More Bubble Talk

ScaredtoQuit

Recycles dryer sheets
Joined
Jan 3, 2007
Messages
211
Pundits continue to kick around the concept of a bubble in the U.S. market. Intellectually, my thoughts on this are that at this point this is being overblown. But since I am planning to get out this year, this is the absolute worse possible time for a crash for me personally. With asset classes becoming more and more correlated, please tell me why I don't have anything to worry about with my slice and dice strategies?

http://www.marketwatch.com/news/sto...x?guid={CE010B5D-A052-40F7-BFA3-85E6A4A2BF6A}
 
If you are second guessing market direction, maybe it's time for an allocation review.

How much cash are you hold, and how many years income is it?

IMO if you think you are taking on too much risk, add a year's income to your cash allocation... maybe even 2-3 years worth of cash. When I retire my goal is 7 years cash is part of allocation.
 
Add some non-correlated investments to the mix, like international value or perhaps a commodities or gold fund in small doses...........
 
What a great article. Manages to be sensational, alarmist, bullish, bearish, and utterly useless all at once.

The "chilling explanation" in the Gartman Letter somehow draws the parallel between 10-fold rise in Nikkei in 70s-80s and the recent ~6% run in the Dow?

::)

Edit: just out of curiousity I looked up the author http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Brimelow who appears to be a right-wing nut. Ugh
 
fluffy said:
What a great article. Manages to be sensational, alarmist, bullish, bearish, and utterly useless all at once.

The "chilling explanation" in the Gartman Letter somehow draws the parallel between 10-fold rise in Nikkei in 70s-80s and the recent ~6% run in the Dow?

Agreed. If you really want to get scared, discount this type of article and look at the mother of all bubbles, the derivatives market.

"The latest estimates judge it to be worth some $236 trillion – or about eight times the GDP of the entire planet. In other words, it is a bubble larger than the world itself."

http://www.moneyweek.com/file/18497/derivatives-the-mother-of-all-bubbles.html
 
back in 2000 most PE ratios were at least twice as high as Google's stock price. except for housing in a few areas of the US, i don't think we are in a bubble
 
A bubble for sure.

S&P Q1 earnings up ~12%
S&P Index up ~6%

Must be a bubble. ::)
 
Dow has finished up 24 of last 27 days. Last time this happened was 1927. :)

Que pasa?

Ha
 
HaHa said:
Dow has finished up 24 of last 27 days. Last time this happened was 1927. :)

So then, can we infer that the second great depression is only two years away ?
 
HaHa said:
Dow has finished up 24 of last 27 days. Last time this happened was 1927. :)

Que pasa?

Ha

Hang in there Mikey. If your comparison is correct, the Dow should just about triple before the Big Crash of 1929! - And I'll go out on a limb here, that if the Dow Triples in the next 2 years We Will have a Crash!

1929crash.jpg
 
Cut-Throat said:
Hang in there Mikey. If your comparison is correct, the Dow should just about triple before the Big Crash of 1929! - And I'll go out on a limb here, that if the Dow Triples in the next 2 years We Will have a Crash!

Edit: removed image of chart

If it doubles in 2 years... I am going to cash! Hope it does. I know what to do!
 
For whatever its worth, I heard Warren Buffett say this morning that he thought the market was not cheap but reasonably priced. He didn't seem to be overly concerned. His main concern was to find a big company to buy.
 
I am not making a prediction, just passing along an observation that I heard on the news on my car radio this afternoon.

I can say though, that this has been an amazing time! I bought a stock in January 2007 that I thought was reasonably priced but not a huge bargain. It has increased 50% since then!

I bought a stock 4 or 5 years ago. It puttered along increasing a bit each year all the while paying high dividends. Then suddenly this year it doubled. I sold it this morning for a 4 bagger.

I've been at this stuff for a long time, and this hasn't happened to me very often I can tell you! (I didn't do techs in the 90s, so I missed that amazing time.)

I am as puzzled as anyone, and maybe more so than most but I am not dumb enough to stand in the way of a runaway train. At least I hope not!

Ha
 
The warnings were loud and clear prior to the tech meltdown and you had to be totally out of touch to not see the writing on the wall as to where the housing boom was headed.
The warnings today are not nearly as loud or obvious for that matter, but they are there.
For the last 4 trading sessions I have slipped into cash ever so slowly and I plan to follow one of two plans for better or worse.
Plan A- Sell equal amounts each day until I reach my max cash position ( 70% )on May 18.
Plan B- If between now and the 18th the SPY MACD gives a clear sell signal I will go to the 70% cash position that day.

Of course I have a plan C if all goes against me, but that simply involves looking stupid.
BTW, I'm looking for a 4 to 6% correction as opposed to the end of the world.
 
JPatrick said:
BTW, I'm looking for a 4 to 6% correction as opposed to the end of the world.

Why bother to sell in this case? I assume this trading is in a retirement account?

Ha
 
HaHa said:
Why bother to sell in this case? I assume this trading is in a retirement account?

Ha
Why sell? To buy later 4-6% lower and earn 6.5% while waiting.
Yes most of this is in IRA's.
 
JPatrick said:
Why sell? To buy later 4-6% lower and earn 6.5% while waiting.

Wow! And they call me a dirty market timer!

Ha
 
HaHa said:
I can say though, that this has been an amazing time! I bought a stock in January 2007 that I thought was reasonably priced but not a huge bargain. It has increased 50% since then!
Last summer my nephew the Army Ranger directed my attention to Armor Holdings (AH). I started buying at $52/share. They've been scrabbling for contracts, going up nicely, making good soldier tools, meeting their targets, nothing spectacular but up to the low $60s.

This week BAE decided to buy AH. Blam!---> to $86/share.

This is happening way too often. Either we've all become brilliant investors or the tide is really really coming in. I believe valuations aren't crazy but all of our scorched tail feathers are probably starting to twitch uncomfortably again. If this keeps up we'll be up over 17% this year. I'm sitting tight but I'm shaking my head in amazement.

Abby Joseph Cohen raised her 2007 prediction this morning.

Buffett is one to talk--Berkshire stock was up 1.3% in the post-meeting euphoria. I'm sure Borsheim's is still trying to stuff the weekend sales cash in their safe.
 
The market didn't get a free ride to get to here. They earned it! Look at corporate profits and M&A activity. S&P 500 P/E are at a very reasonable 16, Interest rates are trending down, Market participation is ho-hum, housing money flowing to stocks ...All point to a higher market.

Also IMHO all this diversification into Foreign & Small & mid Caps has left the U.S. large caps undervalued. These are the very companies that have the best international exposure to keep growing.

I'm all in for the ride. Wish me luck! :)
 
I read this article a couple of weeks back.

http://biz.yahoo.com/ts/070427/10353243.html?.v=7

"we are now seeing the first worldwide bubble in history covering all asset classes" I guess on the bright side, we are not alone...the entire planet is going to burst.

JPatrick said:
The warnings today are not nearly as loud or obvious for that matter, but they are there. For the last 4 trading sessions I have slipped into cash ever so slowly and I plan to follow one of two plans for better or worse.

I agree JPatrick that the markets are getting heated, I have not begun moving to cash because I still think there is some room, but will move to 100% cash in my equity portfolio when I think the market is at resistance.

JPatrick said:
BTW, I'm looking for a 4 to 6% correction as opposed to the end of the world.

Agreed. Maybe the end of the world is upon us. I would prefer to think that any sell off is a regression to the mean and that any correction simply provides us buying opportunities.
 
This is probably a good reason why I dont try and time the markets :D
 
I agree it's not a bubble, but I'm betting on a ~5% correction this summer.
By betting I rebalanced to a more conservative ratio 70/30 as oppose to
75/25. Not the end of world either way. Yea I'm a risk-taker :D
BTW, many of those earning reports were inflated because of the current exchange
rate.
TJ
 
i agree with jpatrick that a 4% to 6% correction is coming simply because the latest rally went up too fast. we are too far above the 10 and 50 day averages to sustain it.

i think the real bear market will start later this year and continue into 1998 once housing starts falling apart. 3Q is when most ARM's start resetting, payment shock will come in time for the back to school shopping season and in time for christmas
 

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