Chef Mickey
Well-Known Member
No, I disagree. Travel absolutely has objectively improved over March, agree? No one was even flying except for critical reasons. That's not the case anymore. Cruising will likely be one of the last to improve. I didn't want to cruise before the virus.Have you tried to book a cruise? The travel industry is not just lift, nor is it just Disney. Again, not disputing that people want to travel. Not saying Leisure Travel won't bounce back in a significant way. Your assessment about the industry as a whole is flat out wrong.
Markets have said whatever Jerome's "magical printing machine" has told them to say. Recently I've seen a few articles on Minsky. I think the up is inflated (you see the illogical push on Tech two weeks ago? And the pull back last? Nobody really knows.) and Armageddon is an overplayed hand. Truth will be somewhere in the middle. Market is not a projection of now, it's a projection of what has yet to be - based on perception. And because there is uncertainty, the market over inflates, and exacerbates the loss.
I know you're a Wharton guy. But numbers don't always equate to sentiment. In these types of times things move irrationally.
Earnings have been largely good. The Fed of course has an impact, but this isn't 1999. Our companies have real earnings to back up valuations. With interest rates this low, stocks are the only game in town.
I am telling you exactly that. Markets know the turnaround is and will happen. In March, markets correctly prepared for a doomsday scenario where things stay closed for indefinite periods of time. That is OFF the table, pending some new development.
Whether the vaccine comes in November (ha ha) or a couple months later is virtually immaterial. The fact a vaccine is imminent takes the hell freezing over scenario off the table. The struggles will be sector based, such as cruising or pockets of travel being weaker.
This is still going to be like the flu vaccine. Some will take it, some won't...and it will take a lot more deaths, cases, or both to get people to be serious about it. Without a vaccine, numbers are trending well at the moment. The next economic pain will come from something else, IMO. But I'm happy to have gotten the opportunity to add more DIS at $80 and S&P at 2500. Irrationality is great. I knew (as did anyone who could remain objective) that a respiratory virus wasn't going to be the end of markets. I was buying every day.
Last edited: