The stock market is feeling awfully frothy to some investors lately, a fact that has helped to weigh on the market’s bullish sentiment in the past week or so, but a report by Ray Dalio implies that equities aren’t as bubblicious as one might think.
“In brief, the aggregate bubble gauge is around the 77th percentile today for the US stock market overall. In the bubble of 2000 and the bubble of 1929 this aggregate gauge had a 100th percentile read,” wrote Dalio in a blog post published on Monday on LinkedIn.
Read more at:
Are we in a bubble? How founder of world’s largest hedge fund says 2021 stock market stacks up - MarketWatch
ISSN-1554-7949: News links about and related to Europe - updated daily "The health of a democratic society may be measured by the quality of functions performed by its private citizens" - Alexis de Tocqueville
Advertise On EU-Digest
Showing posts with label Ray Dalio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ray Dalio. Show all posts
2/24/21
5/13/17
US Economy: Ray Dalio says the long term economic picture 'looks scary' - Evelyn Cheng
Ray Dalio,
founder of Bridgewater Associates, is feeling OK about markets and the
economy right now, but he is getting really worried about the future.
"Big picture, the near term looks good and the longer term looks scary," Dalio wrote in a LinkedIn blog post Friday.
"We fear that whatever the magnitude of the downturn that eventually comes, whenever it eventually comes, it will likely produce much greater social and political conflict than currently exists," he said.
Bridgewater manages $150 billion.
Dalio listed four reasons for his pessimism:
For the full report click here: Ray Dalio says the long term economic picture 'looks scary'
"Big picture, the near term looks good and the longer term looks scary," Dalio wrote in a LinkedIn blog post Friday.
"We fear that whatever the magnitude of the downturn that eventually comes, whenever it eventually comes, it will likely produce much greater social and political conflict than currently exists," he said.
Bridgewater manages $150 billion.
Dalio listed four reasons for his pessimism:
For the full report click here: Ray Dalio says the long term economic picture 'looks scary'
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)