Fear & Greed

Lol, "fear and greed" is the game - greed is used to suck you in, fear triggers the selloff - you might as well join every other dreamer who thinks they can change human nature - second coming anybody?
 



"Holding assets for long periods of time has the effect of lowering the risk of experiencing a loss in asset value."​

Stocks, Bonds, Bills, and Inflation
2006 Yearbook

Ibbotson Associates
Chicago, Illinois







Highs and lows

Range of returns for each asset class, rolling periods, 1926-2008


https://content1.vanguard.info/web/frsh_images/Chart-HighsLows.jpg
ht tps://content1.vanguard.info/web/frsh_images/Chart-HighsLows.jpg

Stock market returns are represented by the Standard & Poor's 500 Index for the period 1926–1970, the Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Index for 1971–April 22, 2005, and the MSCI US Broad Market Index thereafter. Bonds are represented by the S&P High Grade Corporate Index for 1926–1968, the Citigroup High Grade Index for 1969–1972, the Lehman Brothers U.S. Long Credit AA Index for 1973–1975, and the Barclays Capital U.S. Aggregate Bond Index thereafter. Cash is represented by the Citigroup 3-Month Treasury Bill Index. Past performance is no guarantee of future returns. The performance of an index is not an exact representation of any particular investment, as you cannot invest directly in an index

 
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What that chart doesn't tell you is who made money and who lost it.
 

GS10-GS1 is the spread ( i.e., the difference ) between the yield-to-maturities of the 10-year U.S. Treasury bond and the 1-year U.S. Treasury note. It is a measure of how "accomodative/easy" or "restrictive" the Federal Reserve's monetary policy is. In theory, the Fed is supposed to act as the adult ( spiking the punch bowl to get the party going but removing it before the partiers begin to behave like drunken idiots ). From 2001-2005, not only did Greenspan leave the damn bowl out— he continued to pour the equivalent of grain alcohol into it.



http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/fredgraph.png?&chart_type=line&graph_id=30394&category_id=0&recession_bars=On&width=800&height=480&bgcolor=%23B3CDE7&graph_bgcolor=%23FFFFFF&txtcolor=%23000000&ts=8&preserve_ratio=false&fo=ve&id=GS10_GS1&transformation=lin_lin&scale=Left&range=Custom&cosd=1953-04-01&coed=2010-11-01&line_color=%230000FF&link_values=&mark_type=NONE&mw=4&line_style=Solid&lw=1&vintage_date=2010-12-27_2010-12-27&revision_date=2010-12-27_2010-12-27&mma=0&nd=_&ost=&oet=&fml=a-b&fq=Monthly&fam=avg&fgst=lin

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/fredgraph.png?&chart_type=line&graph_id=30394&category_id=0&recession_bars=On&width=800&height=480&bgcolor=%23B3CDE7&graph_bgcolor=%23FFFFFF&txtcolor=%23000000&ts=8&preserve_ratio=false&fo=ve&id=GS10_GS1,SP500&transformation=lin_lin,nbd&scale=Left,Right&range=Custom,Custom&cosd=1953-04-01,2001-01-01&coed=2010-11-01,2010-12-23&line_color=%230000FF,%23FF0000&link_values=,&mark_type=NONE,NONE&mw=4,1&line_style=Solid,Solid&lw=1,5&vintage_date=2010-12-27_2010-12-27,2010-12-27&revision_date=2010-12-27_2010-12-27,2010-12-27&mma=0,0&nd=_,2001-03-01&ost=,&oet=,&fml=a-b,a&fq=Monthly,Quarterly&fam=avg,eop&fgst=lin,lin

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fredgraph.png?g=tSV&dbeta=1

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fredgraph.png?g=tSp&dbeta=1

 
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"Holding assets for long periods of time has the effect of lowering the risk of experiencing a loss in asset value."​

Stocks, Bonds, Bills, and Inflation
2006 Yearbook

Ibbotson Associates
Chicago, Illinois

They've never read that at CNBC.


Why would they? CNBC is in the business of trolling for suckers likely to fall for the propaganda of their advertisers and guest/salespersons.

Do you expect that viewers of the NFL's Super Bowl broadcast are likely to see a message advising that new automobiles and trucks lose 30% of their value the moment they're driven off the lot?

Do you expect that viewers of Saturday Night Live will be told that users of i-Phones are being overcharged?




 
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http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/...0102-metrics-graphic.html?src=me&ref=business
( The graphic below was included in an article. The article can be read at the above link. No portion of the article is quoted.)


I cannot ( and will not ) vouch for the accuracy of the calculations underlying this graphic as I did not calculate or verify them myself. My guess is that it's roughly right but an attempt to incorporate taxation in a calculation of this sort invariably produces variations in results related to the application of timing and rates.
__________________
In Investing, It’s When You Start And When You Finish
By New York Times


Key to graphic:
Investors often have expectations of real annual returns greater than 7 percent — the areas in green. But over 20 years or longer, rates that high are rare.

After 60 or 70 years, returns are relatively stable, but this time frame is longer than the relevant horizon for many retirement plans.
Outlined squares show investment returns after 20 years

An example:
If you invested money at the end of 1930 and withdrew it in 1950, the stock market would have returned about 2 percent a year after inflation and taxes.

People who invested after the crash in 1929 in hopes of a quick rebound had to wait many years for their investments to pay off.

Average real annual return includes dividends, average taxes and fees.
Adjusted for inflation.


This chart ... [below] shows annualized returns for the S.& P. 500 for every starting year and every ending year since 1920 — nearly 4,000 combinations in all. READ ACROSS THE CHART to see how money invested in a given year performed, depending on when it was withdrawn.

WORST 20 YEARS
1961-1981
–2.0% a year

BEST 20 YEARS
1948-68
+8.4% a year

2ND BEST 20 YEARS
1979-99
+8.2% a year

 
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You can tell a lot simply by observing the weightings ( over time ) of various industries in the S&P 500. In the big energy bubble that occurred from 1979-81, energy's weight got all the way up to about 29% in 1981. In the dot-com bubble, "info tech's" ( i.e., technology) weighting got as high as roughly 33% in 1999. The financial sector's weight exceeded 25% in the mid-oughts before the great residential real estate bubble exploded.


Moral Of The Story: If you're part of the herd, you'll eventually run off a cliff with the rest of the herd.


 


.SPEPS:IND SPX EPS (12MO TRAILING CONT OP)
http://noir.bloomberg.com/apps/quote?ticker=.SPEPS:IND




http://noir.bloomberg.com/apps/cbuilder?ticker1=.SPEPS:IND




_____________________

http://noir.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601110&sid=anEYpXOPW_wE



Return on Equity at 10-Year High
By Whitney Kisling, Lynn Thomasson and Nikolaj Gammeltoft

May 2, 2011 (Bloomberg)

...the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, where return on equity has risen six quarters to 23 percent and may reach 27 percent next year, the highest annual level since 2000...

...return on equity rose close to its level now in the first quarters of 2003 and 2009...

...trailing 12-month profit of $88.15 a share is 2 percent away from the record of $89.95 set in September 2007...

...The index [ at 1363.61 ] trades for 15.5 times income from the past 12 months and 12.2 times analysts’ estimate for next year. The average using reported earnings is 16.4 since 1954 and 20.5 in the past two decades...

...Return on equity for the S&P 500 has climbed since falling to 16 percent in the third quarter of 2009, the lowest... going back to 1998. The measure has averaged 22 percent in the past 13 years...

...Sales for S&P 500 companies is projected to climb 9.7 percent this year to $1,040.83 a share...

http://noir.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601110&sid=anEYpXOPW_wE
 
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Yanno what? There are getting to be some bargains out there.


I just might do some shopping tomorrow.

 


This chart has three lines showing the differences between:

(A) the yield of the constant maturity 20-year U.S. Treasury and the 1-year Treasury note and
(B) the yield of the constant maturity 10-year U.S. Treasury note and the 1-year Treasury note and
(C) the yield of the constant maturity 5-year U.S. Treasury note and the 1-year Treasury note.




The differences between the yield-to-maturities of varying tenors of U.S. Treasury notes and bonds shows the steepness (or not) of the U.S. Treasury yield curve. A steep yield curve ( a comparatively larger difference between longer-dated Treasuries and shorter-maturity Treasuries ) shows an accomodative Federal Reserve while an inverted yield curve ( yields of shorter-maturity Treasuries equal to or exceeding longer-maturity Treasuries ) shows a restrictive Federal Reserve.


The Federal Reserve is still spiking the punch bowl:



http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/fredgraph.png?graph_id=34214






The shape of the U.S. Treasury yield curve shows the Federal Reserve's current monetary policy stance at any point in time. An inverted yield curve is a sign that the Federal Reserve wishes to slow economic activity. A steep yield curve shows that the Federal Reserve wishes to encourage economic activity.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yield_curve


http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/18/USD_yield_curve_09_02_2005.JPG/800px-USD_yield_curve_09_02_2005.JPG



Current U.S. Treasury yield curve:

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/chart?type=c13&cfg=yldCurve_10.xml&x=3m|6m|1y|2y|3y|4y|5y|6y|7y|8y|9y|10y|15y|20y|30y&y1=0.01525|0.04576|0.10683|0.26275|0.46558||1.07331||1.6563|||2.20673|||3.24441&y2=0.01525|0.05084|0.11192|0.26217|0.46041||1.06179||1.6427|||2.18883|||3.21602&y3=6.0e-07|-0.00508|-0.00509|0.0005828|0.00518||0.01152||0.0136|||0.0179|||0.02839&img=png


ht tp://www.bloomberg.com/apps/chart?type=c13&cfg=yldCurve_10.xml&x=3m|6m|1y|2y|3y|4y|5y|6y|7y|8y|9y|10y|15y|20y|30y&y1=0.01525|0.04576|0.10683|0.26275|0.46558||1.07331||1.6563|||2.20673|||3.24441&y2=0.01525|0.05084|0.11192|0.26217|0.46041||1.06179||1.6427|||2.18883|||3.21602&y3=6.0e-07|-0.00508|-0.00509|0.0005828|0.00518||0.01152||0.0136|||0.0179|||0.02839&img=png

 
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From now until eternity, it makes absolutely no difference what you paid for a stock. That was yesterday. Buying or selling based on what you paid is the epitome of irrationality. What's truly astonishing is the number of people who behave that way.


It is this irrationality that enables me to anonymously and impersonally reap reward. When I buy something, it is with the intention of holding it forever.


 


For the first time in a number of years, there's a whiff of greed out there. Mind you, it's not enough to necessitate action but it is out there.









This chart has three lines showing the differences between:

(A) the yield of the constant maturity 20-year U.S. Treasury and the 1-year Treasury note and
(B) the yield of the constant maturity 10-year U.S. Treasury note and the 1-year Treasury note and
(C) the yield of the constant maturity 5-year U.S. Treasury note and the 1-year Treasury note.




The differences between the yield-to-maturities of varying tenors of U.S. Treasury notes and bonds shows the steepness (or not) of the U.S. Treasury yield curve. A steep yield curve ( a comparatively larger difference between longer-dated Treasuries and shorter-maturity Treasuries ) shows an accomodative Federal Reserve while an inverted yield curve ( yields of shorter-maturity Treasuries equal to or exceeding longer-maturity Treasuries ) shows a restrictive Federal Reserve.


The Federal Reserve is still spiking the punch bowl:


 
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Do you have any idea how many knuckleheads are falling all over themselves to buy Apple AFTER it's already gone up by 90× ?





______________________

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-...1990-masked-by-apple-adding-8-to-s-p-500.html



Broadest Rally Since 1990 Masked by Apple
By Whitney Kisling
April 12, 2012

...Apple Inc.’s influence on the three-year bull market in American equities is among the biggest ever exerted by a single stock...

The world’s most valuable company has surged 653 percent since March 9, 2009, accounting for 8 percent of the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index’s climb to 1,368.71 from 676.53... The impact is second only to Cisco Systems Inc. between 1998 and 2000... At the same time, the S&P 500 has almost doubled since March 2009 even when Apple is excluded...

Approaching Records
Of the 479 stocks that have been in the S&P 500 since March 2009, 458 have risen... the [Equal-Weighted version of the] benchmark gauge... is posting its biggest annualized return in a bull market in at least 22 years, while the Russell 2000 Index and S&P MidCap 400 Index are approaching records. Gains have put the Dow Jones Industrial Average, which doesn’t include Apple, 11 percent away from its October 2007 all-time high, while the S&P 500 needs to climb 14 percent...

Apple has done more than any other stock to push the S&P 500 up since the bull market began... Cupertino, California-based Apple became the world’s most valuable company last quarter, topping Exxon Mobil with a market capitalization that has since approached $600 billion. Apple added more than three times as much as International Business Machines Corp. and General Electric Co., the next-biggest contributors.

Second to Cisco
The influence of Apple is second to Cisco’s in the history of bull markets since 1982... The world’s biggest maker of computer-networking equipment accounted for 9.4 percent of the 60 percent gain in the S&P 500 between August 1998 and March 2000, the data show. Intel Corp. and Microsoft Corp. each accounted for almost 7 percent during that cycle...

Apple advanced 48 percent last quarter, the 11th-largest increase among the 500 constituents of the benchmark gauge for U.S. equities. While the 12 percent rise in the index shrinks to a 10.4 percent advance without Apple, that still would have been the best start to a year since 1998...

... the S&P 500 has rallied 8.8 percent in 2012...


Annualized Return
The rally has also been widespread based on the S&P 500 Equal-Weighted Index’s ( http://www.bloomberg.com/quote/SPW:IND/chart/ ) annualized return. The index, which gives each company the same contribution regardless of size, returned 34 percent on an annualized basis since March 2009, 5.8 percentage points more than the S&P 500. That’s the best return and best relative performance for a bull market since 1990...



http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-...1990-masked-by-apple-adding-8-to-s-p-500.html
 
The only thing to fear is fear itself. - can't be stated enough. Lol

Without the negatives there would be no stories.

Greed is just the fear of inadequacy. I refer to the line above.

What you seek you shall find.

and last but not least fate is a bitch with a wicked sense of humor. She will grant you joy just to rip it away, but she will always grant you joy.
 

There is an honest-to-goodness buying panic in the market for U.S. government bonds. They are horribly mispriced.



( I didn't write this. The author would not want to be credited on this website)
...There are several explanations for the current distortion in the fixed-income markets. Historically, under normal circumstances, the U.S. Treasury 10-year note should yield around nominal GDP (currently 4%) and have an approximate 2.0% premium above the rate of inflation (currently 2.0%). So by traditional measures, the 10-year note should yield between 3.75-4.0%, not 1.5%. Why the gap? There are several explanations. Most significant is the Fed’s “Zero Interest Rate Policy”, which the Fed has indicated will remain in place until the end of 2014. Another contributing factor is the crisis in the European Union, which has pushed many investors into the safe haven of U.S. Treasury Securities, resulting in higher bond prices and lower yields. Finally, the Fed is also a significant buyer of long-term U.S. Treasury debt through their so-called “Operation Twist”, which is expected to run through June. In a nutshell, the confluence of these factors has created an environment in which artificially low yields are able to exist. However, any legitimate movement towards a resolution of the European crisis, improvement in U.S. economic data, or uptick in inflationary pressures, would lead to an increase in intermediate and longer term interest rates, posing a substantial risk to bondholders. At current yield levels, for a 10-year bond, every 0.1% rise in interest rates would result in nearly a 1.0% loss of the bond’s principal value.


This stage of the interest rate cycle is somewhat reminiscent of the tech boom of the late 1990’s. In January, 2000, just as the dot.com bubble was peaking, Warren Buffet, who was frequently criticized for not participating in the tech frenzy, was asked if he might be wrong and that technology stocks would continue to rise even farther. Mr. Buffet replied, “I know what will happen [eventual collapse], I just don’t know when”. In today’s economic and geo-political environment, it is almost impossible to predict when rates will begin to rise...


 



Yield spread between Moody's BAA-rated bonds and AAA-rated bonds:

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fredgraph.png?g=aQi



http://research.stlouisfed.org/fredgraph.png?g=aQj




Yield-to-maturity ("YTM") spreads between U.S. Treasury bonds:
____ 20-year YTM less 1-year YTM
____ 10-year YTM less 1-year YTM
____ 5-year YTM less 1-year YTM


http://research.stlouisfed.org/fredgraph.png?g=aQk






The annualized interest rate of Federal funds less the annualized rate of change of the Consumer Price Index ( a negative
number means that the Federal Reserve's short-term interest rates are below the rate of inflation):

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fredgraph.png?g=aQl





The difference between the current yield-to-maturity ("YTM") of the 5-year U.S. Treasury note and the trailing annualized
rate of change of the Consumer Price Index (a negative number means that the YTM of the 5-year U.S. Treasury note is
less than the rate of inflation) :

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fredgraph.png?g=aQm





The ratio of market value of equities to GDP (as of April):

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fredgraph.png?g=oLP
 
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They're doing it all over again. Having dramatically underperformed the indexes in 2012, active investment managers and retail investors, alike, are shitting in their pants this year as stock markets rally. They're scared to death of missing this rally, so they're doing exactly what Bernanke is manipulating them into doing— they're throwing caution to the wind.


Everybody in the pool !! We're back to playing musical chairs. It'll all be fine— until the music stops.


Bernanke would be wise to do the same thing Greenspan did— get out of Dodge BEFORE it hits the fan. Another bubble is starting to build. The Fed has painted itself in a corner and cannot orchestrate a soft landing. Smart people are watching the Fed like a hawk. When monetary restraint comes— as it inevitably will (most likely from rising inflation)— a whole lot of people will be trying to get through the exit at the same time.




 





Fear__________________________Greed
^​




Here we go (again). They'll overdo it; they always do.


The total stock market has as total return of more than 29% this year while the S&P 500 has produced a total return of ~27%. Even now, there are signs of overvaluation.



The ratio of stock market capitalization to GDP,
as of April 1st (i.e., before another 15% that's occurred since then):




 
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