Bin Laden Death Effect on the Stock Market

The stock market is about financials, corporations, the economy and our belief about future events. So what does that have to do with Osama Bin Laden? The answer lies in the effect of his cowardly act on September 11, 2001, but it also is reflected in how our fellow citizens reacted to move on from this act of war and show the world that the U.S. is open for business.

America saw its population scared, angry, sad and on the defensive. Yet, our leaders took the offensive and declared that we would not be victims.

Save havens around the globe were eliminated. Taliban leaders in Afghanistan found that their decision to give Osama Bin Laden safe passage found out that they paid for their decision with their loss of their authority, their leadership and their lives.

President Barack Obama stated that operatives conducted the operation at his direction, and took out Osama Bin Laden upon discovery and confirmation of his location.

Since Bin Laden’s greatest travesty created such global uproar, it is important to examine the impact of what he did to global markets. It is widely understood that the impact of the 9/11 actions caused irreparable harm to a number of U.S. and global corporations, not to mention the permanent impact on the families who lost loved ones.

Unfortunately, we expect that gains resulting from news of his death will be substantially dwarfed by news of his actions. Still, we cannot help but to be excited that one of the most notorious enemies of freedom has finally been removed from influence.

As a consumer protection organization that is committed to the protection of the American way of life, the strength of our economy, the influence of our leaders and the spirit of the American people, we are thrilled that justice has finally been served. Osama Bin Laden may have died in a firefight, but he died like the dog that he was. U.S. Navy Seals took him out during a helicopter operation in Abbottabad, Pakistan. That’s a stone’s throw from the capital of Islamabad.

Expectations are that simply the news of Bin Laden’s death may be enough by itself to help nations, the corporations that employ us, and families that have been influenced in one way or another heal from the devastating acts that occurred nearly ten years ago. Mondays can be an interesting start to stock trading, but let us be asured that Monday, May 2 will be a great day in the markets. For those of us who never celebrated May Day outside of elementary school, let’s remember May Day 2011! Thank you to our troops and our leaders, past and present!

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