Home › Forums › Financial Markets/Economics › It feels kinda bubbly right now
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July 30, 2009 at 11:19 PM #440216July 30, 2009 at 11:24 PM #439452paranoidParticipant
I have been fully invested since march. I think market is going even higher (SP500 target 1100 to 1200) in the next few months before it falls back. The reason is that many people missed the boat this time, and there is going to be a panick of buying (psychology of “I will be priced out forever” for retail investors, and performance pressure for professional money managers).
short-term, P/E is meaningless to market movement. It’s all about greed/fear. Stock market is no different from housing market: higher price will draw more buyers in, until everybody has bought 2 houses: one for living, and one for dreaming.
July 30, 2009 at 11:24 PM #439653paranoidParticipantI have been fully invested since march. I think market is going even higher (SP500 target 1100 to 1200) in the next few months before it falls back. The reason is that many people missed the boat this time, and there is going to be a panick of buying (psychology of “I will be priced out forever” for retail investors, and performance pressure for professional money managers).
short-term, P/E is meaningless to market movement. It’s all about greed/fear. Stock market is no different from housing market: higher price will draw more buyers in, until everybody has bought 2 houses: one for living, and one for dreaming.
July 30, 2009 at 11:24 PM #439978paranoidParticipantI have been fully invested since march. I think market is going even higher (SP500 target 1100 to 1200) in the next few months before it falls back. The reason is that many people missed the boat this time, and there is going to be a panick of buying (psychology of “I will be priced out forever” for retail investors, and performance pressure for professional money managers).
short-term, P/E is meaningless to market movement. It’s all about greed/fear. Stock market is no different from housing market: higher price will draw more buyers in, until everybody has bought 2 houses: one for living, and one for dreaming.
July 30, 2009 at 11:24 PM #440049paranoidParticipantI have been fully invested since march. I think market is going even higher (SP500 target 1100 to 1200) in the next few months before it falls back. The reason is that many people missed the boat this time, and there is going to be a panick of buying (psychology of “I will be priced out forever” for retail investors, and performance pressure for professional money managers).
short-term, P/E is meaningless to market movement. It’s all about greed/fear. Stock market is no different from housing market: higher price will draw more buyers in, until everybody has bought 2 houses: one for living, and one for dreaming.
July 30, 2009 at 11:24 PM #440221paranoidParticipantI have been fully invested since march. I think market is going even higher (SP500 target 1100 to 1200) in the next few months before it falls back. The reason is that many people missed the boat this time, and there is going to be a panick of buying (psychology of “I will be priced out forever” for retail investors, and performance pressure for professional money managers).
short-term, P/E is meaningless to market movement. It’s all about greed/fear. Stock market is no different from housing market: higher price will draw more buyers in, until everybody has bought 2 houses: one for living, and one for dreaming.
July 30, 2009 at 11:35 PM #439461paramountParticipantWhat’s pumping up this bubble? The big investment banks borrowing money from the feds at or near 0% interest and pumping that money directly into the market.
July 30, 2009 at 11:35 PM #439663paramountParticipantWhat’s pumping up this bubble? The big investment banks borrowing money from the feds at or near 0% interest and pumping that money directly into the market.
July 30, 2009 at 11:35 PM #439988paramountParticipantWhat’s pumping up this bubble? The big investment banks borrowing money from the feds at or near 0% interest and pumping that money directly into the market.
July 30, 2009 at 11:35 PM #440059paramountParticipantWhat’s pumping up this bubble? The big investment banks borrowing money from the feds at or near 0% interest and pumping that money directly into the market.
July 30, 2009 at 11:35 PM #440231paramountParticipantWhat’s pumping up this bubble? The big investment banks borrowing money from the feds at or near 0% interest and pumping that money directly into the market.
July 31, 2009 at 2:30 AM #439496CA renterParticipantYes, it’s feeling very bubbly right now, in oh-so-many ways.
I still think this rally (in housing and the stock market) has legs, and will not short unless the S&P hits 1100-1200 and the DOW is between 10,000 and 11,000. This rally could very well last into late 2010, IMHO.
July 31, 2009 at 2:30 AM #439698CA renterParticipantYes, it’s feeling very bubbly right now, in oh-so-many ways.
I still think this rally (in housing and the stock market) has legs, and will not short unless the S&P hits 1100-1200 and the DOW is between 10,000 and 11,000. This rally could very well last into late 2010, IMHO.
July 31, 2009 at 2:30 AM #440022CA renterParticipantYes, it’s feeling very bubbly right now, in oh-so-many ways.
I still think this rally (in housing and the stock market) has legs, and will not short unless the S&P hits 1100-1200 and the DOW is between 10,000 and 11,000. This rally could very well last into late 2010, IMHO.
July 31, 2009 at 2:30 AM #440094CA renterParticipantYes, it’s feeling very bubbly right now, in oh-so-many ways.
I still think this rally (in housing and the stock market) has legs, and will not short unless the S&P hits 1100-1200 and the DOW is between 10,000 and 11,000. This rally could very well last into late 2010, IMHO.
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