Honeywell International Inc. (HON)
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HON Forum Topics
- All Comments on HON
- General Discussion on HON
- Bargain Buys For Patient Investors - Barron's [view article]
- No Buy Recommendations - Cramer's Lightning Round (10/1/08) [view article]
- Throw Everything At It - Cramer's Mad Money (10/1/08) [view article]
- Defense Investors in Today's Volatile Markets [view article]
- Bail-out Buys - Fast Money Recap (10/1/08) [view article]
- Dogs of the Dow in the Dumpster [view article]
- 13 Defense and Aerospace Stocks to Consider [view article]
- What I'm Selling (and Buying) in the Market Turmoil [view article]
- Replacement Candidates for David Merkel's Portfolio: From AA to ZZ [view article]
- Defense Spending and the Presidential Election [view article]
- Revisions Ratios Help Uncover Hidden Gems [view article]
- The Top Dividend Paying ETFs and Stocks [view article]
Recent HON Articles
- Bargain Buys For Patient Investors - Barron's
- Defense Investors in Today's Volatile Markets
- Bail-out Buys - Fast Money Recap (10/1/08)
- 13 Defense and Aerospace Stocks to Consider
- What I'm Selling (and Buying) in the Market Turmoil
- Dogs of the Dow in the Dumpster
- Defense Spending and the Presidential Election
- Revisions Ratios Help Uncover Hidden Gems
- Hedge Fund Tracking: Clarium Capital
- The Bear Market in Aerospace & Defense
- Full List of Articles »
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sullivan
Bargain Buys For Patient Investors - Barron's [view article]
I am concerned about the safety of financial preferred stock, particularly Royal bank of scotland and would like some suggestions ReplyBargain Buys For Patient Investors - Barron's [view article]
a little more research would have offered the amount of debt that these companies have in relation to their cash position. that makes a ton of difference.i only follow one company on your list and their debt is zero. Reply
Bargain Buys For Patient Investors - Barron's [view article]
What about solid utilities yielding 6 and 7 percent? Any thoughts? ReplyBargain Buys For Patient Investors - Barron's [view article]
Well done article. Nicely researched and sensible. ReplyBargain Buys For Patient Investors - Barron's [view article]
Other than tech stocks, anything else worth looking at ?Don't have much left after all these stormy days, you know. Reply
pains
No Buy Recommendations - Cramer's Lightning Round (10/1/08) [view article]
Thankfully, this snake-oil salesman shut his mouth, for once...His picks this past year have been as atrocious as the market ..'Who needs this clown ? Only the sheep out there in tv land !
Thanks, cramer, I can pick my own losers. Your record has been no better than throwing darts, worse actually .... Reply
Throw Everything At It - Cramer's Mad Money (10/1/08) [view article]
Just a comment on the sacred cow known as "the free market". There is no such thing, and never has been, here or anywhere. The capital markets must be "policed", just like the free society is "policed" to protect you from being mugged, robbed, burgled or murdered. As most of us have now learned the hard way, even a "free market" must be policed, and obviously heavily, because of fraud, cheating and breaches of fiduciary duty. The price of a security is predicated on the 'fiction' of an efficient market, i.e., one in which all relevant information is disclosed and available. Obviously, every possible abuse, from every angle, resulted in the credit default swap debacle. The system was set up to withhold information from the public, and permit originators to "take the money and run", which they did. The absence of regulation (really "policing") ennabled huge leverage on near worthless paper which nobody had the incentive to value -- until it was too late. I'm no economist, but the "free market" is always a ready victim for greed and corruption. That's what happened here. From the original homebuyer who bought a home on terms "too good to be true", to the mortgage originator, to the purchase of the mortgage-bundled securities, to the investment bankers, to the lobbyisits, to the Congress (republican and democrat alike), to the President, to the SEC, to the other so-called watch-dog agencies --- every one of them had an essential role in the credit crisis of today. The answer: Immediate and heavy government involvement in the fix -- whatever it takes. That includes re-casting mortgages based on current home values with fixed rate mortgages to create a floor on home prices -- the root of the whole pitiful business. Socialism? Just a label. We've had alleged 'socialism' for decades. Without it, you'd have elderly dying on the streets like in old Calcutta. Ask any Republican if he/she is unhappy with their Medicare, and instead would prefer to be saddled with a $ 400,000 hospital bill when they are 86 years old. Not a one would give it up. Getting health care is not the same as buying a car. Health care is not a commodity. ReplyDefense Investors in Today's Volatile Markets [view article]
BA workers, look at GM & Ford, don't take your job for granted, pretty soon you may see the same result just like other struggling businesses, either "DEAD or OUT" !!!Reply
Throw Everything At It - Cramer's Mad Money (10/1/08) [view article]
Jim Cramer is just another idiot Democrat that somehow made some money on Wall Street. He now spends his time, like a true liberal, trying to tell other people what to do with their money. The bailout bill that passed has NOT addressed the fundamental problem which is political interference in the free market system. Barney Frank, Chris Dodd, Franklin Raines and Jamie Garelick, for starters, should be placed in stocks (the old kind made of wood) in front of the Capitol so the public can urinate on them as they go in to beg for more money from the state. The coming inflation that a Jim Cramer-approved money prining mania guarantees will be a terrible sight to behold. Thanks, Jim! Great analysis! ReplyThrow Everything At It - Cramer's Mad Money (10/1/08) [view article]
Bill-p---I do believe your specialty might continue in the computer game sphere, or run for Congress, based upon your suggested craving, to give away individual American's earnings. Just a thought!
Also, have you added enough zeros to your computation?
Just a thought.
of Reply
fleet
No Buy Recommendations - Cramer's Lightning Round (10/1/08) [view article]
Cramer should stop with the doom and gloom and get more constructive. Panic selling good stocks at a loss isn't going to accomplish much unless you need the tax write off.Cramer gets it wrong just as often as he gets it right. The July 15 bottom on WB was just one example. He owns up to the mistakes when he makes them, but you still own the losses.
Would I sell ACI at 27? No. Would I sell NOV at 40? No. Would I sell FWLT at 30? No. Would I sell JOYG at 37? No. Would I sell MOS at 40? No. While I may not add to positions until the market settles down, I certainly wouldn't panic and sell companies with strong fundamentals, healthy balance sheets, and excellent management for a loss. I'd just put them away and take a look again in 18 months.
BTW ---- Both Biden and Palin were pro the use of all alternative energy including cleaner burning coal in the debate. ACI is a buy.
Reply
Throw Everything At It - Cramer's Mad Money (10/1/08) [view article]
i have a better idea than handing out billions of dollars to people that have already proved they can't balance their own checkbooks. let's suppose there are 380 million people in this country and the government gives each and every one a measly one million dollars. instead of giving it to the top teir and letting it "trickle down" let's let it trickle up. this would end a multitude of government assistance programs such as unemployment, child support from deadbeat dads,and welfair to name a few. all the while allowing people to buy the houses they have dreamed about, the retirement trat has been stolen from them etc.etc. etc. this as they spend them money it would "trickle up to bankers, insurance brokers and yes wall street. this plan is not foolproof but it would be cheaper and easier to fix and help those who had nothing to do with the original problem to start with. think of the money the government would save just on public assistance programs alone. just a thought. any other suggestions? ReplyThrow Everything At It - Cramer's Mad Money (10/1/08) [view article]
Correction.....I meant the guy that leads the department of energy needs to go. ReplyThrow Everything At It - Cramer's Mad Money (10/1/08) [view article]
Sorry.......i was talking about KBR above. I am a supporter of the free market system. But with the mess we are in right now the people that just say let them fail are morons. People will lose the rest of their nest eggs, 401 Ks will evaporate, people will lose their jobs, things we must avoid. I think this bailout plan is horrible but I don't think we have a choice. What I do want is an effective bailout without all the extra crap that I have heard them trying to put into it. This pork has got to stop! If they need more time then its worth it to get the bill right. But the way the democrats and republicans have been its really hard to think they are able to do anything right. But again I don't think we have a choice. Both parties let us down AGAIN.....people need to start taking this stuff more serious. Barney Frank needs to go....Christopher Dodd needs to go......Chris Cox needs to go.......Bush will be gone.....Pelosi is a joke as is Harry Reid.....the Dep of Energy needs to go.....the guy who leads the transportation department needs to go.....not mentioning a whole lot more of the republicans and democrats in the congress and senate that act like they are looking out for us when all they care about is keeping their jobs and the power that goes with it. Until people stand up and start getting rid of these cockroaches these things will continue to happen. The people of this great country will continue to suffer because who is looking out for us?......not many I tell you that. ReplyThrow Everything At It - Cramer's Mad Money (10/1/08) [view article]
I think its a pretty good long term investment. But I would wait just a little bit. I think it has more to fall. Reply