homewardbound11 wrote: » I can’t understand why the market hasn’t tanked yet . We’re probably on the verge of a recession deeper and sharper than 2008 and yet the nyse and Nasdaq hasn’t significantly dropped or at least they are at 2019 levels .
iAcesHigh wrote: » On the subject: Bloomberg
Timmaay wrote: » The history of recessions tells us that this is a dead cat bounce, where after the initial crash people probably panicked too much and oversold, and plenty of them had cashed out so reasonable bit of cash still floating around, the feds/central banks printing money was the kick-start to this bounce back, however it usually only is short term and when the wider realities of the economy downturn hit in it will fizzy out and it will drop back yet. The fed/central bank unlimited money printing is the main unknown however, will they, and indeed can they keep a floor under it all, and what will be the longer term implications of this, inflation is usually the immediately consequences of printing money however this less of an issue during a recession. Also not all stocks are back up though, the energy and transport sectors are still on the floor and no sign of recovery.
jon1981 wrote: » The market is still full of speculators with high levels of optimism. I think we'll need to wait for Q1 earnings and possibly Q2 to see the hangover of the lockdown. I suspect the market will continue to swing up and down for the foreseeable. Take Zoom for example, 300m daily active users, 95% of their users are paying zero cents yet the stock price is flying... current market valuation of 49bn!! They are priced on the assumption of perfect growth for many years to come. If you're not playing the 3-5 yrs game right now then you're gambling.
thomasm wrote: » There is a disconnect between markets and the real economy. Valuations and equity prices don’t make sense. They haven’t for years. The amount of money going into the markets via central banks is frankly insane. The Fed is buying corporate junk bonds and has not ruled out buying equities !! Capitalisim is either suspended or dead. Fed pumps money in, cash and bonds are not yielding so the Fed money buys equites. If they stop now everything collapses so they can’t and investors need to play the situation and not the fundamentals
ShineOn7 wrote: » But what the hell is going on? It just goes to show you how much of this is completely engineered. We should be seeing drops below that even of 2008
ShineOn7 wrote: » I'm looking for a share that is down 50% or more on it's January price, but has strong potential to return to well above it's January price by the year 2025
ShineOn7 wrote: » This one is utter baffling to me too. I have savings i was going to spend on 6 months travelling that I was going to invest in Shares now instead with a view to not cash out for a minimum of 5 years But what the hell is going on? It just goes to show you how much of this is completely engineered. We should be seeing drops below that even of 2008 Can the Fed keep throwing money at this all year? Should i wait another few months? Shares I'm interested in: (holding for a minimum of 5 years, maybe some for 10)Amazon (currently soaring for obvious reasons) Alphabet (Google) Apple Facebook Maybes:RyanAir (given the current situation, how the hell is this not at 7 Euros or even lower?) Disney Berkshire Hathaway class B stock I'm looking for a share that is down 50% or more on it's January price, but has strong potential to return to well above it's January price by the year 2025
Shedite27 wrote: » Saw Michael Santoli tweet about this yesterday, One fifth of S&P are -40% More than half are -25% The headline of S&P is only down ~10-15% is heavily impacted by 10 companies or so
Mad_maxx wrote: » It's why stock picking is so difficult and why not being able to buy the S+P in Ireland is so disappointing
One fifth of S&P are -40% More than half are -25%
Mad_maxx wrote: » A handful of companies almost always drive gains in the market It's why stock picking is so difficult and why not being able to buy the S+P in Ireland is so disappointing As to why the market is going up, perhaps the money men know this covid 19 thing is vastly overblown and is more or less exclusively a disease for the old and already ill
iAcesHigh wrote: » you can always buy shares in ETF following S&P