Bear Markets Move Fast: Read This Free Report
October 16, 2014 10:20 amVideo
Latest News
- Technical Analysis of Intraday Price Movement of USD/JPY Main Currency Pairs, Wednesday April 17, 2024. April 17, 2024
- Technical Analysis of Intraday Price Movement of Crude Oil Commodity Asset, Wednesday April 17, 2024. April 17, 2024
- Forecast for EUR/USD on April 17, 2024 April 17, 2024
- Forecast for GBP/USD on April 17, 2024 April 17, 2024
- Forecast for USD/JPY on April 17, 2024 April 17, 2024
- Outlook for EUR/USD on April 17. A boring Monday seamlessly transitioned into a boring Tuesday April 17, 2024
- Will the euro manage to save itself? April 17, 2024
- Analysis for GBP/USD on April 16th. The pound should not count on support from Powell April 16, 2024
- Analysis for EUR/USD on April 16th. The southern trend has been put on pause for correction April 16, 2024
- USD/JPY: Simple trading tips for novice traders on April 16th (US session) April 16, 2024
- GBP/USD: Simple trading tips for novice traders on April 16th (US session) April 16, 2024
- Trading Signals for GBP/USD for April 16-18, 2024: buy above 1.2405 or 1.2450 (21 SMA – 0/8 Murray) April 16, 2024
- EUR/USD: Simple trading tips for novice traders on April 16th (US session) April 16, 2024
- AUD/USD: Australian dollar remains under pressure April 16, 2024
- GBP/USD: trading plan for the US session on April 16th (analysis of morning deals). The pound was quickly bought back around April 16, 2024
- Trading Signals for BITCOIN (BTC/USD) for April 16-18, 2024: buy above $62,500 (4/8 Murray – 21 SMA) April 16, 2024
- Technical Analysis – USDCAD blossoms ahead of central bank speeches April 16, 2024
- EUR/USD: trading plan for the US session on April 16th (analysis of morning deals). Fewer people are willing to sell euro April 16, 2024
- EUR/USD. April 16th. Bears continue to advance against the backdrop of strong US statistics April 16, 2024
- Euro, sterling extend weakness April 16, 2024
Anyone who has been watching the market for the past few years knows that Wall Street wanted the stock market to get back to where it was.
You know, to the optimism and price levels in the time before the 2008-2009 financial crisis.
And Wall Street did get its way in the Dow Industrials more than a year ago. The index reached new all-time highs in 2013.
As for the return to pre-crisis optimism, that took a bit longer. But return it did, and very recently, in two measureable ways:
Stock ownership just hit “a rare extreme” — 34.4% of total financial assets among US households. That’s a higher percentage ownership than in 2007.
The percentage of bears among advisory services fell to 13.3%, the lowest in 27 years. “This means 87.6% of advisors are bullish on the long term trend.”
Of course, these are contrary indicators. Many other similar measures have reached similar extremes. So when it comes to a “Return to 2007,” the real question is:
How far will the re-enactment go?
Markets are most likely to turn when the fewest number of participants expect it. The reason truly big market meltdowns become meltdowns is because so few people are ready beforehand.
We’ve seen a lot of down days in the stock market since the September 19 high. And, after every one of those losses, I read and hear the same idea from the media: This is “a buying opportunity.”
In truth, that notion is also part of the re-enactment.
I’m obliged to say that it’s hardly been two weeks since Bob Prechter published his Special Interim Report. It posted in the afternoon on September 19, the same day as the high.
In 20-point type, Bob said
“This Is It.”
It’s times like these that investors need to prepare for the coming bear market. What we’re seeing is only the beginning. We would rather see you prepare early instead of late.
Preparing early means sidestepping perhaps the biggest bear market in living memory. It means safeguarding your spending power as others struggle to make ends meet.
As Bob Prechter says, bear markets move fast and are intensely emotional; investors and traders who are prepared have greater opportunities on the downside than on the upside.
Please read this free report, “This is It.”
Related Posts: