Based on what I’m seeing we are just getting started.
For starters we still have:
1) Corporate earnings going negative (Q2 and Q3 1 and 2 year comps are gnarly)
2) Tight monetary conditions causing more issues in credit markets
3) which both lead to layoffs
Layoffs matter to consumption which drives the US economy. So how’s the consumer doing now, pre-layoffs?
Not good
- consumer credit has already grown at the fastest rate in history
- consumer savings is coming off of all time lows
IMO looking at the setup, consumption slowing dramatically in the next few quarters is a foregone conclusion. That feeds back into the corporate picture and will lead to more layoffs.
Demand slowing will slow inflation, giving the Fed room to cut. However, even after the Fed’s first cut, historically we still have a few quarters before the S&P bottom is in.
The thing is if you ride a stock 50% down, you need to be up 100% from there to break even. Up 20% YTD after last year’s blood bath is still losing big.
In public markets, I’d rather wait until I see earnings bottom and start to accelerate rather than risk catching falling knives. Perfectly comfortable missing the first 20%
Warren Buffet’s first rule - don’t lose 💰
There are other places to put money than US stocks that aren’t as exposed to the cycle dynamics I mentioned👆 in the meantime.
Some ideas I’m long:
- Defensives: gold, long duration treasuries (now that we are near the end of the rate cycle), and looking to get longer defensive stocks (utilities, defense)
- China reacceleration
[link] [comments] https://www.reddit.com/r/stocks/comments/12swbmr/im_not_ready_to_start_buying_yet_still_too_many/
Login to add comment
Other posts in this group
Please use this thread to discuss your portfolio, learn of other stock tickers, and help out users by giving constructive criticism.
Why quarterly? Public comp
When you sell a stock to buy another stock, do you prefer to set the estimated amount of the capital gains taxes aside in a money market or do you think it better to
Saving for retirement is crucial, but relying solely on a 401(k) might not be enough due to high inflation. Consider investing in growth stocks, especially in the tec
I’m think this is not a good investment as there is no chatter at all on the 52 week low. They are involved in a class action lawsuits by investors and credit card co
Sorry if this is the wrong sub. Let’s say I had $1 million in VOO but I wanted to sell half of it to buy SCHD. It would suck to pay taxes on $500k. So how would you g
Hey guys, I did a deep dive into Crocs. In this analysis, I will do a brief breakdown of the company and go over some quantitative data, qualitative data and estimate