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A market that moves quickly from 'oversold' to 'overbought' territory often makes investors hesitant. However, this speed is a hallmark of a strong market that doesn't wait for consensus. Waiting for a pullback in such an environment often means missing the opportunity entirely.
Analysis of a proprietary EM FX risk index shows that when an "overbought" signal appears to fail, it's not wrong about the market's condition. Instead, extreme readings predict a delayed correction, typically by about three weeks, as strong positive momentum takes longer to reverse.
Recent history, from the pandemic to geopolitical shocks, has taught investors that market downturns are short-lived and followed by strong rallies. This conditioning creates a "learned optimism," where being quick to reinvest has been a consistently lucrative strategy, explaining the market's resilience and rapid bounce-backs from negative news.
In a multi-year bullish environment for emerging markets, technical indicators that worked well post-2010 may consistently flash 'overbought' signals without leading to significant corrections. Strategists should attach a higher probability to these indicators failing, favoring the long-term structural view over short-term tactical signals.
Gardner actively seeks stocks that have already appreciated 30-90% in recent months. Instead of waiting for a pullback, he views this momentum as a key indicator that the market is recognizing a company's fundamental strength and cultural relevance, signaling future outperformance for the best businesses.
Current market bullishness is at levels seen only a few times in the past decade. Two of those instances led to corrections within three months. This euphoria, combined with low volatility and high leverage, makes the market vulnerable to even minor negative news.
Early stages of a bull market are often met with investor negativity and equity sell-offs. This pessimism is a typical part of the behavioral cycle that precedes later-stage optimism and the euphoria which ultimately marks the market's peak. It is a sign that the cycle is not yet over.
Unlike market tops which form over extended periods, market bottoms often occur rapidly after a final capitulation event. Investors should anticipate this speed and be ready to deploy capital during periods of peak negative sentiment, as the recovery can begin just as quickly.
Contrary to intuition, widespread fear and discussion of a market bubble often precede a final, insane surge upward. The real crash tends to happen later, when the consensus shifts to believing in a 'new economic model.' This highlights a key psychological dynamic of market cycles where peak anxiety doesn't signal an immediate top.
Despite the start of a new bull market, current 'frothy' conditions make a significant pullback likely. This should be viewed not as a threat, but as a normal occurrence and a buying opportunity. Near-term catalysts include escalating China trade tensions, stress in funding markets from quantitative tightening, and peaking earnings revisions.
Buying opportunities from market dislocations now last for weeks, not months. A massive $7 trillion in money market funds is waiting to be deployed, causing dips to rebound with unprecedented speed. This environment demands faster, more tactical investment decisions.