One sentence sums up the speculative euphoria gripping markets: January and June of this year are the only months in the last 150 which have seen all assets post a positive total return. (Zero Hedge)
(Article by Charles Hugh Smith republished from CharlesHughSmith.Blogspot.com)
When every asset from bat guano to quatloos is soaring, the current speculative frenzy has reached extremes. We all know the quasi-religious faith driving the euphoria: central banks will push all assets higher as they pursue extremes of "easing."
In other words, asset valuations don't need to make any sense; just buy now and you'll be rewarded with guaranteed gains thanks to central banks. This strategy has worked exceedingly well for 10 years, so why won't it work for another decade?
Put another way: central banks have created a speculative monster. The public cover for central bank easing has always been to "stimulate growth" in the real economy, but the real effect has been to concentrate the newly issued currency and leverage ("money") in the few hands that own most of the speculative ("risk on") assets. This pool of new money has been augmented by cheap credit for global corporations, enabling management to buy back trillions of dollars of stock, thereby enriching stock holders and those collecting stock options as part of their management compensation.
Those reaping billions of dollars in asset gains will not tolerate any reduction in central bank largess. This is the monster the Federal Reserve and other central banks have created: a monster that wields tremendous political power due to its immense wealth and equally potent market power. Any extended sell-off panics the politicos, pundits and peons alike, as everyone has bought into the cargo-cult fiction that a soaring market somehow helps the 95% who own zero or trivial amounts of speculative assets.
As this chart shows, soaring markets don't trickle down to labor's share of the economy. No matter how high stocks rise, Uber drivers are still scraping by unless they get a generous tip from a Unicorn-went-public millionaire.
Stocks owned by what's left of the middle class are locked up in IRAs, 401ks and other retirement accounts, so the owners have to hope the speculative bubble won't burst before they have a chance to start withdrawing their retirement funds.
Read more at: CharlesHughSmith.Blogspot.com