Posted on 07/17/2014 8:19:18 PM PDT by RC one
1853, 1906, 1929, 1969, 1999
Pass the question around your office. Call your money manager and ask him or her, too. Post it on your office notice board.
Give up?
Those were the peaks of the five massive, generational stock-market bubbles in U.S. history.
Investors who bought into stocks around those peaks ended up earning terrible returns over the subsequent 30 years. Forget stocks for the long run. They ended up with stocks for a long face. The bigger the bubble, the worse returns.
And, according to a new research report, we are back there again.
U.S. stocks are now about 80% overvalued on certain key long-term measures, according to research by financial consultant Andrew Smithers, the chairman of Smithers & Co. and one of the few to warn about the bubble of the late 1990s at the time.
The five dates listed at the start of this article, he says, are the only times since 1802, when data began being tracked, when stocks have been 50% or more overvalued according to these measures. And only two of those bubbles 1929 and 1999, both of which were followed by disastrous crashes were bigger than today.
(Excerpt) Read more at marketwatch.com ...
Buy high! Sell low.
what could possibly go wrong with that?
“As research by Smithers and others show, the stock market boom since 2009 has almost exactly tracked the rapid increase in the money supply.”
The biggest thing the ma let has going for it is the players know even a hint of reality will lead to a severe global depression. So playing pretend is the best course of action.
It has a lot higher to go yet. I hope some of you bought my picks in February ‘09 and December ‘13.
I’m in, and thus vulnerable, but what are the options? Cash is 100$ susceptible to inflationary devaluation or a collapse of the dollar. Banks are talking about charging people for depositing their money - instead of paying interest. Precious metals are all over the map, and real estate is also a risky investment.
Having said that, the market doesn’t seem to have much to do with reality.
100$ = 100%
Same here, almost all in.
Most of us here are pretty self-sufficient, if the SHTF.
My only rule, I won’t eat my dogs.
I think the lesson to take away is that now might not be the best time to jump in. Those already in will just have to keep playing the game.
It’s not going to crash until Obastard is out of office and some GOP-e schmuck is in that will get the full media blame for the crash.
I believe Bush did the first bailout for the same reason. I bet they didn’t think they could keep pumpin air in the bubble this long.
That’s possible. It assumes that the Obama holds a dangerous amount of sway over the actions of the Fed though does it not?
Which is exactly why the stock market should keep going up. Inside the matrix, it is still the best place to put money, so people are putting it there. It will fall when that is no longer true, but not before.
Actually, I’m betting on Sept. of next year.
That's the key point. There are no other options. Let's say, for the sake of argument, that during the other bubbles bonds were paying 5%. So there were real choices for those getting nervous.
But now it's either take stock risk or rotate into bonds paying 1 or 2%. That's not even keeping up with inflation. With no other option, people are going to stay put, giving this bubble a ways to go, IMHO.
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