The stock market's 'melt up': Will the rally end painfully?
The Dow is on a tear, but with economic storm clouds looming, complacent investors may be in for a rude awakening
Traders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange: The Dow Jones Industrial Average has surprisingly climbed 19 percent since October. Photo: REUTERS/Brendan McDermid SEE ALL 19 PHOTOS
Best Opinion: TIME, Barron's, MSN Money
Even as European economies flirt with disaster, the U.S. stock market is proving "surprisingly buoyant." The Dow Jones Industrial Average has risen by 19 percent since October, a "melt up" that some market analysts say defies logic, given that the global economic outlook is rather grim and the American economy has yet to make a clear recovery. Do American investors see bright spots others are missing, or are they walking blindly off a cliff?
A disaster is brewing: The European Central Bank is buying massive amounts of bonds, says Michael Sivy at TIME, to prevent interest rates from rising and crushing Europe's most debt-laden economies. All that "hot money" is fleeing the weakest European countries and seeking safe havens, including here in the U.S. That's "creating a bubble in Treasury bonds and a possibly unsupported stock market rally" in the U.S. When that money stops flowing, or some European country defaults, "U.S. shares could take a sizable hit."
"Why this stock rally can't be trusted"
Investors should be wary, but not panic: It does seem that "complacency has set in," says Michael Santoli at Barron's. But that doesn't mean sheep-like "investors will soon be led to slaughter." The rally is legit, and has been led by home builders, semiconductors, railroads, and financial firms. Still, it's always "wise to stay on alert for unwelcome surprises."
"The dangers of complacency"
Main Street sees the writing on the wall: "Wall Streeters are buying now, asking questions later," in an attempt to ignite a "buying frenzy," says Anthony Mirhaydari at MSN Money, but Main Street investors aren't fooled. They're watching pump prices rise as holiday bills come due, and they're painfully aware of the "economic headwinds" of sovereign debt issues and mixed economic reports. "Until this dynamic changes, we're stuck in the mud." Main Street sees what's coming, even if Wall Street can't. "And it's not good."
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