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3 Big Reasons Why Everyone Hates This Bull Market
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Order Scott Redler's 2014 Outlook now!
T3 Live Chief Strategist Scott Redler and Editor-in-Chief John Darsie sat down for an extended interview to preview Scott's upcoming 2014 Outlook Special Report.
The conversation was broken down into eight segments. Check them all out on our website for the full series:
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This has been one of the most hated bull market runs of all-time - but why? Many investors capitulated in 2008 and early 2009 as the market tumbled lower. They bought into the doomsday headlines that said stocks were dead. They paid too much attention to talking heads looking to make a name for themselves. Then, as soon as the market started rallying strong, scars from the financial crisis prevented them from getting back involved.
Everyone loves the market when it's going up, but hates it when it's going down. The same people that say they want to get involved on a pull-back get scared to get back involved with the pull-back comes, often surrounding the latest potentially bull market-killing headline.
As a professional trader, the "why" will always be secondary to the "what." Everyone seems to have a strong opinion about the Fed and QE, but successful traders and investors simply accept the situation for what it is. The reality is that if you zoom out on the chart, you realize that market really hadn't gone anywhere from the early 2000s all the way until early 2013. After the roaring 80s and the go-go 90s, the market consolidated in a range for more than a decade, but still people believed we couldn't get back to all-time highs. Jim Cramer shared my analysis on this topic early this year: How Long Can Bull Last?
The most-hated rallies are often the most ferocious ones, because it means that there is money still on the sidelines that could be put to work. When everyone agrees that the market is going higher and you get mainstream publications cheering on the great bull market, that is when you should start to get worried.
T3 Live Chief Strategist Scott Redler and Editor-in-Chief John Darsie sat down for an extended interview to preview Scott's upcoming 2014 Outlook Special Report.
The conversation was broken down into eight segments. Check them all out on our website for the full series:
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
This has been one of the most hated bull market runs of all-time - but why? Many investors capitulated in 2008 and early 2009 as the market tumbled lower. They bought into the doomsday headlines that said stocks were dead. They paid too much attention to talking heads looking to make a name for themselves. Then, as soon as the market started rallying strong, scars from the financial crisis prevented them from getting back involved.
Everyone loves the market when it's going up, but hates it when it's going down. The same people that say they want to get involved on a pull-back get scared to get back involved with the pull-back comes, often surrounding the latest potentially bull market-killing headline.
As a professional trader, the "why" will always be secondary to the "what." Everyone seems to have a strong opinion about the Fed and QE, but successful traders and investors simply accept the situation for what it is. The reality is that if you zoom out on the chart, you realize that market really hadn't gone anywhere from the early 2000s all the way until early 2013. After the roaring 80s and the go-go 90s, the market consolidated in a range for more than a decade, but still people believed we couldn't get back to all-time highs. Jim Cramer shared my analysis on this topic early this year: How Long Can Bull Last?
The most-hated rallies are often the most ferocious ones, because it means that there is money still on the sidelines that could be put to work. When everyone agrees that the market is going higher and you get mainstream publications cheering on the great bull market, that is when you should start to get worried.