Monthly Archives: December 2014

The Five Most Controversial Articles Of 2014

    If subscribers’ emails and comments are any indication, Wall Street Daily readers are an opinionated bunch! And it’s not difficult to see which topics really get your blood boiling. Here are the most controversial articles we’ve published all year.   #5 Will Millions Boycott Amazon This Holiday? When Chief Political Analyst Floyd Brown criticized Amazon (AMZN) for switching from UPS to…

Stocks Have Never Been More Expensive Based On Long-Term Growth F

As the S&P 500 (SPX) pushes towards Goldman Sachs 2,100 year end target (for 2015!!) today, we thought it worth considering just how much awesomeness has been pulled forward, priced-in, exuberantly-chased. As the following charts show, based on bottom-up long-term-growth expectations, S&P forward P/E valuations have never been higher. But that’s not all… The current Forward…

GDP Is Not A Predictor Of Stock Market Performance

There may be no correlation between economic growth (GDP) and the stock market in the US; and in China too, as Joshua M Brown shows below. This is because GDP only partially reflects corporate earnings and because earnings are only one factor affecting the performance of the stock market. So what of the frenetic trading around the weekly and…

3 Emerging Market ETFs That Soared In 2014

To everybody’s surprise, this year started off with most emerging markets regaining their ground lost in 2013 due to ‘taper tantrums’. In fact, some of these markets proved huge contributors to global recovery (Read: 3 International ETFs Beating SPY This Year) Developing nations were assisted by a number of factors in this time period that helped…

A Quick Note On Different Views Of Potential GDP

Reader Steven Kopits writes “potential GDP model is also a binding constraint model”, so GDP “…is subject to some sort of natural speed limit which cannot be exceeded”. This assertion is so amazingly absolutist in nature, and represents such a misunderstanding of how macroeconomists typically think of potential, that I am moved to observe that if this…