Stock market newcomers revel in their ignorance
By Elliott Wave International
In the past year, the stock market has been flooded by inexperienced investors.
Here's a May 12, 2020 CNBC headline:
Young investors pile into stocks, seeing 'generational-buying moment' instead of risk
The message of that headline matches up with the sentiment among many investors that the stock market is at the start of a boom -- not near an end.
Yes, financial history shows that the same psychology has been on display before, i.e., the heralding of "The New Economy" in 2000 -- just as stocks were topping. And, if you want to go all the way back to the 1929 top, the proclamation of "A New Era."
There are other psychological characteristics on display here in 2021 that are rare.
One of them is a dismissal of the market admonitions from experienced market veterans -- those who've lived through both bull and bear markets.
As the March Elliott Wave Financial Forecast, a monthly publication which provides analysis of major U.S. financial markets, reiterated:
A backlash has emerged against the experienced professional, to the point that someone with "a knowledge of history and value is eventually judged as an impediment to success."
Our April Elliott Wave Financial Forecast described another rare -- if not "unprecedented stage" -- of investor psychology. Here's a chart and commentary:
Newcomers now revel in their ignorance. The chart from The Wall Street Journal shows the "Rise of the Know-Nothings." It's derived from the postings on WallStreetBets' Reddit forum of GameStop fans. In the wake of GameStop's peak on January 28, the percentage of those professing stock market ignorance spiked to about 3% of those posting on WallStreetBets. The use of terms such as "stupid," "idiot" and "no idea what I'm doing" identified the know-nothings. ... The percentage of know-nothing references [spiked] to a high of almost 11% on March 14. So, the foundational basis for the New Era is idiocy.
The reason for pointing out these traits is that they seem to reflect a market psychology that signals an end -- not the beginning -- of a financial "boom."
The best way to get a precise handle on the stock market is to review the Elliott wave pattern of the main indexes.
If you're unfamiliar with the Wave Principle or need to brush up, here's a quote from the Frost & Prechter's Elliott Wave Principle: Key to Market Behavior: