Australian (ASX) Stock Market Forum

"The End" of the US Stock Market Boom

Re: "The End" of US Stock Market Boom

That story is devastating...

Basic message is that Wall Street is just a giant con game game run but the most stupid but greedy people in the world solely for their own gain.

And we, the people and the investors are the sheep who get sheared and slaughtered.:mad:

But read it your yourself and make your own judgements.:2twocents

Unfortunately it makes one question the financial basis of most of our current systems - banks, super funds , investment companies which have substantial exposure to the unreal values generated by this false boom
 
Re: "The End" of US Stock Market Boom

:2twocents

I think the stockmarkets around the world will struggle for along time and not necessarily because of the current problems.

Many people around the globe have been burnt very badly and will not forget what has happened in a hurry, valuations IMO will be very conservative compared to the last few years, dividend yields however will be higher and once this highly volatile period has passed then volatility may go from 1 extreme to the other which wont be good for many traders particualy those with short term time frames.
 
Re: "The End" of US Stock Market Boom

:2twocents

I think the stockmarkets around the world will struggle for along time and not necessarily because of the current problems.

Many people around the globe have been burnt very badly and will not forget what has happened in a hurry, valuations IMO will be very conservative compared to the last few years, dividend yields however will be higher and once this highly volatile period has passed then volatility may go from 1 extreme to the other which wont be good for many traders particualy those with short term time frames.

Half the problem is too many people have short memories & boom/busts keep repeating. I can't see any benefit by holding long with all the uncertainty, global governments playing the market and all agreeing to spend their way out of this. Until govt,s get out of the market and we learn to consume less than we produce things will get worse. In a few years time US is going to have to work out how to fund $55 plus trillion for social security/medicare payments. How will the markets react? Who will lend them the money?
 
I thought it was brilliant, thanks.

Can someone confirm if this is real? I mean, are all the players real? I haven't had time to research it.
 
Very good article.

Talk about greed and stupidity.

And ignorance. He managed to tie together then entire finance markets time continuum for the last 25 or so years and demonstrate how ignorant everyone has been.
 
Is it the end FOR EVER, or just a part of the overall cycle?

Thats something im also tossing up Kennas. Historically the bad/depressing times have always been a good time to purchase for value investors. Each time people have said "this crash is different" as they are now. So is it actually different this time? ie - will the markets not recover within the next 5 - 10 years
 
Thats something im also tossing up Kennas. Historically the bad/depressing times have always been a good time to purchase for value investors. Each time people have said "this crash is different" as they are now. So is it actually different this time? ie - will the markets not recover within the next 5 - 10 years

Keep an eye on earnings though. If they continue to disappoint the bear market will perpetuate. If you buy now in anticipation of a bull market which starts in 5 years, in the meantime I reckon you'll be holding through a lot more very bad news and all the psychology that goes with that.

Time to look at alternative investments. Oh wait, that's what got us here. Which is why no-one is looking there and why the truly smart money probably is.
 
Is it the end FOR EVER, or just a part of the overall cycle?

It's cyclical in the sense that at some point in the future there will be another bull market. In the meantime, what is broken needs to be fixed.

To paraphrase John Mauldin, an entire international credit industry has been vapourised. And anyone who doesn't comprehend how credit has made their long-only portfolios profitable during the last 25 years simply hasn't done enough homework.

I took this away from that article. He wrote Liars Poker in '89 after leaving the industry in anticipation that the machine was broken. It's not difficult to find such opining around this era. The two Market Wizards books are filled with very bright and successful traders predicting that the real end was nigh. And then we got the 90s, and then we got the 00s.

Now, there are a lot of credible reasons to believe that the machine really is broken. And presumably worse than if the Wall Street Lewis walked away from in the 80s had been dealt with and reformed then rather than two decades later.

Some people are drawing parallels with the 70s, but at the same time a lot of statistics are coming out with claims that they're the worst since the 30s depression. The surreal part is the way the impact to the real economy is being drawn out. I'm not noticing it much at all in either Australia, Sweden or Holland. People just got through Christmas buying more for less.

It seems a lot worse in the UK and the US...through the looking glass of my Internet screen. But if it's that bad where are the soup kitchens? Or have western societies standard of living risen far enough to ensure this is unlikely to happen?

My gut tells me we're in bull trap territory.
 
Yeah, me too. Can't wait for the next 4 horseman to arrive so I can park some cash somewhere. It's just buying rum at the moment, which isn't a solid investment.

Last time I checked it was extremely liquid though :D:D:D
 
Interesting question about whether the market is over "forever".

Michael Lewis rightly thought in 1989 that the market needed fundamental reform or would crash. Since then there has basically been a steady and then escalating increase in debt which seems to have funded the rises in stock markets - particularly America.

The Madoff scam is the best example of this effect where the fund continues to grow while more money is poured in. Trouble is the fund is a bubble.

I suspect the market will mirror Madoff. It is mostly bubble. Real physical product making value is very thin on the ground. How can it be otherwise when the most lucrative game in town is playing with money to make money rather than more industrious activities?

And there are still other issues that have to be dealt with in the real world - dealing with the permanent decline in cheap energy for one and tackling the destructive effects of climate change around the world.

Just my opinion.
 
I suspect the market will mirror Madoff. It is mostly bubble. Real physical product making value is very thin on the ground. How can it be otherwise when the most lucrative game in town is playing with money to make money rather than more industrious activities?

I agree.

Why be a steel manufacturer when you can be a banker, its a lot easier and historically more profitable.

When I look at the USA, all I see is ONE BIG F--KING FUND.

Pension Funds, Superannuation Funds, Equity Funds, Mutual Funds, Hedge Funds, Managed Funds, Indexed Funds, Future Funds, Growth Funds, Value Funds, Foreign Stock Funds, Money Market Funds,Foreign Exchange Funds, Sector Funds, blah, blah, blah.
 
A traders synopsis of 2008.

http://leavittbrothers.com/stocks-o...k-at-2008-through-my-eyes-by-upsidetrader.cfm

What, you think I'm Larry Kudlow? Mustard seeds my ass. We have issues. The media will have you believe that the bell will toll on December 31 at midnight for the all clear. More of the same from that lot, just more of the same, and it will NEVER change, they have no vested interest in telling you to sell things. Why? Because about 1 % of the public knows how to short and it's not their audience.

In 2008 we saw the unfortunate failures of banks and investment banks, two of the brokers, Lehman and Bear I spent some great years working for. We discovered that Greenspan was a putz and was more knowledgeable about body tanning with Andrea Mitchell than anything about the economy. What a charlatan. We discovered that although Ben Bernanke was a scholar on the Great Depression he almost single handedly put us in another one. Speaking of body tanning, Angelo Mozilo sent Counrtywide Credit to hell in a hand basket and we discovered the hard way that the credit rating services give new definition to the word incompetent (they are analysts after all). Alan Schwartz at Bear Stearns told us things were swell and that counter party risk wasn't an issue but went belly up days later. Funny, why weren't some of my buddies taking their trades at the time of the interview? It was OK though because Jimmy Cayne was at the helm, he was smoking wacky weed at the time, but he was at the helm. Richard Fuld hid in his ivory tower as Rome burned to the ground, now his art work and Hampton's hacienda could be up for sale. He's not getting saved by zero. The Oracle of Omaha took it in the shorts because even the mighty fall when markets crash. Trust in the market was annihilated this year and nothing has really changed because we will just pass the baton to another twit who will be thrown into the deep end of the pool and will discover baptism by fire. It's just the natural evolution of things. Chairman Cox watched the world implode from his mahogany office, he started a "no short rule" but the market still tanked thousands of points. A couple of months later he signed off on some really sweet triple short ETF's. No, you can't make this **** up. Cramer yelled buy, buy, buy for about 90% of the move down yet the idol worshippers still call in every night just to say Booyah. The media has yelled "bottom" for thousands upon thousands of points and at some point they will be right by accident, but they did none of their viewers any favors.

But from the ashes some stars were born. Meredith Whitney was the only gal in the room that had the balls to call the financials the drek that they really were and still are. She received death threats and harassing calls from the old boy network that all suckle from the same teet. The same mindless warriors that travel together like neons in a fish tank, all snapping in unison at the same minute piece of food. Pathetic and no value added at all.
 
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