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not me , i would rather look in India and Indonesia ( and South-East Asia )Australians invest record amount in Wall Street as analysts warn 'at some stage the music will stop' - ABC News
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2025-01-07/australians-investing-wall-street-analysts-warning/104789944
Super funds drain cash piles to go all-in on frothy markets
Australia’s multitrillion-dollar pension pool is the most bullish it’s been on stocks in over 10 years, leaving little room for error should markets go south.www.afr.com
Sounds like euphoria and irrational exhuberance just with US stocks.
well Trump is well known for his bluster ( some call it bullying ) but he does get some deals done , but usually at some mid-point compromise
the problem is .. just how much trouble is the US actually in ,
official data has been questionable for years , so will the fudging continue or will we see glimpses of the truth ( as an excuse for extreme/emergency measures , )
now i am NOT US-focused although a crashing US market will affect some holdings , anyway
but even though i am less exposed to the US than many i still expect some contagion
studying the GFC in hindsight ( 'cos i had really important stuff happening at that time , so wasn't watching at the time ) my observation suggests the market went to cash ( ideally US dollars ) first .. and then other investments got some positive momentum ( like the precious metals ) as those who had reduced their debt levels exploited the cheaper prices
given recent events will the 'rush to cash' ( US dollars ) be as strong this time , some already have cash on the sidelines , and some will be avoiding US exposure ( like the Russians and Iranians )
In Her Last Official Act, Yellen Warns US Will Hit Debt Ceiling One Day After Trump Inauguration
In Her Last Official Act, Yellen Warns US Will Hit Debt Ceiling One Day After Trump Inauguration | ZeroHedge
ZeroHedge - On a long enough timeline, the survival rate for everyone drops to zerowww.zerohedge.com
For now, I'll continue with the equal weight scheme while working on a more dynamic weighting scheme based on the benchmark weights of the sectors that made it into the top 5.Compare that to the 10% underweight for XLK, and it's not hard to understand that such a weighting scheme causes all kinds of shifts in this strategy's risk-reward profile.
The US is in MASSIVE trouble.
We are in a massive, multi asset bubble. Bubbles do not end well. But going short a bubble too early is also fatal. Therefore, currently, you have to be long. But long with such a light touch that you can exit or reverse very, very quickly.
jog on
duc
Is the moment of truth?‘The debt limit does not authorize new spending, but it creates a risk that the federal government might not be able to finance its existing legal obligations that Congresses and Presidents of both parties have made in the past. I respectfully urge Congress to act promptly to protect the full faith and credit of the United States.’
Should the FED have to start hiking interest rates again due to spiking inflation, I predict the US will end up defaulting on its debt for the first time in history, I see that happening if the Americans end up with stagflation, like what happening during the 1970's. In June 1981, Paul Volcker(Fed chair) had to raise interest rates to 20% to get stagflation back under control. If that happened again, it would be armageddon without the nukes for the Stockmarket and the ecomony.Dan denning has written on a similar vein to Duc above, focusing on the perfidy of Janet Yellen. Politics in the US are so poisoned that each change in admin sees the outgoing ba$tard$ making as much difficulty as possible for the incoming ba$tard$ as possible, even if it is bad for the US economy.
Mick
Around the time I published my weekly research note to paid subscribers about the coming ‘day of reckoning’ for the US dollar (The Dollar Frontier), US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen committed one last act of fiscal sabotage before leaving office on Monday. Yellen sent a note to members of Congress stating she had begun to take ‘extraordinary measures’ to prevent the US government from defaulting on its debt.
The measures don’t seem all that extraordinary. The government will temporarily suspend the funding of retirement benefits and pensions for civil servants and postal employees. But if the government wants to issue new debt, it will have to remove the debt limit it hit on January 2nd. This sets up a fight between the new President and Democrats in Congress.
Yellen said the new measures will begin Tuesday, January 21st, the day after Donald Trump’s inauguration. She added this:
Is the moment of truth?
The day of reckoning for the dollar?
In every other past debt ceiling crisis, the debt ceiling has been raised and Washington has continued to spend money out of an empty pocket. The only difference, this time, may be that the debt ceiling itself is completely removed as a barrier to new spending (it’s not a very effective barrier, clearly).
The bigger story to watch will be whether a strong US dollar continues to draw capital into big cap US tech stocks like a magnet, driving US stocks to even higher historic valuations. US stocks are worth a combined $60 trillion, over 200% of GDP— or ‘strongly overvalued’ according to Warren Buffett’s famous ratio.
If the dollar weakens—because of a debt crisis, because of interest rate cuts by the Fed, or because of a negative market reaction to Donald Trump’s tariffs—this could lead to a sudden and large correction in overvalued US stocks. Be prepared for anything.
This is a bull market for stocks. If you're not making money in this environment, then you should probably reevaluate your strategies. I know for a fact that I've witnessed individuals, who are clearly mentally ill, fight this historic rally pretending that there's some kind of epic credit crisis coming any day now (for over 2 years lol). Whether it's fake breadth deterioration, or the "yen carry trade", or lies about Gold sending some kind of warning, or the Fed ruining everything, or small-caps underperforming, or Trump and his Magas. It's always something. These people will make up anything in their heads, no matter how outrageous, in order to justify poor decisions. Their egos are too fragile. Good. It might be a little sad to have to watch them ruin their lives. But it's great for us who recognize their vulnerabilities and have chosen to just profit from it all instead. You see, when I hear credit crisis, I naturally look at credit spreads to see what's going on. The answer is: NOTHING. Still nothing... Credit spreads are as tight as they've been this entire bull market: |
If there is stress in the stock market, you're going to see it in credit. It's just math. The Bond market is more than twice the size of the U.S. stock market. So if there is going to be pressure on stocks, it will show up in Bonds. It has not. This week I was running around various cities in the northeast talking with smart folks about markets. It was a very successful trip. More on that soon. But on Thursday I was in New York City with Josh Brown and Michael Batnick on the number 1 podcast in Finance: The Compound & Friends. If you're interested in how we're navigating the bull market, this is an episode you're not going to want to miss: |
Josh and Michael are old friends of mine. I've had a front row seat to all their success. And they've been there rooting for me all along as well. This was a ton of fun. Lots of laughs. And we discussed some really important market developments. |
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Picking stocks that outperform the market is hard. Riding them through the ups and the downs is even harder. |
Holding onto big winners in the stock market is difficult because the temptation to book gains is real. We all know how bad it feels to ride a monster only to see gains get cut in half. |
If you’re a stock picker, then there is a 100% chance that you’ve had some stocks that you held onto for too long. Assuming that’s the case, then you have that in the back of your brain at all times, constantly telling you to not be greedy. At the same time, you don’t want to sell too early and leave money on the table. |
Holding stocks on the way up isn’t easy, but holding them on the way down is even harder. When a winning stock falls, you’ll inevitably feel like, “Ugh I’m a greedy idiot. Why didn’t I sell before? Should I sell now? How low is this going to go?” |
Josh opened the show this week by talking about holding big winners. 10 baggers and the such. How much of this is luck, and how much of it is skill? |
Obviously, there is a degree of luck involved, but does it take skill to watch your stock get cut in half multiple times along the way to massive gains? I’m not sure “skill” is the word I would use. I would say a strong stomach and mental backbone, for sure. I would also say, and I really don’t mean for this to sound insulting, even though I know it will, that it takes a certain naivety about how the market works. I would say that non-finance professionals are, I don’t know, 10x more likely to buy and hold a massive winner than somebody who works in the industry. |
Here’s why I say that. People who work in or around finance are more likely to know how unlikely it is that they’ll pick and hang onto the next Apple or Nvidia. We’re also less likely to view the market as a casino than retail investors are. |
We can’t ride big winners because we know too much. I’m mostly sorta kidding. Here’s a story that I think is a decent analogy. |
A husband and wife are at a casino. The husband is well-versed in gambling. He knows when to hit, when to split, when to raise, etc. The wife has never played before. |
After an hour, she comes over to him. He asks, “How’d you do?” |
“I lost $200 playing slots. What about you?” |
“How’d you lose $200 playing slots????” |
“I don’t know. Is that bad? How did you do?” |
“I lost $2,000.” |
“You lost 10x more than me, and I’m getting crap for it?” |
“Yeah, but I know how to gamble!” |
I don’t think I’ll ever get a 10-bagger. I know too much. I read a piece from J.P. Morgan back in 2014 that’s been cemented into my brain. |
“More than 40% of all companies that were ever in the Russell 3000 Index experienced a ‘catastrophic’ price loss,’ which we define as a 70% decline in price from peak levels which is not recovered.” |
One out of every four stocks has a monster decline from which they never recover. Yeah, no thanks. But there are giant winners. I mean, obviously. So, how likely are you to catch one? JPM says that “7% of companies generated lifetime excess returns more than two standard deviations over the mean.” |
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All of these excess returners, with a handful of exceptions, I’m sure, have had multiple monster drawdowns. I mean, look at Apple, for example. It's probably the most widely held 10-bagger ever. Apple’s total return over the last decade is 875%, so close enough. |
Trump is inheriting an economy that is simultaneously robust and fragile. It's evident in his economic advisers' increasingly vivid warnings of fiscal unsustainability. Why it matters: The unemployment rate is low, GDP growth is strong and inflation is falling. But those results have been achieved amid high fiscal deficits, the likes of which have only been seen in times of war, pandemic or economic crisis.
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didn't they ?Now I haven't heard much chatter about recession for a while. After loads of predictions of recession in 2024 (myself included) that did not materialise, recession talk just kinda faded away. 2025 could be the year.
I have also been predicting a recession in the US since last year.Now I haven't heard much chatter about recession for a while. After loads of predictions of recession in 2024 (myself included) that did not materialise, recession talk just kinda faded away. 2025 could be the year.
The real risk posed by recession is the UE rate jumping higher and blowing out the deficits even further.
jog on
duc
Economic orthodoxy is out. Rule-busting and experimentation are in. That's a key takeaway from this week's gathering of top executives and world leaders in Davos. Why it matters: Economic mini-experiments are happening in nations big and small as government officials embrace tariffs, protectionism, anti-immigration and other policies.
What they're saying: Top executives may not love the prospect of big tariffs but say they believe the set of policy changes on the way will be good for the economy on net.
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did you ? ( get it wrong )I have also been predicting a recession in the US since last year.
Got that wrong.
Still expecting one, but the trump mania has shaken everything to bits.
The fundamentals have not changed though.
Mick
seems not many even have a working IQ , because somehow the masses don't seem to careWhether Trump accepts reality or not most economists think US consumers will end up paying more for imported goods and that should start showing up with inflation data coming out of the US. Trump doesn’t understand how Tariffs work.
The tariff tax gets applied once the imported goods enter the US and will be passed to the consumers, so countries like and Canada and Mexico will tell Trump to get F. It doesn’t take a genius with a high iQ to understand that.
Do you maybe understand that inflation is actually part of the US solution ?Whether Trump accepts reality or not most economists think US consumers will end up paying more for imported goods and that should start showing up with inflation data coming out of the US. Trump doesn’t understand how Tariffs work.
The tariff tax gets applied once the imported goods enter the US and will be passed to the consumers, so countries like and Canada and Mexico will tell Trump to get F. It doesn’t take a genius with a high iQ to understand that.
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