Also: Everyone says the "buy and hold" strategy is the smart play, and I see people scoffing at stock picking and speculating, but with the degree of volitility in the market right now, doesn't it make some sense to try a little gambling? For example: American Express, over the last five years, trades around 40/share. Recently areound 18/share and bouncing all over the place. Doesn't it make some sense to buy, see if you can get a nice uptick in the short term, if not, it's more than likely still a decent bet in the mid-long term, even if we find a new bottom (or two) in the meantime? I guess the trick is figuring out when the bottom bouncing ends and the prolonged recovery begins. I guess the long term view is just to see the whole market as a bargain and buy index funds and ride them.
Stock picking and short-term market timing are, in my view, sucker's games.
On a longer term I think that you can spot stuff like risk aversion being high (after a crash) -> low equity prices -> buy now.
This gets down to the efficient markets hypothesis and the capital asset pricing model. The only input to these guys is the degree of risk aversion of the market as a whole.
There are a lot of market participants, and a lot of them have good info, experience and access to large sums of cash. In order to stock pick you have to assume that you're basically smarter than all of these guys (since if even a few of them see the opportunity they will swamp it with their money).
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