Analysis: Wall Street ‘Fear Gauge’ Offers No Silver Lining as Bear Market Looms
A surprising lack of panic in the U.S. stock market as measured by Wall Street’s "fear gauge" is keeping some investors from calling a bottom.
A surprising lack of panic in the U.S. stock market as measured by Wall Street’s "fear gauge" is keeping some investors from calling a bottom.
“The definition of true capitulation is investors selling what they love,” Hartnett said, citing Apple, big tech, the dollar and private equity.
Consider the plight of analysts, whose overwhelmingly bullish forecasts are being furiously rolled back.
Kolanovic’s repeated dip-buying calls failing to play out this year. He’s sticking to bullish stance on risk, urging investors to increase holdings.
Be ready. An ugly liquidation stage to key S&P 500 levels will put the stock market well in front of the Fed, leading to a buying opportunity.
The Fed may no longer be a friend of investors, pros say, and that could be a major headwind to stocks in the near-term.
Musk and Wood criticized passive investing in Twitter thread, weighing in on long-running Wall Street debate about growing power of index funds.