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Credit Suisse "Climbs The Wall Of Worry", Raises S&P Target To 2,500 From 2,350

Credit Suisse "Climbs The Wall Of Worry", Raises S&P Target To 2,500 From 2,350

Following bearish reports from Goldman (which tactically downgraded stocks to Neutral for the next three months just hours before the Fed rate hike), RBC and JPM's head quant Marko Kolanovic over the past week, overnight Credit Suisse decided to take the other side of the trade and hiked its year end forecasts for the S&P500, and pretty much every other risk asset, noting that it is happy to "climb the wall of worry", and prefers equities to bonds.

Morgan Stanley: "Only One Thing Will Allow Central Banks To Keep The Party Going"

Morgan Stanley: "Only One Thing Will Allow Central Banks To Keep The Party Going"

Last week, we presented readers with the latest note from SocGen strategist. Albert Edwards, who explained why after so many years of false rate hike starts, the market not only responded to last week's hike in a dovish manner - interpreting last Wednesday's 0.25% hike as a 0.25% rate cut- but as Goldman Sachs showed previously, the dovish reaction was one of the strongest ones since the financial crisis, in other words: "the market no longer believes the Fed." This is what Edwards said, citing his FX colleague Kit Juckes:

S&P Futures, Global Stocks Rise Ahead Of The Fed; Oil Rebounds

S&P Futures, Global Stocks Rise Ahead Of The Fed; Oil Rebounds

It is fitting that just a few hours until the Fed's second rate hike in two quarters, and one day after Goldman downgraded global stocks to Neutral for the next 3 months, not to mention with the results of the anticipated Dutch election due shortly, that global stocks as well as S&P futures are higher, while crude oil has finally managed to stage a rebound as the Dollar DXY index is fractionally in the red.

Not The Onion: "Fed Is Jeopardizing The Buy-The-Dip Trade", BofA Warns

Not The Onion: "Fed Is Jeopardizing The Buy-The-Dip Trade", BofA Warns

Conceived several years ago, "buy the (fucking) dip" was a joke among traders seeking to explain the market's nearly-instant upward mean reversion, which as we have alleged since 2009, has been pushed higher by central bank policy and various HFT strats. Since then it has, sadly, become perhaps the only "explanation" for the behavior of the most bizarre market traders have ever encountered.

Luckily, the buy the dip quote-unquote "market" may be about to end, perhaps as soon as tomorrow, if Bank of America is right.

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