In “Stocks for the Long Run,” economist Jeremy Siegel researched all the
“big market moves” between 1801 and 2001. Bottom line: 75% of the time,
there is no rationale for “big moves.” No one can predict them. Maybe
technicians and traders can pick short-term moves the next second. Maybe
tomorrow. But the long-term “big market moves?” No way.
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So why predict an “87%” chance of another meltdown in 2013? Because in
the real world of statistical probabilities, historical facts and expert
opinions danger signals are flashing wild. In mid-2008 we summarized
the predictions of 20 experts over several years. Predicted a meltdown
in a few years — markets crashed two months later. Fast.
In retrospect, it was inevitable, thanks in part to the hype, arrogance
and incompetence of Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and Treasury Secretary
Henry Paulson who failed to prepare America.
The warnings are again accelerating. And so is the happy talk from Wall
Street casino insiders, about rallies, housing recoveries, perpetual
cheap money. Don’t listen. The next crash will happen by year-end. (more)
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