ES Journal - 2015

Never, never, never, never short this market.

Ever.


Never?

or Never Never Never?

Wonder what happens on that day when everyone is exiting and all the computer algorithms are going insane, liquidity is on its last breath and you are in awe thinking how could this possibly be....maybe the fed will step in and fix it like they always do or maybe they will just let it fall, hah nah, they will step in and have one of those emergency meetings mid day to give the markets some hope, remember those emergency fed meetings back during the financial crisis. Funny you don't see them when the markets are rallying, but when they are in collapse mode they try and do anything to avert a collapse!
 
Never?

or Never Never Never?

Wonder what happens on that day when everyone is exiting and all the computer algorithms are going insane, liquidity is on its last breath and you are in awe thinking how could this possibly be....maybe the fed will step in and fix it like they always do or maybe they will just let it fall, hah nah, they will step in and have one of those emergency meetings mid day to give the markets some hope, remember those emergency fed meetings back during the financial crisis. Funny you don't see them when the markets are rallying, but when they are in collapse mode they try and do anything to avert a collapse!

all major central banks have embraced the idea of preserving the illusion at all costs. Even if it means using proxies to support their native equity markets. Its basically wealth distribution to people who have a share in the major retirement fund distribution markets. IE bonds/equities. The hope is that as wealth keeps accumulating some of this gets converted to economy drivers. Such as real estate and high end consumer goods. What the FED is realizing is, all that wealth that is funneled into the markets has not made its way out into any meaningful effects. The SP 500 is at 2100, at what level would true rampant speculation come back to main street? Maybe SP 500 at 4000. Even though the public is seeing their accounts go up in value, the main street objective evidence is still disconcerting to the point that people continue to just accumulate the wealth instead of letting it filter out.
 
all major central banks have embraced the idea of preserving the illusion at all costs. Even if it means using proxies to support their native equity markets. Its basically wealth distribution to people who have a share in the major retirement fund distribution markets. IE bonds/equities. The hope is that as wealth keeps accumulating some of this gets converted to economy drivers. Such as real estate and high end consumer goods. What the FED is realizing is, all that wealth that is funneled into the markets has not made its way out into any meaningful effects. The SP 500 is at 2100, at what level would true rampant speculation come back to main street? Maybe SP 500 at 4000. Even though the public is seeing their accounts go up in value, the main street objective evidence is still disconcerting to the point that people continue to just accumulate the wealth instead of letting it filter out.


I could not agree with you more. But none of this has anything to do with the markets today, tomorrow, next week, or next year.
 
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