Thank you Mr. Trump
[h=1]'We’re going to win so much, you’re going to be so sick and tired of winning'[/h]
[h=1]Stock records signal that fighting the Trump rally is a losing battle.[/h]
“Don’t fight the trend” is an oft-used expression on Wall Street. It may be truer now than ever. Casting a dubious eye on what has amounted to a spectacular rise for equity markets since Donald Trump became president-elect in November is proving a costly enterprise.
Whether the advance for equities can sustain itself over the next month and into 2017 is anyone’s guess, but for now investors who have been reluctant to embrace the unabashed exuberance that has gripped stock investors over the past month are losing money—fast.
[h=1]'We’re going to win so much, you’re going to be so sick and tired of winning'[/h]
[h=1]Stock records signal that fighting the Trump rally is a losing battle.[/h]
“Don’t fight the trend” is an oft-used expression on Wall Street. It may be truer now than ever. Casting a dubious eye on what has amounted to a spectacular rise for equity markets since Donald Trump became president-elect in November is proving a costly enterprise.
Whether the advance for equities can sustain itself over the next month and into 2017 is anyone’s guess, but for now investors who have been reluctant to embrace the unabashed exuberance that has gripped stock investors over the past month are losing money—fast.