Sunday, October 19, 2025

Where Are US Stock Prices Going? - Weekly Blog # 911

 

 

 

Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings

 

Where Are US Stock Prices Going?

 

Editors: Frank Harrison 1997-2018, Hylton Phillips-Page 2018

 

 

 

Time to Achieve

The old rule for publishers regarding future projections is to never state both a target number and a date certain. However, the result of that warning is a relatively useless projection for planning current actions. Unfortunately, I have views on both the target number and approximate timing, although neither are precise nor tied together. In this blog I share my thoughts with the hope that some are of value, and our trusted readers will share what they think are reasonable answers.

 

As a racetrack trained analyst, I believe the odds favor the US stock market reaching a multi-year peak in the foreseeable future. Consequently, my grandchildren and great-grandchildren will likely see nominal gains in their assets long-term. Careful readers will quickly surmise that I must have mixed views regarding my children’s market wealth prospects. Their results will be heavily influenced by their controlled spending and financial diligence, and what they want to leave to their heirs.

 

Current Market Dilemma

Most of the time a single investment attitude drives market prices. Today, there are two dominant thought patterns. The first is enthusiastic buyers who largely believe the President is in the process of restructuring the economy and therefore society. However, he is at a disadvantage of having only loyalists support him. (Loyalists generally do not pursue details of potential execution problems or even try to identify them to reduce political, functional, and court issues.) They think things are going well.

 

The second group is reluctant to make decisive decisions in the market. The $8 trillion in money market funds is one measure of their non-acceptance of things going well. Cash or similar investments are both a repository for normal operating reserves and future buying pools.

 

Incomplete Evidence

  • Tariff impact: Consumers 55%, importers 22%, foreign producers 18%, and 5% evaded. (I suspect until tariffs are removed consumers will pay at least 90% of them, either in aggregate prices and/or in quality/quantitative shrinkage.)
  • While the media and uninformed public focus on the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) and New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) volume and prices, they are missing a critical change in stock market structure. The year-over-year share volume has increased 40.88% for the NYSE and 80.55% for the NASDAQ, effectively double. (To some degree the NASDAQ volume includes inter-dealer trades to restore trading inventory positions.) Sometimes the two markets act differently. For example, on Friday the NYSE volume of advancing prices rose, as did total volume from Thursday. However, NASDAQ activity was the opposite, with lower volume and more decliners than gainers. A larger measure of the market is the Standard & Poor’s 500 (S&P 500), which is very near an all-time high.
  • In the weekly survey sample of the American Association of Individual Investors (AAII), the percentage of respondents predicting a bullish market for the next six months dropped to 33.7%, while those predicting a bearish market rose to 46.1%. Just three weeks ago the ratios were 42.9% vs 39.2% in favor of the bulls.
  • The current market and political situation resemble those of the late 1920s, which led to both the recession and depression. Both started with an overall increase in debt at the individual and business level. This was particularly true in the politically sensitive farm community, which was suffering from a change in foreign demand for its crops. (This time it’s a Chinese decline in demand for soybeans.) Small and medium-sized banks were having loan payment problems, which then led to imposing tariffs on foreign products and services. The current Federal Reserve Board is very conscious of this history.
  • Another parallel is certain foreign governments recognizing the relative weakness of America and taking advantage of the situation by threatening further actions. This week Ruth and I spent time with the leaders of the US Marine Corps University who are preparing for a future different than the past. Similar efforts occurred before WWI and WWII, suggesting investors should think about structural changes to their investment policies.

 

Building a larger cash opportunity reserve may make sense. What do you think?

 

 

 

Did you miss my blog last week? Click here to read.

Mike Lipper's Blog: A Good Time to Sell? - Weekly Blog # 910

Mike Lipper's Blog: Risks: Recession/Cyclical, Depression/Structural - Weekly Blog # 909

Mike Lipper's Blog: Tactical Headlines Show Strategic Clues - Weekly Blog # 908

 

 

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A. Michael Lipper, CFA

 

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