The market can stay...

I might redefine that as 'you can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent'. :) Blaming the market for irrationality is in practice used as an excuse for being wrong. I am actually correct but the market isn't as right as me!

That's certainly true if you're a short term trader without deep pockets. Your opinion of market value/movement is irrelevant as long as the market is doing the exact opposite and continues doing so.

On the other hand - there are investors/speculants who actually was right when the market was wrong and managed to stay solvent until they were proven right. For example, Dr Michael Burry (provided The Big Short is factually correct) who shorted the housing market leading up to the financial crisis in 08.
 
Yes, the LOLN takes over. But who can ever know when that time is? We're in a strange time, Mr. S200.
Yes, the LOLN takes over. But who can ever know when that time is? We're in a strange time, Mr. S200.
I agree completely. It's strange enough that it has forced me to consider the possibility that the markets have crossed over into some sort of "new normal", where the parameters that used to have a high degree of reliability, don't necessarily apply anymore.
 
The market is breaking out to new highs after considerable resistance, Fed is dovish, and Europe is considering new stimulus.

What’s not to like about stocks?

Being at ATH is not necessarily any indicator except "it'll keep hitting ATH until it doesn't." And it's been hitting ATH since 2013.

All that being said... Here are some other times where it hit ATH for a few years. Purely by that metric, we have a few more years to run.

upload_2019-7-14_11-40-11.png

upload_2019-7-14_11-39-24.png

upload_2019-7-14_11-39-36.png


Most recent times

upload_2019-7-14_11-40-24.png
 
My question is when is a market fully valued?
Because it seems to most there is no such thing as a fully valued market anymore ..it's just buy and keep buying. Law of large numbers eventually takes over. No?

I believe the challenge is that no one is sure how to determine where the market is "fully valued" in an environment of continuing ultra-low (compared to past) interest rates. One reference point may be Japan's markets over the past 20-30 years.
 
The market is breaking out to new highs after considerable resistance, Fed is dovish, and Europe is considering new stimulus.

What’s not to like about stocks?
%%
Yes, all that;
+ price above 200 day moving average. NOT a prediction, not long
TSLA:D:D . :D:D:D:D:D:D
 
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