Movers and shakers continue influencing the political world; but little is traumatizing the financial markets; as the S&P treats everything from the speech of Chairman Powell to revelations by Trump Organization’s CFO or NY State litigation, as ‘favorable news’; apparently whether it is or isn’t. So it is for the vacillating reports about ‘trade talks with China’, or even Trump cancelling Sec’y. of State Pompeo’s upcoming North Korean foray. Alone it causes people to wonder if progress is real or just a facade by both sides for show. Hopefully that’s not the case; but everything is inconclusive. 

(Caution: internally the market does NOT ‘have’ to equal January’s peak.)  

Meanwhile as markets climb, the higher ‘standard deviation band’ is still in an ascent that borderline remains dangerous; while it at minimum retains a sort of bated-breadth anxiety about when we get a respectable shakeout.  

You’ve had a gargantuan move in the handful of stocks leading the charge; while some are projecting a huge move in almost giddy fashion now. Does that mean we’re near the end of the run? A bit hard to say; but basically it remains the same overpriced issues continuing to power illogical rallies, at the same time that anyone using logic to short stocks, gets hammered.  

  

So, we continue skeptical at the same time we won’t actively short S&P’s in this market. That means we hold core (and speculative) positions from long ago; especially immediately in the wake of Trump’s election; when a key point was to separate one’s political views from investment decisions; if indeed the two weren’t in-sync. This year’s moves were rotational from the parabola back in January; with the market rotating higher often in less than synchronous ways. It is likely working on borrowed time.  

Widespread strength in corporate earnings suggests to some analysts that we are far from the final stages of this bullish market cycle. That’s possible if we get extreme continuity of growth; trade deals; a political solution that does not rock the markets ‘too much’; and the Fed’s limited rate moves. All that is exclusive of implications of Midterms; barely over 2 months hence.  

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