http://hussman.com/wmc/wmc140106.htm
“Wall Street remains exuberant about economic prospects. Last week
brought a 6-year high in consumer confidence, evidently supporting the
idea that the consumer remains strong and the economic expansion remains
intact. Unfortunately, if you examine the data, you'll quickly
discover that consumer confidence is a lagging indicator, well
explained by past movements in GDP, employment, and capacity
utilization. Worse, for the stock market, it's a contrary indicator.
This is a fact that I've noted at both extremes, not only in early 2000
when new highs in consumer confidence supported a defensive position,
but conversely in the early 1990's, when new lows in consumer
confidence supported a leveraged position in stocks. High levels of
economic optimism are regularly observed at the peaks of both U.S. and
foreign economic expansions. This includes the general consensus of
individuals, businesses, politicians, central bank officials and
notoriously – economists. That shouldn't be surprising. It's the very
nature of a peak that it can't be produced except by unusual optimism.”
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