Burry SP500 going to 1800? WTF?

Lastly, what the world needs most right now isn't dollar, but food and energy, which they cannot print. In conclusion, the FED can't do anything now to prevent what is coming.
Opening pipelines, renewing oil/gas leases and other actions could do a lot to help domestic energy and lower prices. In fact, just doing those things would encourage speculators/hedgers to sell/short energy in anticipation before more energy is actually produced (just like they went long right after Biden closed Keystone). But that seems very unlikely right now.
 
I believe S&P, Indexes, have just started falling, 2008 will look like child's play. My long term commodities system short many sectors as inflation has forced pricing to go way beyond the norms. Am short the dollar and crypto too, long most other major currencies.

I seeking S&P below 1800 before I reverse.
 
The fed controls this soft landing or hard crash with interest rates. Anyone predicting a market outcome in the next 2 years is predicting what the fed will do. That's entirely political. They'll react to the screams of the masses like they always have. When you stop complaining about inflation and start complaining about a failing economy then they will rotate back to QE.

this is the correct answer
 
I think the difference between now and 2008 / 2000 is that you could get a decent yield on treasuries back then. Also, and related, inflation was much lower back then. Now the Fed's only tool to fight inflation will kill the economy. I think a lot of people jumped into equities after realizing that it was the only game in town that provided any kind of return. I suspect that a lot of people have too much exposure in equities and should not be in equities based on their risk tolerance / investment horizon. I also don't see the main inflation drivers: food, energy, and housing becoming cheaper anytime soon. Hopefully inflation has peaked, but I suspect it will stay high for a while. Yeh, I think it will be a hard landing. Very hard indeed. Fortunately, I think everyone can see at this point that it's not mostly due to some stupid "Putin price hike", but instead horrible, reckless government spending and policy combined with a faciliatory Fed printing money.
 
I think the difference between now and 2008 / 2000 is that you could get a decent yield on treasuries back then. Also, and related, inflation was much lower back then. Now the Fed's only tool to fight inflation will kill the economy. I think a lot of people jumped into equities after realizing that it was the only game in town that provided any kind of return. I suspect that a lot of people have too much exposure in equities and should not be in equities based on their risk tolerance / investment horizon. I also don't see the main inflation drivers: food, energy, and housing becoming cheaper anytime soon. Hopefully inflation has peaked, but I suspect it will stay high for a while. Yeh, I think it will be a hard landing. Very hard indeed.
Agreed...perfect storm
 
The fed controls this soft landing or hard crash with interest rates. Anyone predicting a market outcome in the next 2 years is predicting what the fed will do. That's entirely political. They'll react to the screams of the masses like they always have. When you stop complaining about inflation and start complaining about a failing economy then they will rotate back to QE.
Yep. I'm waiting for one of these "gurus" who predict the market reaching certain levels or percentage loss/gains to put their money where their mouth is. Like if they're wrong, retire, donate $500,000 to some charity, etc. Anyone can make outlandish predictions and if they make enough, eventually they'll be "right" like a broke clock is twice a day. When I first started following the markets, everyone claimed they "called the 1987 crash" because they made some vague, bearish prediction within a year or two of the crash. Most of them went on to "call" about 25 of the next 2 bear markets over the next couple of decades.
 
I think the difference between now and 2008 / 2000 is that you could get a decent yield on treasuries back then. Also, and related, inflation was much lower back then. Now the Fed's only tool to fight inflation will kill the economy. I think a lot of people jumped into equities after realizing that it was the only game in town that provided any kind of return. I suspect that a lot of people have too much exposure in equities and should not be in equities based on their risk tolerance / investment horizon. I also don't see the main inflation drivers: food, energy, and housing becoming cheaper anytime soon. Hopefully inflation has peaked, but I suspect it will stay high for a while. Yeh, I think it will be a hard landing. Very hard indeed. Fortunately, I think everyone can see at this point that it's not mostly due to some stupid "Putin price hike", but instead horrible, reckless government spending and policy combined with a faciliatory Fed printing money.

Putin will be a perfect scape goat to be blamed for it.
 
The rates can only go to high for a short time as the national debt is huge, with very high rates they cannot service the debt, the amount of debt service can be as much as the military budget. So at say 6-8 percent it is not dumb to lock into some long bonds.
 
I agree with him for the long run. I am so tempted to buy some LEAPS QQQ/SPY puts. You cannot invest in this market only trade it,maybe buy some Latin American bonds?

timtheenchanter, according to BR SCHULTZ, THE final bottom may not occur until 10/23 .
 
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