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The S&P 500 is at an all-time high.


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2024 Jan 13, 6:47am   2,303 views  49 comments

by Al_Sharpton_for_President   ➕follow (5)   💰tip   ignore  



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1   clambo   2024 Jan 13, 8:19am  

My accounts are a little bit below their previous maximum value.
I'm a bit surprised but not unhappy about it.
2   Patrick   2024 Jan 13, 9:44am  

What is it relative to inflation?
3   RWSGFY   2024 Jan 13, 9:45am  

clambo says

My accounts are a little bit below their previous maximum value.
I'm a bit surprised but not unhappy about it.


My accounts are above the previous maximum, but the shack has brought my (paper) net worth half a mil down from the previous high. So I don't feel as rich as then. 🤡
4   AD   2024 Jan 13, 7:03pm  

I heard Anthony Scaramucci on Bloomberg TV being interviewed from Davos, Switzerland today.

He says that most wealth and pension fund managers will invest up to 3% of their assets in bitcoin ETFs and he advised sticking with the larger ETFs like Blackrock and Fidelity.

He says Bitcoin market cap will match how much is invested in gold. He even says it may come close to this around 2030.

.


5   AD   2024 Jan 13, 7:22pm  

Al_Sharpton_for_President says




Took about 2 years and 2 months to return to the all time high for the S&P 500. I think the COVID pandemic bear market resulted in a 33% drop in the S&P 500 in March/April 2020. There was a drop of about 21% in October 2022.

It took about 8 years for it to return to its all time high after the 2000 dot com bust, and about 7 years from the great recession of 2009-2010. Both of these periods saw at least a 50% drop in the S&P 500 :-/

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

https://money.com/bear-market-when-do-stocks-recover/

"On average, it took about 19 months for stocks to recover their losses from a bear market or near bear market, according to the analysis. But for the last three bear (or near bear) markets in 2011, 2018 and 2020, it took stocks just four to five months to make up the losses.

The worse a bear market is, the longer it takes to recover, LPL Research found. For example, when a bear market decline was less than 22%, it took just seven months on average to recover, but when a bear market decline was more than 22%, it took an average of 27 months."
6   fdhfoiehfeoi   2024 Jan 17, 7:07am  

You haven't seen anything yet..

"2024, YEAR OF MASSIVE MONEY PRINTING. "Bottom line: after several years of tightening, 2024 is when the liquidity floodgate reopen and not only does the Fed start to cut rates aggressively, but with Q(uantitative) T(ightening) tapering, we fully expect the next Q(uantative) E(asing) to be launched in the near future, sending the dollar into its next, and possibly final, reserve currency death spiral as printer goes BRRRR."

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/its-all-over-now-powells-wsj-mouthpiece-jpmorgan-confirm-qt-almost-over
7   DOGEWontAmountToShit   2024 Jan 17, 7:29am  

NuttBoxer says


You haven't seen anything yet..

"2024, YEAR OF MASSIVE MONEY PRINTING. "Bottom line: after several years of tightening, 2024 is when the liquidity floodgate reopen and not only does the Fed start to cut rates aggressively, but with Q(uantitative) T(ightening) tapering, we fully expect the next Q(uantative) E(asing) to be launched in the near future, sending the dollar into its next, and possibly final, reserve currency death spiral as printer goes BRRRR."

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/its-all-over-now-powells-wsj-mouthpiece-jpmorgan-confirm-qt-almost-over


And won't. This is gaslighting by the folks feeling the pain on Wall Street from the higher interest rates. Who are trying to pressure the Fed to do just what they 'predict'.

If the Fed cuts rates, inflation will get worse again. They won't increase rates tho. It is an election year.

https://wolfstreet.com/2024/01/17/our-drunken-sailors-push-back-against-rate-cut-mania/

Higher rates are here to stay anyway. It is because the Boomers ate retiring en masse and pulling their $$$ out of their retirement funds
8   Eman   2024 Jan 17, 7:54am  

High probability the Fed WILL cut rates this year. Their dot plot suggests 3 cuts. Wall Street is twisting the Fed’s arm by suggesting 5 to 6 cuts. Let’s see how this will play out.
9   Misc   2024 Jan 17, 7:55am  

Looks like inflation expectations went a little higher today. Not just in the US, but across the globe. 10 year government bond yields are up everywhere.

This makes it less likely for a rate cut.
10   Eman   2024 Jan 17, 7:58am  

Inflation has already entrenched in our economy. The Fed’s method of calculating inflation is f’ed up.
11   SunnyvaleCA   2024 Jan 17, 9:44am  

Previous max S&P was almost exactly 2 years ago. So the S&P is not quite there now if adjusted for 12% to 15% cumulative inflation. One of the interesting proposals of the Trump tax changes was that the basis for long term investments would be adjusted for inflation when calculating gains/losses. Calculating the modified basis would be easy enough (you already have to write down the date of purchase), and would remind people constantly how much the currency is being debased. I'd have liked to see that change go into effect and simultaneously harmonize long-term, short-term, and W2 taxes. The change would affect things like houses; you could probably drop the $250k/$500k deduction from house proceeds to simplify things.
12   fdhfoiehfeoi   2024 Jan 17, 11:35am  

UkraineIsFucked says

And won't. This is gaslighting by the folks feeling the pain on Wall Street from the higher interest rates. Who are trying to pressure the Fed to do just what they 'predict'.


If they don't they lose the overnight repo market battle. Either way the economy is fucked. Kind of the point of central banks.
14   Eman   2024 Jan 17, 11:58am  

ad says

https://www.barrons.com/articles/fast-food-wins-inflation-4233f728

https://apnews.com/article/inflation-rate-cuts-federal-reserve-economy-017e2a5938bd09db69a706b70a863943


Waller’s remarks follow recent comments from other senior Fed officials that suggest that the central bank remains on track to begin cutting its benchmark short-term interest rate, likely by mid-year. In December, the policymakers collectively forecast that they would cut their rate three times this year. Wall Street investors and many economists expect the first cut in March.
15   AD   2024 Jan 17, 12:49pm  

Eman says


Waller’s remarks follow recent comments from other senior Fed officials that suggest that the central bank remains on track to begin cutting its benchmark short-term interest rate, likely by mid-year.


I don't see this happening if annual CPI and PCE are not below 2.5% for at least 3 consecutive months and/or the labor market is still at least good.

.
16   GNL   2024 Jan 17, 1:37pm  

NuttBoxer says

You haven't seen anything yet..

"2024, YEAR OF MASSIVE MONEY PRINTING. "Bottom line: after several years of tightening, 2024 is when the liquidity floodgate reopen and not only does the Fed start to cut rates aggressively, but with Q(uantitative) T(ightening) tapering, we fully expect the next Q(uantative) E(asing) to be launched in the near future, sending the dollar into its next, and possibly final, reserve currency death spiral as printer goes BRRRR."

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/its-all-over-now-powells-wsj-mouthpiece-jpmorgan-confirm-qt-almost-over

What's the best bet for a $50K account that I have laying around?
17   clambo   2024 Jan 17, 2:58pm  

Vanguard Tax Managed Capital Appreciation Fund if you don't need the money too soon.
18   Blue   2024 Jan 17, 3:01pm  

Eman says

Inflation has already entrenched in our economy. The Fed’s method of calculating inflation is f’ed up.

This is by design all along!
20   AD   2024 Jan 17, 5:09pm  

Eman says


Holy crap!


The only reason is because the Democrats are demanding this behind the scenes. They rather do whatever it takes including with gas prices. They don't give a shit what happens after the election as long as they win.

Look at how Biden tapped the strategic oil reserves months before the midterm election, and how gas prices went back up right after.

From what I recall, the Fed Funds rate is usually at least 1.5% above annual CPI or PCE.

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21   Patrick   2024 Jan 17, 5:31pm  

Price-fixing of interest rates should be illegal. First, no one is smart enough to really know what to do, and second, it opens a massive hole for corruption, as people favored by the Fed get tipped off on the direction of rates.

The Fed should not exist. Let the market set interest rates.

And all money should be silver by weight and not dollars or anything else. If it's not real silver in hand, it can be promises of silver, discounted for default risk. That allows internet commerce to continue.
22   fdhfoiehfeoi   2024 Jan 18, 8:35am  

GNL says

What's the best bet for a $50K account that I have laying around?


I don't like to gamble, so my advise is always invest in a small business, land way out from any cities, more guns, ammo, chickens, goats, seeds, water filters, or set your pump up for a manual back up system. And of course real money, gold and silver.
23   AD   2024 Jan 18, 1:44pm  

NuttBoxer says


And of course real money, gold and silver.


Not sure if it gets that bad like Mad Max-bad if gold and silver would be accepted as a medium of exchange such as one ounce silver coin for 5 loafs of bread, 2 cans of peanut butter and 24 eggs.

Localities such as in American Redoubt with its homesteaders and survivalists will barter goods and services.

If anything, store food with very, very long shelf life, and have source of potable water and energy (for heating and boiling of water).

In times like that which there is unrest and chaos, silver and gold won't have any utilitarian value like bullets, cans of soup, first aid kit, water purification systems, etc.

.
25   stereotomy   2024 Jan 18, 5:29pm  

Let the Fed cut - for every 50 bps, gold will gain $50. I'll be a millionaire who buys $100 loaves of bread at WalMart.
26   Al_Sharpton_for_President   2024 Jan 19, 11:25am  

NuttBoxer says

we fully expect the next Q(uantative) E(asing) to be launched in the near future

Sending the price of stonks up.
27   fdhfoiehfeoi   2024 Jan 19, 3:03pm  

ad says

Not sure if it gets that bad like Mad Max-bad if gold and silver would be accepted as a medium of exchange such as one ounce silver coin for 5 loafs of bread, 2 cans of peanut butter and 24 eggs.


Mad Max is a movie, so a bit theatrical(more than a bit). I never understand people who think about the future now, but somehow if society collapses, the future no longer matters to them. Such a defeatist all-or-nothing mentality. Things will get bad, but when I come out on the other side with wealth stored in assets that maintained their value, and you come out with nothing, who's future looks brighter?
28   RWSGFY   2024 Jan 19, 5:28pm  

If previous SHTF situations taught us anythig, they were extremely re-distributive in nature.

Did Russian Empire's elites get to keep their RE, gold and precious art objects? Nope. Only these who managed to flee early and carried some jewelry or maybe already had some money stashed in foreign banks. That's why a taxi driver with a noble Russian name was a common occurence in Paris in the 1920-30s.

Fast forward 15 years, did Ukrainian farmers get to keep the wealth they accumulated after getting the land taken from emperial landowners and working on it for 10 years during basically free market known as "New Economic Policy"? Nope, after collectivization, confiscation of their land and food stockpiles they were forced to exchange their gold for very little bread in government stores and still starved to death in millions.

Fast forward another 8-10 years: did European Jews get to keep their gold? Rhetorical question.

I can go on and on, but the pattern is pretty clear.

So it seems like stockpiling gold maybe helps in some pretty mild scenarios, like some bout of hyperinflation, but for true socieatal collapse the best bet is to join the winning team early and not only survive, but take all these juicy assets from the losers. (Jews didn't have that option, obviously).

And whatever these MadMax movies show is just silly and bears no resemblance to anything happening IRL.
29   AD   2024 Jan 19, 8:58pm  

NuttBoxer says

Things will get bad, but when I come out on the other side with wealth stored in assets that maintained their value, and you come out with nothing, who's future looks brighter?


Yes Mad Max was just some rhetorical reference as far as societal collapse.

I will give you the benefit of the doubt as far as society eventually recovering.

What makes you think society will recover fast enough for you to acquire the wealth of gold and silver ?

At best you may be 90 years old and in frail health when that would happen.

.
30   AD   2024 Jan 19, 9:06pm  

RWSGFY says

If previous SHTF situations taught us anythig, they were extremely re-distributive in nature.


Many Jews knew well enough to escape Germany by the mid 1930's.

There were still established governments like the Kremlin and Nazi's in your SHTF examples. They established order and control and there was not complete societal collapse. If there was, then the Nazi party would disintegrate and there would never have been the Holocaust as far as death camps.

I bring up Mad Max as far as not having established and effective governments. Yes Barter Town in the 3rd Mad Max movie was dystopian and ineffective.

Yes the Mad Max movie reference is just a rhetorical example of societal collapse, and of course we have not seen this completely IN REAL LIFE (IRL).

.
31   fdhfoiehfeoi   2024 Jan 19, 9:16pm  

ad says

What makes you think society will recover fast enough for you to acquire the wealth of gold and silver ?

At best you may be 90 years old and in frail health when that would happen.


Because it's happened, many many times. Nothing lasts forever, and nothing stays the same. It's only our arrogance that's makes us think that. But history tells a different tale, albeit the same version.

It's just what's fake that will disappear. Fake money, fake wealth, fake rulers. What's real isn't going anywhere, and what's more, we're already moving back towards it. The crash will just speed up that process of decentralization, return to local communities, and building real wealth.
32   fdhfoiehfeoi   2024 Jan 19, 9:17pm  

"Since Q1-2003 when the debt was $6.46 trillion it has added $27.54 trillion or 5.26 times (up 426%) to $34 trillion."

- Franklin Sanders
33   AD   2024 Jan 19, 9:25pm  

NuttBoxer says

It's only our arrogance that's makes us think that.


And its naivety to think that society will quickly recover from a collapse.

It may take at least 100 years for it to recover for gold and silver to be considered valuable, especially if the supply chains and resources availability are that ruined or dire.

But yes, I will not discount or marginalize the human spirit as far as recovering eventually and the proliferation of prosperous local communities.

.
34   AD   2024 Jan 19, 9:40pm  

The real compound annual growth rate is only around 4.4% for the S&P 500 since January 2000 :-/

The S&P 500 reached an all time high today at 4839. At least its PE is at 26 compared to the all time high of 46 back in 2001.

I remember back around 2003 when all the news outlets including financial reporting like CNBC, Kiplinger, and Money stated that the S&P 500 should average long term about 7% after inflation every year.
.



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35   AD   2024 Jan 19, 9:47pm  

NuttBoxer says

"Since Q1-2003 when the debt was $6.46 trillion it has added $27.54 trillion or 5.26 times (up 426%) to $34 trillion."

- Franklin Sanders


911 and War on Terrorism added at least $7 trillion let alone the ballooning of government such as all those intel jobs (contractor and civil servant).

I guess the Great Recession spending added about $2 trillion and COVID spending added about $5 trillion.

Track federal government interest payments as a percentage of the federal budget and percentage of GDP over the last 50 years.

I think now annual interest payment is equal to the Pentagon's annual budget.

They need some austerity such as increase annual spending of government at a rate less than annual inflation.

And they need to encourage work and productivity especially in regards to services inflation.

This would hopefully help to lower inflation and consequently the US Treasury interest rates.

.
36   GNL   2024 Jan 19, 9:50pm  

Eman says

Holy crap!


https://x.com/mcclellanosc/status/1747724059016855734?s=46&t=5lEEPaezr6Ic-W4Z6huZ5Q

Who's ever in charge seems retarded but, I doubt that's it. No, the fed is a captured entity of the elite. Prove me wrong.
37   AD   2024 Jan 20, 10:22am  

GNL says


Who's ever in charge seems retarded but, I doubt that's it. No, the fed is a captured entity of the elite. Prove me wrong.


Even with the Fed Funds rate at 5.5% and at a ~23 year high, the S&P 500 is an all time high and back to where it was in December 2021.

Unless the Democrat establishment twists the Federal Reserve's arm going into this November's election cycle (to have another stock market rally), then I don't see the Federal Reserve measly lowering rates if PCE remains above 2.5% for at least 4 consecutive months and/or unemployment remains below 5%.

If PCE remains around 3.25% then the Federal Reserve would keep the Fed Funds rate around 5%, so it would mean only a cut of 0.5% to the rate.

.
38   AD   2024 Jan 20, 10:37am  

The S&P 500 was up about 24% in 2023 (not including dividends) and is up 22% for last 12 months.

Some sectors and stocks within S&P 500 that have been beaten down in last 12 months and may be value buys are Raytheon, Nike, Disney, Schwab, Pfizer, Bristol Myers, Bank of America, electric utilities, oil/gas, and regional banks. I'm not sure as far as real estate.
.


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39   gabbar   2024 Jan 20, 12:57pm  

ad says

I'm not sure as far as real estate.

Would Redfin or Zillow be a good long term buy when they report earnings in the next few weeks?
40   AD   2024 Jan 20, 5:21pm  

gabbar says

Zillow


Zillow still has not had positive net income since going public around 2012. I am leery about it.

And the only real estate related investments I would consider would be such as iShares US Home Construction and Vanguard's real estate fund.

.

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