Bubba and the Badger discuss the hammering the markets took on Friday March 6th 2014 after the jobs number was released. They talk about how positive economic numbers can be viewed by Wall Street to be negative news and the markets react to it by selling off very quickly. Bubba comments that the ''fear Index'' did not rise on the selloff.Bubba and the Badger discuss the effect of Apple Inc. being included in the DJIA. Bubba wonders if IBM is it really a tech company anymore. The Badger talks about ''market expectation''. Bubba points out that the market had mostly negative news in February but had one of its better months in recent years. The Badger talks about the effect of a rising dollar on U.S. exports. He uses the example of car prices to support his position.Bubba asks the Badger to rank the size of the Equity markets in relation to the debt markets. The Badger points out that they are just a fraction of the debt and energy markets. Bubba and the Badger discuss the concept of spreading debt, using Greece and Germany as an example. Bubba talks about the chase for yield and how the negative interest rates are affecting the makeup of todays interest rate markets.The Badger comments on how the media loved the jobs number on Friday. However they were off base when it became apparent that the good jobs number might lead to the Fed raising short term interest rates. The Badger makes a comparison between theoretical traders and traders who are in the markets every day and their viewpoint. He comments about how it is difficult to predict future prices unless you have some metric to measure them against.