As I've been saying for many weeks now, buying is fun.... This is an abbreviated article from an everyday investor newsletter. Enjoy....
By Porter Stansberry: As longtime readers of my advisory can tell you, I haven't been bullish on the stock market in years. In fact, for the last couple years, I've been warning that stocks, in general, were vastly overpriced. Investors were too complacent. They had too little fear. It turns out that was very close to a huge top in asset prices. Stocks, bonds, commodities, foreign currencies all peaked over the next several months. It was easy to see this peak coming with three key points: the number of stocks trading at reasonable prices, the amount of insider buying in the stock market, and the spread between emerging-market bonds and U.S. Treasury bonds. Reviewing these key data points today shows we're building an important bottom in stock prices. And it's why I'm telling everyone I know that this is one of the great buying opportunities of the last 30 years. Looking through the list of cheap stocks, several great businesses jump out: ExxonMobil, Wal-Mart, Microsoft, Johnson & Johnson, McDonald's, etc. Any reasonable evaluation of the market would find plenty of safe and cheap stocks... thousands more than you would have found a year ago at the market's peak. What about insiders? Brian Heyliger covers insider buying and selling for my firm Stansberry Research. He follows corporate insiders on a full-time basis. Throughout this bear market, the ratio of buys to sells has been steadily increasing. In June, the ratio was in the high thirties – anything over 35% is bullish. But since then, the ratio doubled, hitting 63% in October... a level I've never seen before. What about that lack of fear? My favorite measure of fear is the spread between emerging-market debt and U.S. Treasury debt – the so-called "risk spread." Institutional investors consider U.S. Treasuries a "risk-free" asset. Emerging markets have much lower credit ratings, higher inflation, and a much greater risk of defaulting on their debts. Investors normally demand much higher interest rates from emerging-market economies. But... in big bull markets, near the very top, investors become so complacent, they begin to assume holding emerging-market debt is tantamount to holding U.S. Treasuries. Looking back historically, you can see this spread is a great indicator of global tops and bottoms in stock prices. In about a year, we've moved from a period of complete complacency to absolute terror. Paradoxically – and this is hard for most people to understand – you want to be a buyer of equities when everyone else is panicking. None of these factors mean that stocks have to go up or that they will. No one can predict the future – but you don't have to be perfectly right to do very well in the market. Yes, our economy is struggling right now with huge problems. Enormous risks threaten America's leadership in the world, the dollar's status as the world's reserve currency, our energy supplies, the rule of law in this country, etc. But all of these risks – all of them – existed a year ago, when stocks were almost 100% higher, on average. And all of these risks will exist 10 years from now, when stocks have gone up three or four times from their averages now. To do well as an investor, you have to buy when stocks are cheap. And stocks only get cheap when most investors are afraid. So you have two choices: You can r refuse to invest in stocks, or you can learn to buy stocks heavily when their prices offer you a reward for taking smart risks. That moment is right now. END OF ARTICLE
You might recognize the lady at the left - she didn't need to buy stocks, she used to own Monaco.