The most unfortunate part of this scenario is that the little guy,
who got crushed last fall, is likely to get it again...
Steve is not the only IDE analyst who thinks the buy high and
sell low crowd is lining up for another drubbing, and that you
should proceed with caution.
Andrew Gordon, editor of INCOME, is beating the same drum.
Andy points out that investor optimism has surged, despite an
extraordinarily weak economy. The stock market is up almost 50% since
March, while jobs, cars, houses and big ticket items are all
slumping. In an email this week, he writes:
"The stock market trades 80% on psychology and 20% on fundamentals.
No way can you justify this 50% rise on fundamentals. Chalk it up to
crazy, unwarranted and temporary optimism."
"It happens all the time in the market. Besides using 80/20
breakdowns, I also believe in 98/2 breakdowns. I’ve been watching
the markets for a very long time. And I’m convinced that stock markets
are in emotional equilibrium around 2% of the time. The rest of the
time, markets are either overly hopeful or overly despairing."
And that brings us to the biggest hoax perpetrated on investors of
all time…
The efficient market hypothesis assumes that we’re all rational
investors, like mainstream economics assumes we’re all rational
buyers. Yeah, right. It’s like writing physics formulas without
taking into account friction.
The higher stock prices go, the more irresistible the market becomes…
So, it appears that investors have become overly hopeful. This is
where the fear of losing money gives way to the fear of missing big
gains. Investors have $3.5 trillion tucked away in money market
funds. Look for a chunk of this money – dumb money – to switch to
the stock market.
Don’t follow the dumb money. And certainly don’t jump in with
both feet. It’s much too risky right now. But neither should you
sell just because the market is surging higher and appears to be
overextended.
A rally is a rally. Whether it’s built on false hope or solid
fundamentals, it’s hard to say when it will end.
If a rally can go up this much on the basis of so little real
economic growth, it can continue to run from here. Why should it
stop at 50%... why not 60%? It’s simply a matter of a crazy market
getting crazier.
The world’s greatest investors don’t try to time the market.
Great investors let their winners run. But they also cut their
losses short and mind their trailing stops religiously. You should
too.
Good Investing,
Bob Irish
Investment Director
Investor’s Daily Edge
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Best Wishes for Your Trading Success!
Tim McMahon, Financial Trend Forecaster |