High GDP May Lead to Market Problems, Paulsen Says
Leuthold strategist fears hot economy will push up inflation, threatening advance.
Leuthold strategist fears hot economy will push up inflation, threatening advance.
LPL’s Lynch, impressed by the profit bonanza, thinks the bull market will extend into 2019.
While Wall Street proclaimed a new record on Wednesday, another view holds that the celebration must wait until 2021.
The Dow is up 4.6% since he took over, putting him in the middle for debut chairs.
This summer has produced a nice rally, and LPL says that portends a good run the rest of the year.
Polls, options, and the fear gauge all point in a sunny direction, for now.
With the Democrats likely to take over the House, legislative gridlock may have a Wall Street impact, study shows.
Upsetting events have a way of showing up this month and hurting stocks, LPL’s Detrick warns.
Weakness in once market-leading tech threatens to reprise the winter 10% slide, the firm says.
Seldom are the 2nd and 3rd quarters good for stocks. But their performance thus far is OK.
Half of returns are positive, half negative, for an overall uninspiring performance.
Jim Paulsen says public optimism is now so high that stocks likely have peaked.
While pay raises are torpid now, expect a surprise at year-end due to tight labor markets, David Levy says.
AAII gauge shows largest weekly jump in pessimistic sentiment since January 2016.
The recovery from the market’s winter correction is aiding this month’s performance, so far.