Are You Gambling with Your Retirement Account?

And just like that.  The year is half over.  Can you believe it?

Hardly the blink of an eye ago we were putting the final touches on our one great big nasty prediction for 2023 – that China will invade Taiwan.

Of course, this hasn’t come true – yet.  And, quite frankly, we hope it doggone never does.  But with fools like Anthony Blinken in charge, the unthinkable could become a reality.

Certainly, the stock market, as measured by the S&P 500, has performed well.  As of market close on Thursday (June 29), the S&P 500 is up 14.51 percent year-to-date.  Not bad.

But the real action is over in the technology sector.  Year-to-date, the NASDAQ is up 29.86 percent.  Did you capitalize on it?

If not, you may still have a good shot at easy stock market returns over the next six months.  That’s what research by Thomas Lee, founder of Fundstrat Global Advisors, says. Continue reading

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Washington’s Bias for Continuous Inflationism

This week Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell delivered his semiannual testimony to Congress.  A main feature of the discussion was the status of rate hikes and the fight against inflation.

In short, Powell’s inflation fight isn’t over.

Core CPI, which excludes food and fuel prices, is increasing at an annual rate of 5.3 percent.  Similarly, core personal consumption expenditure (PCE) prices are up 4.7 percent from a year ago.

Thus, a federal funds rate of 5.25 percent isn’t enough to contain rising prices.  Ideally, a rate on the order of 7 to 7.25 percent is needed to do the trick.

After its recent FOMC meeting, the Fed signaled two additional rate hikes this year.  As part of this week’s testimony, Powell validated this… remarking it was a “pretty good guess”.

So, why pause in the first place?

The Silicon Valley Bank and First Republic Bank fiascos in March are a very small part of a much larger issue.  Rapid interest rate hikes have left poorly prepared banks unable to adequately compensate depositors. Continue reading

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Are You Unknowingly in the Impact Zone?

“When the wave breaks here.  Don’t be there.  Or you’re gonna get drilled!” Turtle

A New Bull Market?

Have U.S. stocks really entered a new bull market?

That’s the claim of some experts following the S&P 500’s recent attainment of a 20 percent increase from its October 2022 interim low.  We have some reservations.

Of note, the S&P 500 is still down over 7 percent from its all-time closing high reached on December 29, 2021.  Certainly, the S&P 500 could hit a new high as part of this rally.  But it would be short-lived.

There are a number of factors at play that are bearish for the stock market.  Interest rates, Treasury sales, credit market stresses, and an imminent recession.

In fact, we believe the S&P 500 has become increasingly risky over the last six months as the top technology stocks have bubbled up.  Because of this, the portfolios of many investors are now unknowingly in the impact zone.  And they will get absolutely drilled when the market resumes its next bear market leg down.

We’ll get to the how and why of this in just a moment.  But first, some context is in order.

This week’s Bureau of Labor Statistics consumer price index (CPI) report is as good a place as any to look at first.  As you may have seen, the BLS reported that consumer price inflation, as measured by the CPI, increased at an annual rate of 4 percent in May.  That’s more than double the Fed’s arbitrary 2-percent inflation target. Continue reading

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Time to Get Real About Artificial Intelligence

There’s never really a good time for a new bubble mania.  But usually, they have the decency to come at the tail end of an extended bull market, as a sort of blow-off top.

That’s when investors, blinded by greed and confident from a long period of success, throw caution to the wind.  They recklessly chase share prices higher with the expectation of bagging easy riches.

The dot com bubble mania blow-off in the run up to the new millennium was a true classic.  It was preceded by an 18-year bull market and triggered by a new, game-changing technology.  The subsequent downside – a 75 percent collapse of the NASDAQ – was timeless.

The current AI bubble mania is an odd duck.  With the roll out of ChatGPT, roughly 6 months ago, the AI bubble mania has inflated within an extended bear market rally.  Hopeful investors are getting suckered in at the worst possible time.

Year-to-date, the NASDAQ is up 26 percent.  Yet, it is still down over 17 percent from its November 19, 2021, all-time closing high. Continue reading

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