How to Identify a Bubble: Wall Street Says It's Not a Bubble
August 25, 2021
The post-bubble-crash phase is already being prepared:
'no one could have seen this coming'--except anyone who paid attention to anything other
than self-interested shills.
It's really pretty simple to identify a speculative bubble of epic proportions in stocks:
if Wall Street says it's not a bubble, it's a bubble. As I explained in
The Smart Money Has Already Sold, from the long view the entire game of "investing" (wink-wink)
boils down to one dynamic:
Wall Street and the Federal Reserve inflate an unprecedented debt-funded speculative bubble
and then lure retail "investors" (i.e. gamblers) in with the promise that the enormous gains
are just starting, there's so much more easy money ahead, etc. Then Wall Street distributes
(sells over time so as not to alert the complacent herd of retail punters) its shares of overpriced
rubbish ("investments", heh) to bagholders, and then to everyone's surprise (or not), the market
suddenly crashes as the unsustainable bubble pops.
Wall Street has long practice in how to reassure the herd: since insiders have juiced the
market higher for years at every dip (with the Fed's free trillions offering a helping hand),
the bagholders have been well-trained to buy the dip even as the wheels come off the
whole "this time it's different" scam.
Human psychology being what it is, desperate retail bagholders cling to the delusional belief
that a recovery to new highs is just around the corner, because that's what the market has done
for 13 straight years.
Every decade or so--1999-2000, 2007-2008, and now 2020-2021--Wall Street's roving army of
shills spews the same paper-thin justifications for "this is not a bubble":
this rally is just getting started, we're assured because 1) corporate profits are rising and
will support much higher valuations; 2) the Federal Reserve will never let any bubble pop
(said in so many words) and 3) if we look at comparative charts of quatloos, the British pound
in the 1820s, the current price of sake on the Sendai Exchange and bat guano futures, it's
obvious the S&P 500 is still undervalued. (Use as many arcane charts as possible to wow the
bagholders.)
Sadly, it's all so easy. The hardest part is waiting for the pain from the last bubble popping
to diminish enough for greed to overwhelm caution. Wall Street only had to wait five years
from the nadir of the dot-com bubble in 2003 to the next bubble pop in 2008; the wait from
2008 to 2021 has been excruciatingly long. Thirteen years we've had to wait for the retail
herd to go all in, for margin debt to soar to new extremes, for short interest to fall to
multi-decade lows.
But it's finally showtime, and the bagholders continue buying garbage that's guaranteed to
collapse in value. The post-bubble-crash phase is already being prepared:
no one could have seen this coming--except anyone who paid attention to anything other
than self-interested shills.
The woe and gnashing of teeth will be colossal for the bagholders, as will the profits for
Wall Street insiders. Fortunately they have long practice in looking woeful in public,
as if they're sharing the pain, and hiding their glee at getting away with
the same old "this isn't a bubble" scam yet again.
What nobody dares ask is: will the bagholders have anything left after this "third time's
the charm" bubble pops? Please don't tell us this is the end of the road for the
"this isn't a bubble" scam. Without greed-fueled credulous bagholders with cash/credit to
gamble, the game is over.
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