Are We Being Set Up For A Crash? Stocks Bubbles Of 1929, 2000 And 2007 Repeating
By Michael Snyder/Economic Collapse Blog December 12, 2016 Share this article:
Will the financial bubble that has been rapidly growing ever since
Donald Trump won the election suddenly be popped once he takes office?
Could it be possible that we are being set up for a horrible financial
crash that he will ultimately be blamed for?
The
U.S. dollar has been surging, companies are announcing that they are
bringing jobs back to the U.S., and we are witnessing perhaps the
greatest post-election stock market rally in Wall Street history.
In
fact, the Dow, the Nasdaq and the S&P 500 all set new all-time
record highs last week. What we are seeing is absolutely unprecedented,
and many believe that the good times will continue to roll as we head
into 2017.
What has been most surprising to me
is how well the stocks of the big Wall Street banks have been doing. It
is no secret that those banks poured a tremendous amount of money into
Hillary Clinton's campaign, and Donald Trump had some tough things to
say about them leading up to election day.
So you wouldn't think that it would be particularly good
news for those banks that Trump won the election. However, we seem to
be living in "Bizarro World" at the moment, and in so many ways things
are happening exactly the opposite of what we would expect. Since
Trump's victory, all of the big banking stocks have been skyrocketing...
Financial
stocks in particular have been on fire. Citigroup (C) and JPMorgan
Chase (JPM) are up about 20% since Donald Trump defeated Hillary Clinton
-- and that makes them laggards!
Morgan
Stanley (MS) has gained more than 25%. So has troubled Wells Fargo
(WFC), despite the lingering fallout from its fake account scandal. Bank
of America (BAC) is up more than 30%.
And
so is Goldman Sachs (GS) -- the former employer of both Treasury
Secretary nominee Steven Mnuchin and Trump chief strategist Steve
Bannon.
But are these stock prices justified by the fundamentals?
Of
course not, but during times of euphoria the fundamentals never seem to
matter much. Stocks were incredibly overvalued before the election,
and now they are ridiculously overvalued.
Earlier
today, a CNBC article pointed out that the cyclically-adjusted price to
earnings ratio has only been higher than it is today at three points in
our history...
"The cyclically adjusted P/E
(CAPE), a valuation measure created by economist Robert Shiller now
stands over 27 and has been exceeded only in the 1929 mania, the 2000
tech mania and the 2007 housing and stock bubble," Alan Newman wrote in
his Stock Market Crosscurrents letter at the end of November.
Newman
said even if the market's earnings increase by 10 percent under Trump's
policies "we're still dealing with the same picture, overvaluation on a
very grand scale."
And of course a historic stock market crash immediately followed each of those three bubbles.
So are we being set up for a huge crash in early 2017?
There are some out there that believe that this is
purposely being orchestrated. For example, Mike Adams of Natural News
believes that the markets "will be deliberately and destructively
imploded under President Trump"...
Right
now, the U.S. stock market is surging, with the Dow leaping toward
20,000, a number rooted in fiscal insanity and delusional expectations.
There are no fundamentals that support a 20,000 Dow, but fundamentals
have long since ceased to matter in a financial world hyperventilating
on debt fumes while hallucinating about utopian economic models that
will soon prove to generate fools instead of real wealth.
Today
I'm going on the record with a prediction that I'll offer with near
absolute certainty: The rigged markets that now seem to defy gravity
will be deliberately and destructively imploded under President Trump
for all the obvious reasons. There will be financial chaos like we've
never seen before: Investors leaping off tall buildings, banks declaring
extended "holidays" that freeze transactions, and California pensioners
slitting their wrists after they discover their promised pension funds
were just vaporized by incompetent bureaucrats.
On
the other hand, there are others that believe that Trump is just
walking into a very bad situation and that a crash would be inevitable
no matter who was president.
History tells us
that there is no possible way that stock prices can stay at this
irrational level indefinitely. But for now a wave of optimism is
sweeping the nation, and many of those that are caught up in it will get
seriously angry with you if you try to inject a dose of reality into
the conversation.
But like I said yesterday,
let's hope that the optimists are correct. A survey that was just taken
of 600 business executives found that 62 percent of them were
optimistic about the U.S. economy over the next 12 months.
Incredibly, that number was sitting at just 38 percent the previous quarter.
For the moment, business leaders seem to be quite thrilled that we have a business executive in the White House.
Hopefully
Donald Trump's business experience will translate well to his new
position. And it is certainly my hope that he is as successful as
possible.
But even during the campaign Trump
talked about how stocks were in a giant bubble, and the euphoria that we
have seen since his election victory has just made that bubble even
larger.
Throughout U.S. history, every giant
financial bubble has always ended very badly, and this time around will
not be any exception.
Trump may get the blame
for it when it bursts, but the truth is that the conditions for the
coming crisis have been building for a very, very long time.
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