James Deporre hat auch mal wieder ein paar interessante Gedankengaenge:
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Supply, Demand and Rotation Will Determine Where the Market Heads Next
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Many complex factors move the stock market, but at its heart it is simple supply and demand. The supply of stocks and the level of non-invested cash ultimately will determine how stocks act.
The thing that has driven the market more than anything in 2020 is the flood of liquidity that was created by the Federal Reserve to deal with the Covid-19 crisis. That high level of liquidity has persisted for months and there continues to be a surge of inflows that is pushing the indices to all-time highs.
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Here on Tuesday morning we learn that Tesla (TSLA) has filed to sell $5 billion in common stock as there is likely to be a surge in demand for its shares due to the company's addition to the S&P 500 on Dec. 21. There have been a slew of secondary offerings and there are several big initial public offerings (IPOs) on the docket. DoorDash will soak up around $3 billion and Airbnb will have a valuation of around $30 billion.
This additional supply is going to have an impact on the very strong rotational action that we have seen lately. As I've been writing recently the primary rotation that has been taking place is out of some of the standard growth leadership and into stock picking. Sectors such as special purpose acquisition companies (SPACs), electric vehicles, solar energy and biotechnology have benefited as a flood of hot money has chased strong momentum. The rotation is mainly occurring under the surface of the indices and has rewarded those who have reacted quickly and aggressively.
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https://realmoney.thestreet.com/investin...t-15509399
*****
Supply, Demand and Rotation Will Determine Where the Market Heads Next
...
Many complex factors move the stock market, but at its heart it is simple supply and demand. The supply of stocks and the level of non-invested cash ultimately will determine how stocks act.
The thing that has driven the market more than anything in 2020 is the flood of liquidity that was created by the Federal Reserve to deal with the Covid-19 crisis. That high level of liquidity has persisted for months and there continues to be a surge of inflows that is pushing the indices to all-time highs.
....
Here on Tuesday morning we learn that Tesla (TSLA) has filed to sell $5 billion in common stock as there is likely to be a surge in demand for its shares due to the company's addition to the S&P 500 on Dec. 21. There have been a slew of secondary offerings and there are several big initial public offerings (IPOs) on the docket. DoorDash will soak up around $3 billion and Airbnb will have a valuation of around $30 billion.
This additional supply is going to have an impact on the very strong rotational action that we have seen lately. As I've been writing recently the primary rotation that has been taking place is out of some of the standard growth leadership and into stock picking. Sectors such as special purpose acquisition companies (SPACs), electric vehicles, solar energy and biotechnology have benefited as a flood of hot money has chased strong momentum. The rotation is mainly occurring under the surface of the indices and has rewarded those who have reacted quickly and aggressively.
....
https://realmoney.thestreet.com/investin...t-15509399