Gotta love ZERO RISK in the SP500 = $$$

Federal reserve inflation target 2.00% currently 1.9% they will do everything possible "keeping a lid on oil" to keep this there last so called metric not meeting there target to keep from raising rates......

What am i thinking they will do what they did with unemployment, switch to something else, like wage growth, they will think of something, to keep allowing the privileged to borrow at zero percent.

Yes, you sound as cynical as me...OTOH, I won't rule out a "token" rate hike just for the sake of Yellen's dwindling credibility...As far as the market goes, the glam tech stocks are running like it's the fall of 1998, overshooting even the steepest bullish channels (see AMZN), so it's pretty clear that the "risk on" mentality is in full swing...

I'll give props to Autodidact for his call...that was a solid play down at those lows...
 
It's not that, it's the bunch of newbies thinking the market will tank hard if they raise. Market will make higher highs, regardless of hike. Hike might produce a bullshit pullback (which should be bought) to shake weak hands, get shorts short, AGAIN, and then does what it does best, fuck them all at once.

Some of these guys predicted the correction that occurred was the start of a 40-50% crash. That was never going to happen, why on earth would people sell stocks like AAPL when they still generate a lot of profits ( with some growth still ) ? P/E levels are nowhere near bubble levels, and both 1998 and 2011 are instructive on what can occur in these types of markets. Most of these "crash hunters" are years early on their forecasts even if they luck into picking one, and 2008 is far too recent for investors to create another crash. Those who sold near the bottom regret their choices now, and some never came back. I think many who made money since 2009 have rebalanced their portfolios, less equity exposure given the increased risk of higher P/Es.

The first couple of rate hikes ( up to 0.50% ) will have no lasting impact on US indexes. If indexes move it will be valuation based entirely, with corporate earnings setting the tone for future growth or decline. If anything, the bull stalled on the idea that the hikes were coming, then corrected when the fed didn't raise which worried weak hands that the US economy was struggling ( it isn't ). The whole China story is a joke, the idea that a growing economy is a negative because it's growing at a more normalized pace is deeply flawed, and AAPLs earnings clearly illustrated they have an immense consumer market. I have no idea how many listed companies can profit from these world wide changes, but corporate earnings will tell the tale, not all the bs hype ( mostly negative this year ) in the media that feeds into people's fears.

As per usual, the tape will tell the tale, not opinions. If I'm wrong, no worries, I have an extremely low risk position right now.
 
Some of these guys predicted the correction that occurred was the start of a 40-50% crash. That was never going to happen, why on earth would people sell stocks like AAPL when they still generate a lot of profits ( with some growth still ) ? P/E levels are nowhere near bubble levels, and both 1998 and 2011 are instructive on what can occur in these types of markets. Most of these "crash hunters" are years early on their forecasts even if they luck into picking one, and 2008 is far too recent for investors to create another crash. Those who sold near the bottom regret their choices now, and some never came back. I think many who made money since 2009 have rebalanced their portfolios, less equity exposure given the increased risk of higher P/Es.

The first couple of rate hikes ( up to 0.50% ) will have no lasting impact on US indexes. If indexes move it will be valuation based entirely, with corporate earnings setting the tone for future growth or decline. If anything, the bull stalled on the idea that the hikes were coming, then corrected when the fed didn't raise which worried weak hands that the US economy was struggling ( it isn't ). The whole China story is a joke, the idea that a growing economy is a negative because it's growing at a more normalized pace is deeply flawed, and AAPLs earnings clearly illustrated they have an immense consumer market. I have no idea how many listed companies can profit from these world wide changes, but corporate earnings will tell the tale, not all the bs hype ( mostly negative this year ) in the media that feeds into people's fears.

As per usual, the tape will tell the tale, not opinions. If I'm wrong, no worries, I have an extremely low risk position right now.

I used to react until I learned how to predict.
 
Has anyone heard from ClassicCharts17? He divides his time between Indonesia and Sinai Peninsula. Have not heard from him since the plane crash and all the chaos there happened. Doubt he flies on a Russian carrier or through Russia but the area is kind of a mess with stranded tourists and everything.

He said he was going to take a few weeks off while all the earnings played out so maybe he is just resting on a beach. Anyway hope he's well and hurry back to posting now that earnings are nearly over. "So many bullish that we may finally see some downside"...

http://www.elitetrader.com/et/index...isk-in-the-sp500.85694/page-1214#post-4199543
 
Some of these guys predicted the correction that occurred was the start of a 40-50% crash. That was never going to happen, why on earth would people sell stocks like AAPL when they still generate a lot of profits ( with some growth still ) ? P/E levels are nowhere near bubble levels, and both 1998 and 2011 are instructive on what can occur in these types of markets. Most of these "crash hunters" are years early on their forecasts even if they luck into picking one, and 2008 is far too recent for investors to create another crash. Those who sold near the bottom regret their choices now, and some never came back. I think many who made money since 2009 have rebalanced their portfolios, less equity exposure given the increased risk of higher P/Es.

The first couple of rate hikes ( up to 0.50% ) will have no lasting impact on US indexes. If indexes move it will be valuation based entirely, with corporate earnings setting the tone for future growth or decline. If anything, the bull stalled on the idea that the hikes were coming, then corrected when the fed didn't raise which worried weak hands that the US economy was struggling ( it isn't ). The whole China story is a joke, the idea that a growing economy is a negative because it's growing at a more normalized pace is deeply flawed, and AAPLs earnings clearly illustrated they have an immense consumer market. I have no idea how many listed companies can profit from these world wide changes, but corporate earnings will tell the tale, not all the bs hype ( mostly negative this year ) in the media that feeds into people's fears.

As per usual, the tape will tell the tale, not opinions. If I'm wrong, no worries, I have an extremely low risk position right now.

Thank you for your view, and looking forward to seeing you deploy your cash in the next correction, whenever that may be (and hopefully not much higher from here.)
 
Has anyone heard from ClassicCharts17? He divides his time between Indonesia and Sinai Peninsula. Have not heard from him since the plane crash and all the chaos there happened. Doubt he flies on a Russian carrier or through Russia but the area is kind of a mess with stranded tourists and everything.

He said he was going to take a few weeks off while all the earnings played out so maybe he is just resting on a beach. Anyway hope he's well and hurry back to posting now that earnings are nearly over. "So many bullish that we may finally see some downside"...

http://www.elitetrader.com/et/index...isk-in-the-sp500.85694/page-1214#post-4199543

Hey PriceChange,

Sweet of you to remember me. I m ok. Plane crash is a sad incident, many of these Russians actually live in Sinai. Who wouldn't want to live there! Plane was an old junk as the pilot told his wife.

I m changing some of my set up to match my lack of discipline. Hardest part of trading is to keep coming back after a loss instead of giving up. I m still confused. A safe tactic with a clear stop and target? or a flowing system like reverse martingale and the likes. Have to test and find out the hard way i guess.

It has been very calm on ET i noticed. Are we all waiting to see where this insane rally is heading? last report i wrote after the breakout of 2020 was a target of 2150-2170 i recall, but predicting is one thing and trading it is another, its driving me nuts!!
 
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