Quote from stonedinvestor:
Well the 1995 move was based off The Internet- probably the most transforming tech app of all time, there's nothing happening like that now.
The market is doing it's soft landing mantra but I remember the last time around at it was sort of 0. something growth for one reporting cycle- that was about as slow as it got before a couple more GDP's in the ones...and still it hurt like hell. Stocks went down.
Housing is big we are in a sweet spot for a few months - where things apparently have stabilized. So there's still lots of time for a nice rally before housing takes another leg down and freaks everyone out. When the next leg up? Soon; not now. Fed language on Inflation has to be unusually tough and perhaps they are proven right> the economy re accelerates (I'm personally betting on it I like Big Ben) But that leads to interest rate hikes resuming. At least then we would be in sync with Europe
Last year we had that disquieting period when we were all waiting for the " new money "
to come pouring into the market in Jan and it just didn't happen. This Jan could feel very much the same, especially as the whole Iraq mess will be percolating good when Syria and Iran agents are on the ground there, fixing things with one hand and helping plan even more deadly attacks with the other. Dollar meltdown scenario is very much alive and well, it would really take just one move by China to hold half of their assets in Swiss Francs or something to really roil the greenback, that leads to big hedge funds coming unglued very easily. Will Paulson have the guts Reubin did and know when the time is right to step in there and buy. It's a gamble. He seems to be hooked on the weak dollar being A-OK which I'm not into. My online account is up almost 30% for the year, at the first really good break of Mr. Market I might be running for the door. How many Hedge Funds will be there before me blocking the way? The question quickly becomes: Why Give Half Back if you don't have to?
True...I like most of what you said. Except, I think one reason for the SPX rally is the weak dollar and international arbitrage between companies in Europe and the US. That is, as the dollar falls, Verizon looks cheap versus Vodafone. Plotting the graph of the SPX in EUR shows a gap down actually...