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Re: "Wall Street Fear Has Yet To Grip Main Street" 

By: Zimbler0 in POPE 5 | Recommend this post (3)
Fri, 26 Oct 18 8:06 PM | 67 view(s)
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Msg. 11374 of 62138
(This msg. is a reply to 11367 by capt_nemo)

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And why should 'main street' fear?
My dividend checks are still coming in.
I've seen two 'major downturns' and I'm
currently well ahead of the game.

Stocks go up, stocks go down . . .
When the markets come crashing down time to buy.

More of the 'Dividend Aristocrats' - companies which
not only paid the dividends through the previous
downturns - but increased the dividends in spite of
them.

Zim.




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Mad Poet Strikes Again.


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The above is a reply to the following message:
"Wall Street Fear Has Yet To Grip Main Street"
By: capt_nemo
in POPE 5
Fri, 26 Oct 18 7:47 PM
Msg. 11367 of 62138

Earlier this week, when looking at a variety of market positioning and technical indicators, Goldman strategists laid out 7 reasons why, in their opinion, professional investors were bailing on the market even as retail investors continued to buy. These included:

Since January, “Professional ETFs” have seen outflows while “Retail ETFs” have seen steady inflows.
Futures show a reduction in net exposure for equity and bond investors over the past 7 months; however, institutional investors seemed to re-risk in equities during September.
Borrowing costs are increasing quickly as rising rates exacerbate the impact of widening credit spreads.
Equity volatility: increase in 2018 has been smaller than in 2007, but started from a higher level.
Market Makers providing less electronic liquidity in SPX Futures markets.
Corporate leverage is in decline: Decrease in Debt Issuance, increase in Cash Balances are only partially offset by Buybacks.
Economic impact of equity declines.
Now, picking up on this odd trend which has seen pros dump their exposure to risk while retail investors dig in, is Bank of America, whose CIO Michael Hartnett writes in his latest flow shows that the fear from Wall Street has yet to grip Main Street.

As evidence he references BofA's Private Client ETF holdings (which now amount to $2.3 trillion in AUM) which show high net worth investors buying equities, and selling bonds, in reversal of BofA's "playbook" from the four weeks preceding the last three prior market panics including Feb’16, Oct’11, and Mar’09.

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