like most things on ET, here I am repeating whats already been said LOL apologies for the copycat post
like most things on ET, here I am repeating whats already been said LOL apologies for the copycat post
Yeah the scenario I laid out several weeks back about a parabolic blowoff top early next year seems to be playing out perfectly. New all time highs are a few weeks away.
From a valuation standpoint stocks are not expensive, they're not cheap either so yea there's probably more upside to equities especially in a zero interest rate environment.
As for Valeant Citron is a highly respected short t sell side firm that has a huge following. The questions they've raised are major red flags. Clearly some type of fraud was taking place.
I disagree...even if you priced SP500 in terms of euro and yen to account for currency fluctuations and relative valuations, it is still on the expensive side. However, I won't argue that it may have farther up to go...being expensive has never stopped people from buying before.
As for Valeant, I agree with your point. A drug manufacturer that has that kind of a relationship with a specialty pharmacy is sketchy. There is definitely a conflict of interest.
It looks like Nov Natty is going to go off the boards near contract lows pushing a one handle. Amazing.
Try not to think of stocks in terms of p/e ratios. Think of them in terms of opportunity cost. What are the alternatives and what are there forward synthetic yields. On the margin, equities probably have the best value, but this has to be re-evaluated everyday. Why? Because as other prices change, the relative value changes. Personally valuation decisions don't factor in for me, but if I was a long term investor, they most certainly would.
Try not to think of stocks in terms of p/e ratios. Think of them in terms of opportunity cost. What are the alternatives and what are there forward synthetic yields. On the margin, equities probably have the best value, but this has to be re-evaluated everyday. Why? Because as other prices change, the relative value changes. Personally valuation decisions don't factor in for me, but if I was a long term investor, they most certainly would.