“In the March issue of my newsletter, The Oxford Income Letter, which comes out tomorrow, I mentioned that I recently remarked to a friend, “It feels 1999-ish.”
Investor sentiment is extremely bullish. Not just bullish, mind you – unearned overconfidence is off the charts.
I’ve been involved in the markets for 31 years, 25 of them as a professional. It may shock you to know that I am never extremely confident. Do I believe in my convictions? Absolutely. Do I believe that the market could prove me wrong at any moment? Absolutely.
I’ve seen too many really smart people get their heads handed to them because they not only were wrong but also invested too much in their position or refused to sell when it was clear they were wrong.
I was reminded of this investor overconfidence the other day on Twitter (you can follow me @stocksnboxing).
CNBC posted an article about mutual fund manager and fund family founder Ron Baron. He said he doesn’t invest in Bitcoin because he doesn’t understand it despite being a “fairly sophisticated investor.”
Someone replied, “Enjoy staying poor.”
“”Maybe Bitcoin will skyrocket and he will miss out on further riches.
But the hubris of an average Joe to tell a multibillionaire to “enjoy staying poor” because he doesn’t invest in Bitcoin is not something you see at the bottom of a cycle.
Then there’s an article I read about young workers putting all of their retirement money in Bitcoin. One 30-year-old stated, “It’s the best long-term asset to hold.”
Maybe he’s right. But you still don’t put all of your money in one asset. That is extreme optimism.
It’s not just in Bitcoin where sentiment is through the roof. Special purpose acquisition companies (SPACs), tech stocks and heavily shorted stocks have all caught investors’ attention, and those investors have driven the stocks higher.
Bank of America recently said bullishness among sell-side analysts is so high it’s about to trigger a sell signal. (To get a better understanding of what the sell side is, click here to see my recent video about it.)
In other words, Bank of America is saying its peers are too bullish.
Why shouldn’t people feel bullish?
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