HF Mayor
5.4K posts

HF Mayor
@smartin8352
There is never enough time to do all the nothing you want. -Calvin & Hobbes

BUYING THE S&P 500 RIGHT NOW IS A BAD IDEA Here is Paul Tudor Jones's explanation: The US stock market is now 252% of GDP. In 1929, the peak was 65%. In 1987, it was 90%. In 2000, it was 170%. We have never been here before. Bear markets since 1970 have averaged a return to 25-30 year P/E norms roughly every 10 years. A 30-35% market decline from here would erase wealth equal to 89% of US GDP. Then the cascade begins. 10% of all federal tax revenue comes from capital gains. A serious bear market takes that to near zero. This is what being "over-equitized as a country" actually means. Private equity was 7% of institutional portfolios going into 2007-2008. It is now 16%. Real estate allocations are up. Infrastructure is up. Institutional money is far more illiquid today than it was going into the financial crisis. Someone recently asked: if you were investing for 20 years, what would you do? The standard answer is buy the S&P 500 and close your eyes. Here is the problem. When you buy the S&P at a P/E of 22, history shows 10-year forward returns are negative. The S&P 500 is a great long-term investment across 100 years. But that average includes decades when the P/E was 6, 7, or 8. One-third of what it is today. "Valuation matters a lot. The stock market's really high. It's going to be really hard to make money from here."

CEO of Citadel: "no one is more wrong than I am today", he built the most profitable hedge fund in history in this interview he explains why he hired a Russian rocket scientist, why being the smartest in the room is a mistake, and why being right 54% of the time made $90 billion Bookmark & watch it. Then read the article below - The 77-year-old formula that explains why a small edge is all you need ↓

I know what job awaits him: @davidein




100 mph from 6-foot-9 LHP Brody Bumila (2026) today. Struck out all six batters he faced in his first two innings with 19 of 20 pitches for strikes in his first start of the year on a beautiful 40 degree day in Massachusetts.

















