The momentum that has carried the S&P to 5,000 “has few equals in history,” the standout being the Internet-fueled rally off a similar mkt bottom in Oct. 1998: Evercore’s Emanuel. He sees a host of issues suggesting 1-yr forward returns for stocks of 0% regardless of recession.
The momentum that has carried the S&P to 5,000 “has few equals in history,” the standout being the Internet-fueled rally off a similar mkt bottom in Oct. 1998: Evercore’s Emanuel. He sees a host of issues suggesting 1-yr forward returns for stocks of 0% regardless of recession.
—Lisa Abramowicz
Lisa A is a naysayer. Why are there so many market naysayers who want to focus on the rare times that the market has not done incredibly? They seem to revel when the market is down. The stock market has had a ton of great years and very few bad years. And every bad year was followed by an even better good year, with the exception of 2000-2002.
Wal Mart has had many nasayers during its history. It went public 55 years ago (1970). Guess how much $5,000 invested back when it first went public would be worth today? Quite amazing ... $74 MILLION. Pretty incredible. That is true for many of the stocks in the stock market.
Pets.com commercial, featuring the iconic Sock Puppet. Developed and produced by the creative team at Baker Street Advertising: www.bakerstadvertising.com.
My first laptop was from Microelectronics (MUEI), a sister company to Micron. iVillage (IVIL), like Pets was one of the last to come public, shot up for a bit before rolling over. I believe that was the summer of 2000. I had a client who bought it the first day, went to Europe on a vacation, came back it was toast.
This post was edited 2 minutes after it was posted.
My first laptop was from Microelectronics (MUEI), a sister company to Micron. iVillage (IVIL), like Pets was one of the last to come public, shot up for a bit before rolling over. I believe that was the summer of 2000. I had a client who bought it the first day, went to Europe on a vacation, came back it was toast.
In the mid-90s I went with my dad to buy his first computer. He paid about $2,500 and the salesman assured him that he would never have to buy a new computer. This baby would last a lifetime. It only had 1 MB of RAM so we couldn't even install Windows on it.
My first laptop was from Microelectronics (MUEI), a sister company to Micron. iVillage (IVIL), like Pets was one of the last to come public, shot up for a bit before rolling over. I believe that was the summer of 2000. I had a client who bought it the first day, went to Europe on a vacation, came back it was toast.
In the mid-90s I went with my dad to buy his first computer. He paid about $2,500 and the salesman assured him that he would never have to buy a new computer. This baby would last a lifetime. It only had 1 MB of RAM so we couldn't even install Windows on it.
I had an Apple laptop mid-1990s, at the time a Texas State employee. It was stolen out of our car while stopping for dinner on a road trip to California at Christmas. The value at that time was about $5,000, and I was required to report the theft to the Texas Rangers.
In the mid-90s I went with my dad to buy his first computer. He paid about $2,500 and the salesman assured him that he would never have to buy a new computer. This baby would last a lifetime. It only had 1 MB of RAM so we couldn't even install Windows on it.
I had an Apple laptop mid-1990s, at the time a Texas State employee. It was stolen out of our car while stopping for dinner on a road trip to California at Christmas. The value at that time was about $5,000, and I was required to report the theft to the Texas Rangers.
So was it Cordell Walker or Nolan Ryan who handled the case?
So do we just now accept that small cap stocks simply cannot compete against the giants anymore? And give up on them? A quarter of a century is a long long time.
Matt Phillips and Carl Quintanilla follow Barchart @Barchart Small Cap Stocks $IWM are underperforming S&P 500 Large Cap Stocks by the widest margin in almost 23 years
So do we just now accept that small cap stocks simply cannot compete against the giants anymore? And give up on them? A quarter of a century is a long long time.
Matt Phillips and Carl Quintanilla follow Barchart @Barchart Small Cap Stocks $IWM are underperforming S&P 500 Large Cap Stocks by the widest margin in almost 23 years
Barchart @Barchart · 12h The Nasdaq is outperforming the S&P 500 by the largest margin in almost 30 years 👀
Lisa Abramowicz @lisaabramowicz1 "Forward EPS growth has just gone negative. This has only previously happened 4 times over the past 23 yrs. In each prior instance (2001, '08, '15, '20), equities have faced significant price downside associated w/the shift from positive to negative earnings growth:" MS's Wilson 9:51 AM · Feb 6, 2023 · 217.5K Views
Lisa Abramowicz @lisaabramowicz1 "Forward EPS growth has just gone negative. This has only previously happened 4 times over the past 23 yrs. In each prior instance (2001, '08, '15, '20), equities have faced significant price downside associated w/the shift from positive to negative earnings growth:" MS's Wilson 9:51 AM · Feb 6, 2023 · 217.5K Views
Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA)became a Wall Street darling last year when a boom in artificial intelligence (AI) highlighted the massive potential of its business. It...
I had an Apple laptop mid-1990s, at the time a Texas State employee. It was stolen out of our car while stopping for dinner on a road trip to California at Christmas. The value at that time was about $5,000, and I was required to report the theft to the Texas Rangers.
So was it Cordell Walker or Nolan Ryan who handled the case?
I would only let Walker touch the case. :-) …..smiling early in the morning…..
Barchart @Barchart · 3h Japanese Stocks Hit 34-Year High 🚨 For the first time in 34 years, the Nikkei jumped above 37,000. The index is now about 5% away from taking out the all-time high set all the way back in December 1989.
Barchart @Barchart · 3h Japanese Stocks Hit 34-Year High 🚨 For the first time in 34 years, the Nikkei jumped above 37,000. The index is now about 5% away from taking out the all-time high set all the way back in December 1989.
Warren Buffet took over Berkshire Hathaway in mid-1960s. Anyone want to guess how much it is up since then?
A whopping almost 5 MILLION%. I think most people would take that return.
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