In a recent report by Bespoke Investment Group, it was revealed that one of the most profitable trades on Wall Street, since 1993, was to simply buy the S&P close, and sell the open. If you did just that alone, you would have seen a whopping 800% return to date, vs. doing the opposite, which resulted in a shocking 10% loss over the same period. According to Zero Hedge, this simple but effective strategy has seen the S&P rise 660 points since May, while doing the opposite has shown essentially no change. On the year, the buy the close, sell the open strategy is up 9.2%, vs the buy the open, sell the close, which is up just 2.6%.
I think it goes whithout saying that markets are being manipulated from every angle imaginable, and it's clearly nothing new. We've all observed the seemingly relentless gap up's, like the one we're seeing again this morning, persistently distorting valuations, and acting as a money printer of sorts. It's frustrating when these types of schemes appear, because you know it's no accident, and market participants are willfully tarnishing the integrity of markets, and along with it, the mechanism of price discovery. Personally, I'm sleeping great now that I have zero long exposure. Alternatively, with little if any upside left in markets, based on my own technical and fundamental analysis, I'm positioned for a repeat of the March crash. I think the megaphone will hold on the monthly, and we'll see a 10% correction in Dec/Jan, at the very least.
I appreciate your time today guys. If you enjoyed the analysis, please hit the Like button and subscribe to our profile. The information and analysis shared in this post is not financial advice. Always conduct your own analysis and research. Cheers, Michael.
I think it goes whithout saying that markets are being manipulated from every angle imaginable, and it's clearly nothing new. We've all observed the seemingly relentless gap up's, like the one we're seeing again this morning, persistently distorting valuations, and acting as a money printer of sorts. It's frustrating when these types of schemes appear, because you know it's no accident, and market participants are willfully tarnishing the integrity of markets, and along with it, the mechanism of price discovery. Personally, I'm sleeping great now that I have zero long exposure. Alternatively, with little if any upside left in markets, based on my own technical and fundamental analysis, I'm positioned for a repeat of the March crash. I think the megaphone will hold on the monthly, and we'll see a 10% correction in Dec/Jan, at the very least.
I appreciate your time today guys. If you enjoyed the analysis, please hit the Like button and subscribe to our profile. The information and analysis shared in this post is not financial advice. Always conduct your own analysis and research. Cheers, Michael.
Note
I don't know how journalists in the financial media continue to write articles everyday with titles like, "US Stocks Rise on Stimulus Hopes," or, "US Stocks Rise as investors Track Stimulus Talks," or, "Stocks rise, recovering some losses as investors eye stimulus, vaccines," and still get up the next day to go to work. How many times can you explain price action with these same elementary narratives? Is anyone seriously buying this sh*t? Talk about the FED, and what dollar debasement is doing to our purchasing power, and where the money is really going. Notice your food doubling in price lately? How about that condo? Or the 401K? Inflation is here big time, and it's not even being discussed in the MSM. They're too busy cheering on the FED as they print more money, making hard working American's poorer, and poorer, and poorer. Soon we'll all be billionaire's, but a Big Mac will be $900 Million...
Note
Stock buy-backs might be the culprit...Note
That's all folks! It was a fairly quiet day of trade, but the bulls sent a clear message to the bears, that they're not done yet. Yesterday's negative sentiment was smacked 180 degrees today, and SPY ended the day near all-time high's. Vix wasn't able to hang on to a 23 handle, but we're still looking resilient as there's plenty of risk that need's protecting right now. Tomorrow's another day, I hope you guys have a great night. Cheers! Michael.Related publications
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Disclaimer
The information and publications are not meant to be, and do not constitute, financial, investment, trading, or other types of advice or recommendations supplied or endorsed by TradingView. Read more in the Terms of Use.