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Bubble - Licious

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  • Bubble - Licious

    ``Among the litany of other classic features of a speculative bull market peak, margin debt on the NYSE has surged to the highest level in history, and at nearly 2.5% of GDP, exceeds all but two months in 2000 and 2007.

    The amount being borrowed to buy stocks on margin is now 26% the size of all commercial and industrial loans in the entire U.S. banking sector.

    As low-quality, high-risk borrowers rush to take advantage of the present speculative appetite, issuance of leveraged loans (particularly the junkier "covenant-lite" forms) has now hit a record high, already eclipsing the previous record in 2007 at the height of pre-crisis yield-seeking.

    New equity issuance is also running at the fastest pace since any point except the 2000 bubble peak.

    At the same time, Bloomberg reports that investors are plowing more into stock mutual funds than at any point since the 2000 bubble peak.

    Keep in mind how this works - every buyer is matched with a seller in equilibrium, so the same amount of stock is being sold by institutions and other non-retail investors.

    One doesn't need to think long to answer who is likely to be the "smart money" in this trade, as the history of surges in retail participation provides a rather firm answer to that question.''

    http://hussmanfunds.com/wmc/wmc131209.htm



  • #2
    Re: Bubble - Licious

    Originally posted by don View Post
    ``Among the litany of other classic features of a speculative bull market peak, margin debt on the NYSE has surged to the highest level in history, and at nearly 2.5% of GDP, exceeds all but two months in 2000 and 2007.

    The amount being borrowed to buy stocks on margin is now 26% the size of all commercial and industrial loans in the entire U.S. banking sector.

    As low-quality, high-risk borrowers rush to take advantage of the present speculative appetite, issuance of leveraged loans (particularly the junkier "covenant-lite" forms) has now hit a record high, already eclipsing the previous record in 2007 at the height of pre-crisis yield-seeking.

    New equity issuance is also running at the fastest pace since any point except the 2000 bubble peak.

    At the same time, Bloomberg reports that investors are plowing more into stock mutual funds than at any point since the 2000 bubble peak.

    Keep in mind how this works - every buyer is matched with a seller in equilibrium, so the same amount of stock is being sold by institutions and other non-retail investors.

    One doesn't need to think long to answer who is likely to be the "smart money" in this trade, as the history of surges in retail participation provides a rather firm answer to that question.''

    http://hussmanfunds.com/wmc/wmc131209.htm
    I like Hussman, and he'll be proven right ... eventually (and I wish he already had)

    What's different now than in 2000 and 2007 however is the cost of credit is effectively 0 and QE-eternity (the specific effects on the equity markets I don't really understand, but increasing the base money at a rate of $1T p.a., even though it may show up as excess reserves on balance sheets may have some effect)

    Another point that is often overlooked is that although it is true there are sellers for every buyer, that does not mean that somehow the bubble cannot continue for an indeterminate (and longish) time, e.g. say the smart money sells after securing a 100% gain, watches the market drop 15% and then buys again and pushes the market up 40%, sells, drops 10%, buys, ....

    The bubble will blow ... sometime

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    • #3
      Re: Bubble - Licious

      Your point of free money is paramount in inflating the current market bubble. Perhaps the best indicator for timing the pricking of the bubble is when the bag-holders are all in place.

      the history of surges in retail participation provides a rather firm answer to that question.''

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Bubble - Licious

        Originally posted by don View Post
        Your point of free money is paramount in inflating the current market bubble. Perhaps the best indicator for timing the pricking of the bubble is when the bag-holders are all in place.
        right, when there are no more sheeple to buy in .... do we have an indicator for that?

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Bubble - Licious

          Originally posted by vinoveri View Post
          right, when there are no more sheeple to buy in .... do we have an indicator for that?
          I thought the indicator is/was when the barber/dentist are informing me/us to buy or sell?

          Comment

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