Apr

5

I'm liking the look of that huge spike down in ES, out of my euro and sterling, that was a crazy move too. Technically it's nice looking low, from a chart perspective. I'm liking the low interest rate and commodity softening posture, I'm pretty damn bullish on equities.

William Huggins responds:

the shock moment is not when the canes come out - those metaphorically come out when the bulls have given up. those are generational moments related to the culling of new speculators who have only known rising markets (ie, anyone who joined robin hood with their stimulus checks in hand). as long as there are people willing to pay x60-100 earnings for hype, i don't think its quite time for a shift in strategic allocation.

this is simply the first serious wakeup call for anyone who thought this administration is doing anything remotely like macroeconomic analysis when it sets policy. according to the executive, there will be more such shocks to come so as many were fond of suggesting in mid-november "buckle up" (your 401k, and the usd, have both been liberated from gravity!)

Steve Ellison comments:

The S&P 500 has not even gone off the bottom of my hand-drawn chart. The move down since yesterday strikes me as more an efficient market repricing of reduced economic prospects than an emotional panic or forced selling.

By contrast, my hand-drawn chart on February 28, 2020.

Adam Grimes states:

Canes? Nowhere close, in my opinion. And the fact that many people think this is a crash is just a lack of perspective (and a misunderstanding of potential.) Again, all in my opinion, which may change with any tick.

UPDATE: Stefan Jovanovich has a shopping list:

The idiot list is the catalog of companies that our model collects on the presumption that their common stocks will be worth more in 5 years than they are now. I publish it when we guess that our stupidity is within the 25% range - i.e. we won't lose more than $1 out of every $4 we invest in those companies if they liquidate. Thanks to the List and others, we have learned not to trade so the publication is, in no sense, a "Buy"; it is simply an indication that prices have gotten low enough that the list has more than 10 companies on it. (A month ago it had 5.)


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