A Warning to AI Investors

In This Article:

Bullish sentiment is soaring … but we still have a flagging U.S. consumer … “none and done” for 2024 rate cuts? … Louis Navellier’s AI warning

Older investors will recall this infamous cover of BusinessWeek from 1979. The title declares, “The Death of Equites.”

Classic BusinessWeek cover from 1079 proclaiming "The Death of Equities"
Classic BusinessWeek cover from 1079 proclaiming "The Death of Equities"

The cover reflects what had been a brutal run for the stock market since the early 1970s.

Long-term investors had been destroyed. The price return from early 1973 through this cover story in August of 1979 was a loss of nearly 17%.

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Good luck retiring on that.

However, had an investor used this magazine cover as a contrarian “buy” signal, he would have been rewarded with 17.4% annual gains for the next two decades. That’s a cumulative 2,375% returns, turning $20,000 into almost half a million dollars.

Bottom line: Beware extreme investor sentiment. It’s often precisely when the market begins shifting in the other direction.

With this in mind, here’s what I stumbled upon yesterday morning

It doesn’t carry the same gravitas as a BusinessWeek cover, but you’ll get the point…

A graphic of a bear on life support in a hospital. Behind him is an unyielding bullish stock chart.
A graphic of a bear on life support in a hospital. Behind him is an unyielding bullish stock chart.

Source: @BarChart

If you can’t see the image, we’re looking at a bear on life support in a hospital. Behind him is an unyielding bullish stock chart.

We’re seeing this rampant, gleeful bullishness everywhere today.

For example, the put-to-call ratio just fell to 0.44, the lowest level since July of 2023. It’s also the second-lowest level since March of 2022.

If you’re less familiar with options, investors typically buy puts when they’re feeling bearish and calls when they feel bullish. So, this ratio is telling us that bullish investors have the least interest in hedging their portfolios in years.

And why should they?

The S&P has racked up 45 all-time highs in 2024… it’s having its best year-to-date performance of entire millennium… and it has launched the value of the median U.S. household stock portfolio to $250,000, which is almost twice where it stood in early-2023.

Chart showing how gains in the S&P have launched the value of the median U.S. household stock portfolio to $250,000, which is almost twice where it stood in early-2023.
Chart showing how gains in the S&P have launched the value of the median U.S. household stock portfolio to $250,000, which is almost twice where it stood in early-2023.

Source: The Daily Shot

Bottom line: Bulls are partying… fear is fading as portfolios swell… and once again, FOMO is becoming the driving emotion of the market.

If you listen closely, you can almost hear Warren Buffett whispering “be fearful when others are greedy.”

Now, let me quickly push back against myself…

Yes, today’s market is expensive. If you’re a regular Digest reader, you’ve seen me provide a variety of indicators and ratios illustrating this in recent weeks/months.

However, that doesn’t mean that we’re near a top. And even if we are, a study of market history reveals that the biggest gains often come at the end. For example, between October 20, 1999, and March 9, 2000 – just 141 days – the Nasdaq soared 88%.