Wall Street Bets on New Riches Ahead in Markets All-In on Trump

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(Bloomberg) -- All year, a slew of Wall Street pros have questioned the durability of an indiscriminate risk rally that has fattened stock prices by trillions of dollars, sent Bitcoin soaring, fueled a credit bonanza, and more.

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All year, besides a short-lived market wobble in the summer, they’ve been dead wrong. Now with Donald Trump storming back to the presidency and assets surging in his wake, an altogether different anxiety has set in: That investors aren’t bullish enough.

This insecurity is fueling the latest buying spree across stocks, credit and crypto. More than $2 trillion was added to equities over the five sessions, helped by a $20 billion inflow to funds on Wednesday alone. Small-cap companies surged nearly 9%, banks rallied too and Bitcoin hit a fresh record.

Behind the run-up is near-unalloyed optimism that Trump’s pro-growth promises — tax cuts and deregulation — will unlock another round of gains in an already flourishing economy, just as the Federal Reserve tilts toward an easy-money stance.

Bonds have been the sole port of skepticism in this election cycle on concern that the price-tag for fiscal stimulus will be high. Yet even Treasury yields showed signs of settling down by week’s end.

Wall Street is now falling over itself to predict how far the everything-boom goes. As Bitcoin crossed $75,000 for the first time, VanEck’s Matthew Sigel is calling the bull case “stronger than ever,” with $180,000 possible next year and a cool $3 million by 2050. Veteran analyst Mike Mayo said he sees a “paradigm shift” for US banks, one of a slew of bullish calls on financials.

The venerable strategist Ed Yardeni’s big worry is that his own optimism has been too restrained, predicting a full-on “Roaring 2020s” ahead.

“I keep getting stampeded by the stock market,” said Yardeni, founder of Yardeni Research, one of the industry’s staunchest bulls. “I think we’re in a bull market that’ll last through the end of the end of the decade.”

Exuberance has flooded all corners of Wall Street. The S&P 500 hit its 50th record this year amid a weekly gain of 4.7%. The VIX Index, a measure of volatility known as the “fear gauge,” saw its biggest weekly drop since 2021.

While momentum can beget momentum, moves as fast as this also risk blinding investors to lingering weaknesses in the economy and elsewhere. It was only in September that concern about the health of the US labor market sent the S&P 500 down more than 4% in a week. The month before, economic fears and the unwinding of hedge-fund trades nearly spurred a 10% correction in the index, sending the VIX to its biggest spike in three decades.