**note from my prorpietary TA MODEL
>RSI not made new high yet....though MACD reaching to or near
it's higest point.....I would suggest we could see another 100 pts or so tacked
onto SPX before THE TOP.<
WHY I think SECULAR BEAR NOT OVER:
2003 and 2009......MOMO signals were of greater magnatude
and did not offer a divergence in force and price. COntrary...so far
anywho...RSI, CCI making lower highs...that can change of course.
SECULAR BEAR should last about 16 years (conventional top was 2000)
putting in a LOW LOW
(OUR LIFETIME) in the 2014-2016 time frame (it IS still possible that 2009 low will hold but feel it COULD get tested) . What that
will look like I don't know.
IMHO ENERGY, delivery , storage many facets of it
will LEAD the "next great bull MKT" as cost for energy DROPS, jobs
created, consumers have more spendable income (unlike todays stagnant income
growth), manufacturers costs drop dramatically as energy costs drop more will
be made in this country.
We are becoming, will be huge net exporter of
energy...spurring a real economic boom, IMHO
Last weeks Noland
" guess it took the 2008 crisis for
economists to finally acknowledge that their models might be deeply flawed,
though one would have thought the previous 20-years (plus) of serial global
booms and busts would have raised some concerns. I have argued that we’ve been
witnessing a unique period in history: For the first time, during recent
decades there have seen no constraints on either the quality or quantity of
Credit issued on a global basis. No one should expect that unlimited cheap Credit
would prove conducive to system stability, and we’re now privy to sufficient
history to be certain it’s not. All along the way, policymakers have seemed to
go out of their way to avoid learning lessons.
U.S. and global finance were going through epic changes. Meanwhile, policymakers and the economics community stuck their heads in the sand, clinging steadfastly to their outdated old models and analytical frameworks. Greenspan became a vocal proponent for derivatives and Wall Street risk intermediation. He also used the rapidly expanding global leveraged speculating community as the most powerful monetary policy transmission mechanism ever (spur risk-taking and “wealth creation” with a mere hint of a 25bps rate cut!). And with Greenspan (along with the GSEs) backstopping the markets, the bubbling derivatives marketplace could mushroom to hundreds of Trillions on the specious assumption of “continuous and liquid markets.” Opportunistic hedge fund managers could incorporate enormous leverage on (Fed-assured) high probability bets – and become billionaires."
U.S. and global finance were going through epic changes. Meanwhile, policymakers and the economics community stuck their heads in the sand, clinging steadfastly to their outdated old models and analytical frameworks. Greenspan became a vocal proponent for derivatives and Wall Street risk intermediation. He also used the rapidly expanding global leveraged speculating community as the most powerful monetary policy transmission mechanism ever (spur risk-taking and “wealth creation” with a mere hint of a 25bps rate cut!). And with Greenspan (along with the GSEs) backstopping the markets, the bubbling derivatives marketplace could mushroom to hundreds of Trillions on the specious assumption of “continuous and liquid markets.” Opportunistic hedge fund managers could incorporate enormous leverage on (Fed-assured) high probability bets – and become billionaires."
1 comment:
Everything the fed is doing is working. The market is telling you this.
Get long and enjoy it.
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