Business Week writes: “Investors’ Worst Instincts, Revealed (Again)”
The U.S. stock market is killing it. In the two-and-a-half year period from Jan. 1, 2011, to June 28, 2013, U.S. shares returned a cumulative 35 percent—26 percentage points ahead of international developed markets and 47 points better than emerging markets.
Investors, being investors, have taken to this turn of events by doing what they have sworn many times never to do again: They’re chasing the winners. In July, investors crammed a record $40.3 billion into U.S. equity mutual funds and exchange-traded funds—this after years of yanking money from the category.
History offers plenty of examples as to why this is a bad idea. Emerging markets got hot in the mid-1990s, only to melt down just as U.S. dot-coms and tech stocks took over. By the time most retail investors bought in to that doomed mania, small caps, commodities, and BRICs took over. Lather, rinse, repeat….
This is not a surprise. This is how the markets work. This is how the human mind works. Majority of people are followers and seek out safety in numbers. If everyone is making money, I should do it and if everyone is in that mutual fund, I should be in it as well.
I do agree with one premise of the article. The market is significantly overvalued and since most people are once again chasing hot stocks, it is about to go down. I will go even further than that and say that the market is about to go down big time (20%-40%) as my timing work and previous articles indicate.
Don’t be stuck with the bag of shit when the music stops playing. Right about now is a good time to get out of stocks. It’s might be a little too early to confirm, but technical indicators are showing that the final bear leg that will take us into the 2016 bottom and the end of the bear market that started in 2000 might have already started. There will be a bounce here followed by a decline. All we have to do now is wait for a confirmation. I will write more about it later.