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Healthcare Reform Solves Nothing... It's The Debt, Stupid!

Healthcare Reform Solves Nothing... It's The Debt, Stupid!

Authored by Lance Roberts via RealInvestmentAdvice.com,

Over the last few weeks, I have been discussing the ongoing consolidation process for the S&P 500 from the March highs. (For a review read: “Oversold Bounce Or Return Of The Bull,” and “Return Of The Bull…For Now.”) As the expected rally in stocks, and reversal in bonds, took shape as the S&P 500 was finally able to ratchet a record close at 2399.29. (Read: 10/2016 – “2400 Or Bust”)

Equity Outflows Surge As Stocks Limp To Record High

Equity Outflows Surge As Stocks Limp To Record High

After the quietest 8 days in S&P history since 1964...

 

The broad market index managed to limp quietly to a new record close on Friday after a very mixed payrolls print.

 

 

However, despite the volumeless spike to record highs, it appears the week's dismal data..

As Bloomberg notes, to say the S&P 500 Index’s slog to a record this week failed to ignite animal spirits on Wall Street would be an understatement.

The Five Largest Stocks Account For 42% Of The Nasdaq, And Why Goldman Clients Are Concerned

The Five Largest Stocks Account For 42% Of The Nasdaq, And Why Goldman Clients Are Concerned

With the Nasdaq 100 index making new record highs on practically every day of 2017, and returning 32% during the past 12 months vs. "only" 19% for the S&P 500, Goldman's clients are starting to  get concerned. And, as Goldman's David Kostin writes in his latest weekly letter, increasingly nervous investors are asking "whether NDX outperformance will continue."

Axel Merk: "There's More To Investing Than Chasing Companies That Want To Make Mars Inhabitable"

Axel Merk: "There's More To Investing Than Chasing Companies That Want To Make Mars Inhabitable"

Authored by Axel Merk via MerkInvestments.com,

How does one construct a portfolio in an era of seemingly ever rising and highly correlated asset prices? Years of asset prices moving higher has changed both retail and institutional investors; it has changed the industry; and, in my humble opinion, those changes spell trouble. The prudent investor might want to take note to be prepared.

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