Sell in May and go away or keep going up?
My same thoughts.
My same thoughts.
"There have been eight consecutive weeks of net inflows into domestic stock funds, with institutional investors setting the trend. Individuals began following suit three weeks ago. The flows are still relatively meager -- $11.5 billion the past four weeks, according to Cambridge, Mass.-based fund tracker EPFR Global -- but, importantly, they are consistent. Not since 2004 have U.S. equity funds posted positive inflows for a full year. Tired of missing out as stocks continue to rise after the biggest market rally since the Great Depression, and gaining more confidence in an economic expansion, investors are showing signs of favoring stocks over long-preferred bonds, whose best days may be over as the yield on 10-year U.S. Treasuries hit 4% earlier this past week.
At long last, too, investors are migrating from the sidelines, dismayed with the paltry returns offered by money-market funds: More than $300 billion has flowed out of money funds this year (through last week), an intense pace that already represents more than half the total outflows from the group last year, observes Brad Durham, EPFR's co-founder.
For some, the barrage of bullish economic indicators confirms the cyclical bull market is back on track and a double-dip recession will be avoided, allaying fears that beset the market earlier in the year."
"There have been eight consecutive weeks of net inflows into domestic stock funds, with institutional investors setting the trend. Individuals began following suit three weeks ago. The flows are still relatively meager -- $11.5 billion the past four weeks, according to Cambridge, Mass.-based fund tracker EPFR Global -- but, importantly, they are consistent. Not since 2004 have U.S. equity funds posted positive inflows for a full year. Tired of missing out as stocks continue to rise after the biggest market rally since the Great Depression, and gaining more confidence in an economic expansion, investors are showing signs of favoring stocks over long-preferred bonds, whose best days may be over as the yield on 10-year U.S. Treasuries hit 4% earlier this past week.
At long last, too, investors are migrating from the sidelines, dismayed with the paltry returns offered by money-market funds: More than $300 billion has flowed out of money funds this year (through last week), an intense pace that already represents more than half the total outflows from the group last year, observes Brad Durham, EPFR's co-founder.
For some, the barrage of bullish economic indicators confirms the cyclical bull market is back on track and a double-dip recession will be avoided, allaying fears that beset the market earlier in the year."
They are getting just what they want..top 20% waiting for smaller player to jump in b4 they take half off....again...we already what they do to gold and silver....
They are getting just what they want..top 20% waiting for smaller player to jump in b4 they take half off....again...we already what they do to gold and silver....
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