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Is the Stock Market "Detached From Reality"?

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libertythroughwealth.com

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ltw@mb.libertythroughwealth.com

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Mon, Oct 26, 2020 05:12 PM

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When someone tells you that the stock market has it all wrong, they're saying they're smarter than e

When someone tells you that the stock market has it all wrong, they're saying they're smarter than everybody. And that's rarely the case. [Liberty Through Wealth]( SPONSORED [Wall Street FEEDING FRENZY on 5G SuperStock!]( [5G SuperStocks]( One stock set record revenue in 2019 due to "booming 5G demand." The $3 stock is bringing in... get this... $340K per MINUTE! Wall Street is loading up. [Get the story on this 5G SuperStock right here.]( Tell Us... Do you enjoy short-term trading? [Click here to vote in our Twitter poll.]( [And click here to join the conversation on Facebook.]( THE SHORTEST WAY TO A RICH LIFE Is the Stock Market "Detached From Reality"? Alexander Green | Chief Investment Strategist | The Oxford Club [Alexander Green] I'm not sure whether to be amazed or amused that so many professional economists don't understand the first thing about the stock market. Exhibit A is [Paul Krugman]( a Nobel laureate and regular columnist for The New York Times. Four years ago, he predicted a market collapse and "a global recession with no end in sight" if Donald Trump were elected president. He then spent the next three years pooh-poohing the economic boom - and bull market - that followed. The pandemic and government-imposed economic lockdown ended both, of course. But when the market rallied off its March lows, Krugman wrote column after column declaring that investors had lost their minds. Despite the egg on his face, he still has plenty of company... The Washington Post recently ran an article by economist Heather Boushey, president and chief executive of the Washington Center for Equitable Growth, with this understated headline: "The Stock Market Is Wildly Detached From Reality." Boushey cannot fathom how the economy could be so bad and the stock market - up more than 50% since the March lows - so good. I've written before about how the troubles affecting so many small companies have [benefited cash-rich public companies](. But let's start at the beginning... SPONSORED [Keep Calm]( [UNCLAIMED CHECKS RELEASED BY STATE AND FEDERAL TREASURIES:]( Average of three checks for every American. [Click here before the money runs out...](. A public company's valuation is determined by where buyers and sellers can agree on its share price. (There is a buyer for every share sold and a seller for every share bought.) Stock prices are based on information specific to the company - such as sales, earnings and margins - as well as information about the general economy, like inflation, interest rates, commodity prices, currency values, Federal Reserve policies, government spending, etc. Opinions about these things change day to day and even minute to minute - as do share prices. Boushey is right when she says the stock market is not the economy. It could be better described as a public opinion poll on the outlook for the economy. Unlike questions asked by Gallup or Pew, however, the opinions reflected in the stock market carry risk. Bet that a company's shares are undervalued and you may lose money, at least temporarily and perhaps permanently. Bet that a company's shares are fully valued and you give up the upside potential. Mindless Robinhood gamblers notwithstanding, self-interested traders and investors give [serious consideration]( to the stocks they buy and sell - and try to base their decisions on the best information available. That's why the market is often described as "efficient." Every bit of publicly available information - both good and bad - is immediately reflected in share prices by investors. Those prices also include quite a bit of information that is not widely known. People are out talking to customers, employees, suppliers and competitors every day, trying to glean information to gain an edge. This information filters into the stock market and is reflected in share prices. That's why you often see a stock move higher a few days before good news is released or lower in the days just before bad news is reported. In essence, the stock market is like a public opinion poll, but only for knowledgeable, risk-savvy individuals and the financial institutions that represent them. What's important to understand - and what apparently crosses Krugman's and Boushey's noggins at 30,000 feet - is that these men and women are not basing their opinions on the current economy, but on what the economy will be like in the future. If you were buying a private company in its entirety, you would certainly visit the operations, pore over the books, and talk to the workers and suppliers. But what you would ultimately pay for the business would be based primarily on what you believe it will earn in the months and years ahead. Stock market investors think the same way. Their buying and selling reflects their thoughts on the state of the economy six to nine months out, and how it will affect business. In the aggregate, these price fluctuations determine how stocks - including benchmarks like the Dow, the S&P 500 or the Nasdaq - are moving. Like other opinion polls - the 2016 election comes immediately to mind - the stock market is sometimes wrong. That's why economist Paul Samuelson famously quipped that the stock market had predicted "nine of the past five recessions." (I give Samuelson credit for understanding - unlike Krugman and Boushey - that the stock market is a leading indicator, not a lagging one.) Investors do sometimes get the big picture wrong. But not usually. (The exceptions are bubbles and panics, where extreme emotions overcome reason and common sense.) Making economic prognostications is a treacherous business under the best of circumstances. The world is a messy, complicated place. Human behavior is unpredictable. Moreover, the global economy is affected by politics, war, consumer prices, interest rates, energy prices, the value of the dollar, consumer and business confidence, scientific advances, and technological innovation, to name just a few. Then there is the occasional bolt out of the blue... Consider the stock market crash of 1987, Saddam Hussein's invasion of Kuwait (which led to the first Gulf War), the collapse of the highly leveraged hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management (requiring a massive Wall Street bailout), 9/11 and the second Gulf War, the housing bubble (and bust), the financial crisis, and [the current pandemic](. You'd have to be clairvoyant to see these events ahead of time. Yet the consensus is generally spot-on. (That's why "[the trend is your friend]( Investors generally do get the outlook more right than wrong. We witnessed the longest bull market in history over the last 11 years because we also experienced the longest economic expansion in U.S. history. The stock market cratered in the first quarter because investors correctly anticipated an enormous economic contraction as a result of the coronavirus and economic lockdown. And the market rallied strongly since March because investors correctly anticipated a record economic rebound. Here's the bottom line... There are smart people who know more than most of us on certain subjects, including economics. But the stock market doesn't reflect what some smart person thinks. It reflects what investors everywhere think. So when someone tells you that the stock market has it all wrong, they're not just saying they're smarter than some people. They're saying they're smarter than everybody. And that's rarely the case. It's know-it-alls and bloviators like Paul Krugman and Heather Boushey who are "wildly detached from reality." Stock market investors? Not so much. Good investing, Alex P.S. Readers may have noticed that Friday's Liberty Through Wealth column was published with some of the paragraphs out of order. You can read the corrected version [here](. [Leave a Comment]( [Wall St Sign]( [Click here]( to watch Alex's latest video update. For Alex's latest video updates, subscribe on [YouTube](. JOIN THE CONVERSATION [Facebook]( [Facebook]( [Twitter]( [Twitter]( [Email Share](mailto:?subject=A%20great%20piece%20from%20Liberty%20Through%20Wealth...&body=From%20Liberty%20Through%20Wealth:%0D%0A%0D%0AWhen%20someone%20tells%20you%20that%20the%20stock%20market%20has%20it%20all%20wrong,%20they're%20saying%20they're%20smarter%20than%20everybody.%20And%20that's%20rarely%20the%20case.%0D%0A%0D [Email Share](mailto:?subject=A%20great%20piece%20from%20Liberty%20Through%20Wealth...&body=From%20Liberty%20Through%20Wealth:%0D%0A%0D%0AWhen%20someone%20tells%20you%20that%20the%20stock%20market%20has%20it%20all%20wrong,%20they're%20saying%20they're%20smarter%20than%20everybody.%20And%20that's%20rarely%20the%20case.%0D%0A%0D MORE FROM LIBERTY THROUGH WEALTH [The Investment Upside of COVID-19]( [Secrets of Successful Swing Trading]( [How Swing Trading Lets You Bet on a Market Bottom]( SPONSORED [Forget About Market Crash Fears - 5G Is Here to Stay]( You know the old saying "Buy when there's blood in the streets"? Well, between the coronavirus outbreak and the plunge in oil prices... The market looks like an absolute bloodbath right now. And there's never been a better time to buy this small cap stock. [Here's how you can "buy the dip" and potentially score a retirement fortune...]( [The Oxford Club]( You are receiving this email because you subscribed to Liberty Through Wealth. Liberty Through Wealth is published by The Oxford Club. Questions? Check out our [FAQs](. Trying to reach us?[Contact us here.]( Please do not reply to this email as it goes to an unmonitored inbox. [Privacy Policy]( | [Whitelist Liberty Through Wealth]( | [Unsubscribe]( © 2020 The Oxford Club, LLC All Rights Reserved The Oxford Club | [105 West Monument Street](#) | [Baltimore, MD 21201](#) North America: [1.800.589.3430](#) | International: [+1.443.353.4334](#) | Fax: [1.410.329.1923](#) [Oxfordclub.com]( The Oxford Club is a financial publisher that does not offer any personal financial advice or advocate the purchase or sale of any security or investment for any specific individual. Members should be aware that although our track record is highly rated by an independent analysis and has been legally reviewed, investment markets have inherent risks and there can be no guarantee of future profits. The stated returns may also include option trades. We expressly forbid our writers from having a financial interest in their own securities recommendations to readers. All of our employees and agents must wait 24 hours after online publication or 72 hours after the mailing of printed-only publications prior to following an initial recommendation. Any investments recommended by The Oxford Club should be made only after consulting with your investment advisor and only after reviewing the prospectus or financial statements of the company. Protected by copyright laws of the United States and international treaties. The information found on this website may only be used pursuant to the membership or subscription agreement and any reproduction, copying, or redistribution (electronic or otherwise, including on the world wide web), in whole or in part, is strictly prohibited without the express written permission of The Oxford Club, 105 W. Monument Street, Baltimore MD 21201.

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