I havn't looked at the charts for awhile but look at the DOW going into the great depression and look at the charts now. I hope we don't go for the second fall
Tip of the ice burg.
Look at the ratios of buying and selling/short positions and long positions; debt to GDP; index rallies to corporate performance; so on and so forth. Instead of comparing them to historical occurrences; consider that none of the math is right and the basic fundamentals of economics are not being reflected in the results.
You pump funny money into the system, you get funny results. Any currently-perceived improvement being reported is pretty much bogus.
I really hate to be a doom and gloomer; but we're in bad shape and, frankly, we're being fed garbage in the media.
The next shoe to drop will be the Fed's reluctance to purchase (with fake money) mortgage-backed securities (with fake values) from banks (which were mandated by the government to lend to unqualified borrowers in teh first place) due to inflation risk. Inverse relationships will result in an increase in mortgage rates, which will trigger a drop in home sales activity, which will trigger a drop in home values, which will repeat the fun of 2008 all over again.
And this time, it wont be limited to the residential sector. CapMark (aka GMACCM) filed for Chapter 11 in October last year. They are one of the largest servicers of CMBS loans in the world and if *they* are filing, that means they ain't getting payments (ex-employee; guess KKR and GS did me a favor...).
Greenspan, Bernanke, Geithner and Paulson should be drawn, quartered and dragged through the streets of Washington DC.
Our economy is a house of cards held together by a phantom system of credit and debt. Compared to 50 years ago, we dont produce anything and we dont provide any service. We make money with money.
The model is unsustainable and the current policies designed to "fix" the economy are akin to throwing more wood on a fire in an attempt to deprive it of oxygen. Good luck.