Friday, November 20, 2015

Case for Overheated market

The low market of August 24 is long gone. The market of November 2015 seems to be rallying back to dizzying heights though it is obvious that it is getting overheated in most parts.
Just take a look at the rallying components - for instance some of the bellweather stocks which measure the pulse of the market and it is obvious again that they are having greed written all over it. There is euphoria which reflects in the high and insane P/E for these stocks. Are these really justified at this point ? All the indicators - statistical ones seem to be pointing to an ok economy and ok numbers and revenues but certain companies seem to be simply going up for no particular reason.
Take Fedex for instance. It zoomed from 140 to 164 at the time of this writing. Why? Is there any really good news that came out from this sector or company? Oil got shellacked and yet XOM and Chevron and Conoco are doing rather decently well. Home Depot and Lowes are simply disconnected from the real estate market reports. Walmart got beaten up badly and compounded with Buffet selling stake on Walmart. Usually there are a bunch of followers who mimic what Buffet seems to do - hedge funds, individual investors etc. Does not make sense though. Target and Costco are up too though Target is closing stores. Apple is swinging and acting like a volatile startup rather than the biggest capped player in the market. Which probably explains the wild gyration of the market indexes. Same with Google and other tech stocks such as Facebook. MCD breakfast took it to the highest point it has witnessed in decades - which makes it even weirder. And some predictable news are bolstering some sectors and companies more than it needs to be.
Bottom line: stay put, hold on buying any new stocks or indexes or any kind of funds. Unless you are into swinging as the core strategy. But even then if for some reason the market were to turn suddenly downwards, you would held with the bag of stocks like the way folks were in 2007 upturn. The market is in heated to overheated mode - a widely held belief - and likely going to be in this mode until there is an anticipated change in interest rates.

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