000
09:03 $ .80 4,000
09:03 $ .80 400
09:03 $ .80 2,000
09:03 $ .80 100
09:03 $ .80 1,500
Kann durchaus Sprünge von + - 30 % geben diese Tage....aber abgerechnet wird zum Schluß...so oder so ??!!!
Also keep cool und einfach abwarten was passiert
Also keep cool und einfach abwarten was passiert
9.09.2008 13:49
IWF: Fannie Mae u. Freddie Mac benötigen Sanierung
Washington (BoerseGo.de) - Durch die von der US-Regierung vorgenommene Rettung der beiden Hypothekenfinanzierungsriesen Fannie Mae (News) und Freddie Mac gelangt gemäß dem IWF-Vizedirektor John Lipsky der US-Hausmarkt zu Stabilität. Aber die beiden Konzerne müssten letztendlich einer Restrukturierung unterzogen und die Marktdisziplin wieder hergestellt werden. Weiters müssten steuerliche Kosten minimiert und künftige Risiken limitiert werden. Fannie Mae und Freddie Mac (News) seien zur Zeit im Niemandsland zwischen staatlichen und privaten Eigentum anzusiedeln und dieser Umstand bedürfe einer Lösung, führte Lipsky im Rahmen einer Rede in Frankfurt weiter aus.
IWF: Fannie Mae u. Freddie Mac benötigen Sanierung
Washington (BoerseGo.de) - Durch die von der US-Regierung vorgenommene Rettung der beiden Hypothekenfinanzierungsriesen Fannie Mae (News) und Freddie Mac gelangt gemäß dem IWF-Vizedirektor John Lipsky der US-Hausmarkt zu Stabilität. Aber die beiden Konzerne müssten letztendlich einer Restrukturierung unterzogen und die Marktdisziplin wieder hergestellt werden. Weiters müssten steuerliche Kosten minimiert und künftige Risiken limitiert werden. Fannie Mae und Freddie Mac (News) seien zur Zeit im Niemandsland zwischen staatlichen und privaten Eigentum anzusiedeln und dieser Umstand bedürfe einer Lösung, führte Lipsky im Rahmen einer Rede in Frankfurt weiter aus.
Dank dem Kollegen...hier RT USA beide Werte ...
http://www.nasdaq.com/aspx/nasdaqlastsale.aspx?symbol=ABK&sy…
http://www.nasdaq.com/aspx/nasdaqlastsale.aspx?symbol=ABK&sy…
Posted by: THE WOOGSTER Date: Tuesday, September 09, 2008 7:33:45 AM
In reply to: None Post # of 107
Federal Bailout FNM FRE
Sep 09, 2008 (Winston-Salem Journal - McClatchy-Tribune Information Services
via COMTEX) --
American taxpayers are on the hook for the huge bailouts of mortgage giants
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in what is just another example of how our
government let us down over the past half decade.
The Congressional Budget Office estimated a while back that the bailout
could cost taxpayers $25 billion. But as more has come to be known about the
real state of the two companies, that guess is beginning to look like the
kind of bargain that $3-a-gallon gasoline would be.
Americans had better get ready, because the bailout is likely to be
enormous. And the even sadder news is that it will just go on top of an
already enormous federal deficit. We have mortgaged our future, and it will
be our children and their children who suffer because of it.
Over the weekend, the Bush administration placed the two companies in
conservatorship, a state akin to bankruptcy reorganization. While it was a
horribly distasteful action for the government to take, it was necessary. It
had no other choice. The administration could not allow the economy to
continue to slide downward.
The immediate reaction of foreign and domestic money and equity markets was
very positive. But we'll have to see if that is sustained. A number of
experts continue to call for even bolder federal action, and even optimistic
commentators are saying that this will not end the financial crisis in which
the nation is mired.
Americans had better ask themselves how the country got in this mess and
whether the answer to that doesn't tell them something about what they must
demand of their government.
The current economic crisis can be tied directly back to the government's
decision to allow the lending industry to act recklessly -- not with its own
money, but with that of other people. In the end, the excessive speculation
and greed to which the federal regulatory system had no response took us all
down.
The people hurt in this financial crisis go beyond those who borrowed more
than they could afford and lost their homes. It hurt more than those who lent
that money. It pulled down the whole economy, destroying not just the
perpetrators of the mess but a great many innocent Americans who had been
paying their mortgages on time, people with good credit.
A lot of people made a lot of money while housing prices ran up and loans
were easy. But the bubble burst, and now we're all paying to correct the
distortion that they injected into the market.
The lesson to be learned here is that the economy is too important to put in
the hands of reckless speculators. This nation needs strong laws regarding
its financial system, and it needs to enforce those laws.
That we did not have such stewardship over the past decade is the reason
we'll all be paying for this bailout.
To see more of the Winston-Salem Journal, or to subscribe to the newspaper,
go to
http://www.journalnow.com/. Copyright (c) 2008,
In reply to: None Post # of 107
Federal Bailout FNM FRE
Sep 09, 2008 (Winston-Salem Journal - McClatchy-Tribune Information Services
via COMTEX) --
American taxpayers are on the hook for the huge bailouts of mortgage giants
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in what is just another example of how our
government let us down over the past half decade.
The Congressional Budget Office estimated a while back that the bailout
could cost taxpayers $25 billion. But as more has come to be known about the
real state of the two companies, that guess is beginning to look like the
kind of bargain that $3-a-gallon gasoline would be.
Americans had better get ready, because the bailout is likely to be
enormous. And the even sadder news is that it will just go on top of an
already enormous federal deficit. We have mortgaged our future, and it will
be our children and their children who suffer because of it.
Over the weekend, the Bush administration placed the two companies in
conservatorship, a state akin to bankruptcy reorganization. While it was a
horribly distasteful action for the government to take, it was necessary. It
had no other choice. The administration could not allow the economy to
continue to slide downward.
The immediate reaction of foreign and domestic money and equity markets was
very positive. But we'll have to see if that is sustained. A number of
experts continue to call for even bolder federal action, and even optimistic
commentators are saying that this will not end the financial crisis in which
the nation is mired.
Americans had better ask themselves how the country got in this mess and
whether the answer to that doesn't tell them something about what they must
demand of their government.
The current economic crisis can be tied directly back to the government's
decision to allow the lending industry to act recklessly -- not with its own
money, but with that of other people. In the end, the excessive speculation
and greed to which the federal regulatory system had no response took us all
down.
The people hurt in this financial crisis go beyond those who borrowed more
than they could afford and lost their homes. It hurt more than those who lent
that money. It pulled down the whole economy, destroying not just the
perpetrators of the mess but a great many innocent Americans who had been
paying their mortgages on time, people with good credit.
A lot of people made a lot of money while housing prices ran up and loans
were easy. But the bubble burst, and now we're all paying to correct the
distortion that they injected into the market.
The lesson to be learned here is that the economy is too important to put in
the hands of reckless speculators. This nation needs strong laws regarding
its financial system, and it needs to enforce those laws.
That we did not have such stewardship over the past decade is the reason
we'll all be paying for this bailout.
To see more of the Winston-Salem Journal, or to subscribe to the newspaper,
go to
http://www.journalnow.com/. Copyright (c) 2008,
Freedie mittlerweile leichtes minus gehabt...
klarer Gewinner des Tages dürfte Fannie werden...hab ich auch mal Glück...
NASDAQ Last Sale
0.86 0.13 ++++17.81% Volume
881,335
klarer Gewinner des Tages dürfte Fannie werden...hab ich auch mal Glück...
NASDAQ Last Sale
0.86 0.13 ++++17.81% Volume
881,335
So sieht es bei Freedie aus !!! NASDAQ Last Sale
.89 0.01 ++1.14%
und hier FANNIE...unsere :
NASDAQ Last Sale
0.8299 0.10 +++13.70%
.89 0.01 ++1.14%
und hier FANNIE...unsere :
NASDAQ Last Sale
0.8299 0.10 +++13.70%