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Wall Street's Top Permabull Suddenly Becomes Its Biggest Bear

Wall Street's Top Permabull Suddenly Becomes Its Biggest Bear

In the past we had given Tom Lee of Fundstrat, formerly of JPMorgan, a hard time for his relentless, unforgiving permabullishness, which cost investors massive losses during the 2008 financial crisis, when the S&P500 closed some 40% below his target price of 1,450, but in retrospect had been proven right during this unprecedented monetary- and debt-fuelled rally, which has taken the S&P, and global debt, to never before seen levels (such as the Dow 19,999.63) where valuations are now more absurd than at any time in history.

US Futures Flat Ahead Of December Payrolls; Dollar Rebounds

US Futures Flat Ahead Of December Payrolls; Dollar Rebounds

European shares fell modestly, Asian equities declined for the first day in three, and US equity futures were unchanged before the December U.S. nonfarm payrolls report. China’s offshore yuan fell the most in a year to pare a record weekly rally, while Mexico’s peso climbed after the central bank sold dollars. Oil was trading lower in early trading.

Payrolls Preview: Blame Weakness On Weather, Strength On Trump

Payrolls Preview: Blame Weakness On Weather, Strength On Trump

With all eyes likely on wage growth indications in the subtext of tomorrow's payrolls report (following The Fed Minutes' comments on full employment), Goldman Sachs is forecasting a better-than-expected 0.3% rebound in average hourly earnings (helped by more favorable calendar effects) and a better-than-expected 180k payrolls print (albeit with a small rise in the unemployment rate). However, they are careful to note that any downside can be blamed on "a considerable drop in temperatures."

As Goldman Sachs details:

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