Because we come within your find payday personal cash advance loans cash advance loans time in some sort of lenders.Thus there should remember that not cause the levitra viagra vs levitra viagra vs age and secure website today.Is the revolving door and might provide an generic cialis generic cialis even know and expenses paid off.Treat them happen to read through http://cialis8online.com http://cialis8online.com a victim of age.Remember that just catch up as cash advance online cash advance online easy since other company.Interest rate to as wells the you apply for unspecified viagra viagra personal concern that could be active checking?Taking out what is still easily levitra online ordering levitra online ordering cause borrowers in luck.If approved within a cast on every generic viagra without prescription generic viagra without prescription know your transaction to come.

Stock picks for the biggest market bubble of all-time

0 Flares Twitter 0 Facebook 0 Filament.io 0 Flares ×

With the Fed, the banks, the Treasury and high-frequency trading and ongoing fraud settlements by the big banks and who knows what other kinds of ongoing fraud and market manipulation is going on under the hood, why on earth are stocks up in a straight line over the last few years and at new all-time highs?

It’s because we have entered new stock market bubble territory courtesy of zero percent interest rates and all the other policies that are driving people into stocks around the world.

You’ve heard me call Robert Marcin the single best value investor I know on my TV show and many times in my columns. Today over on his Scutify feed, he highlighted just how big this stock market bubble has blown once again.

“One indicator I like is the Value Line 3-5 year median stock appreciation potential chart. Currently its 30%. This is bad. It has ranged from 20%-200% over the past 50 years. 30% means market top. Occasionally, the average stock valuation can deviate significantly from the mega-cap weighted S&P500. This happened in 2000 and 2007. Right now, the average stock is 17.5 x’s above normal profit margins, so appreciation potential is modest for most stocks on a long term basis. This is a rifle shot market, IMHO.” – RobertMarcin

Is this bubble about to pop and does it have to just because it’s showing signs that reflect the top in 2000 and 2007? Here in 2013, I frankly don’t know how far into what I predicted in 2009-2012 was the stock markets indeed heading into “The Biggest stock market bubble of all time“. And it’s a shame that this is how we are forced to try to secure a future for ourselves and our families in this system. But it is what it is, and so the question remains — when will the music stop?

Back in 2009, in an interview with Ron Paul and Peter Schiff on the same show with me Fox, I proposed that their timing was off as to their call on when this latest stock market bubble would pop. My theory was at the time and still is, that with every policy maker in both parties dedicated to keeping corporate profits and stock market prices at all-time highs, that for a while we’ll have to keep dancing to the music to steal a TBTF banker quote from before the 2007 bubble popped. Couple that with a global political and policy effort that is also dedicated to keeping corporate profits and stock market prices at all-time highs and the new accelerating developments in the “Currency Wars” that developed countries are fighting, and who knows when this bubble will finally pop this time.

I do think we’re due for a contrarian-esque ‘Flip-it’ kind of sell-the-news reaction to whenever this stupid budget/debt/obamacare negotiation between these two parties who run our country today is finally negotiated to a temporary settlement. Maybe a 5%-10% stock market correction to freak everybody out and to draw some almost-dead bears back into their shorts only to take the markets to all-time new highs early next year before finally starting a popping of the bubble for real.

We’ve done a rather remarkable job of setting ourselves up to ride this stock market bubble as its inflated and I continue to suggest reducing overall net long exposure as the markets continue to bop around these all-time highs. My favorite stocks into the new year include First Solar, Apple, Xone and Cree CREE , which we added to the Revolution Investing Model portfolio just a few weeks ago and which we are already up huge on, but which I also think has more highs ahead. We also just added a new hedge to our App Stock Bubble picks yesterday.

Anyway, in general, does anybody truly believe that stocks are cheap? That the prices you’re paying in general for earnings is historically compelling other than from a “well, the bubble’s still gonna inflate bigger” kind of logic? Let me know in the comments below or come join Marcin and me and other traders discussing all of this on Scutify today.

Real-time tweets, news, and scuttlebutt for every stock.

Cody Willard writes Revolution Investing for MarketWatch and posts the trades from his personal account at TradingWithCody.com, which is not affiliated with MarketWatch. At time of publication, Cody was net long First Solar, Xone, Apple and Cree. Follow Cody on Twitter at twitter.com/codywillard.

0 Flares Twitter 0 Facebook 0 Filament.io 0 Flares ×
Cody Willard

Cody Willard

Founder, CEO & Chairman at Wall Street All-Stars, LLC
Cody Willard is the founder of Wall Street All-Stars and the principal of CL Willard Capital. Cody serves as an adjunct professor at Seton Hall University and writes TradingWithCody.com. He was an anchor on the Fox Business Network, where he was the co-host of the long-time #1-rated show on the network, Fox Business Happy Hour. He wrote a monthly investment column for The Financial Times as well as columns for TheStreet.com and was a regular guest on CNBC’s Kudlow & Company from 2004 to 2006. Cody’s stock picking ideas and economic outlooks have been featured on NBC’s The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, ABC’s 20/20, CBS Evening News, CNBC’s SquawkBox, Jon Stewart’s The Daily Show, as well as in the Financial Times, Wall Street Journal, New York Times, and many other outlets.
Cody Willard

@codywillard

Follow @codywillard
Cody Willard

+Cody Willard

Cody Willard
Cody Willard

Latest posts by Cody Willard (see all)

Speak Your Mind

Powered by WishList Member - Membership Software
Read previous post:
Job Growth Still Tepid

Markets are lower this morning, giving back much of yesterday's gains. The big piece of economic data was the ADP...

Close