Gary Gordon | TalkMarkets | Page 4
President, Pacific Park Financial, Inc.
Location: 6 Gilly Flower Street, Ladera Ranch, CA, United States
Phone: 888-500-4279
Contributor's Links: Pacific Park Financial ETF Expert
Gary A. Gordon, MS, CFP® is the president of Pacific Park Financial, Inc., a Registered Investment Adviser with the SEC. He has more than 28 years of experience as a personal coach in “money matters,” including risk ...more

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What The Real Estate Cycle May Tell Us About Stocks
Why is the S&P 500 still struggling to take out the January highs? Maybe it is nothing more than a six-month “breather.” Or perhaps higher borrowing costs are affecting more than mortgages alone.
Corporations Set Records For Buybacks As Their Insiders Sell
Tax-cut infused earnings have been solid. The rapid-fire rise of longer-term borrowing costs has slowed considerably. And corporate share buybacks have dwarfed earlier records.
Stuck Between A Rock, A Boulder And A Hard Place
If the Federal Reserve raises the federal funds rate much further, it risks triggering a recession.
The Yield Curve And Stocks: Much Ado About Everything
There has been a great deal of chatter about the strength of the American job market. And with good reason.
Can A Stock Bull Prevail Without The Financial Sector?
The domestic economy has performed admirably and corporations have demonstrated how the recent tax cuts have made them more profitable.
Non-Diversification: Free Stock Risk Without The Reward
The yield curve inversion can have considerable lag time before a recession. And for that matter, the U.S. Treasury bond curve can invert long before a stock market bear.
Is The World’s Largest Hedge Fund Wrong About Stock Assets?
The sharp increase in debt at the corporate level means that companies are more vulnerable to rising borrowing costs, Federal Reserve policy error and/or a weakening global economy.
A Bigger Tech Bubble Today Than The One In 2000? Why You Should Question The Unicorns
The stock market eventually woke up to the insane valuations for those dot-com IPOs. The subsequent punishment was swift and severe.
Why Are Investors Considering Alternatives To Stocks?
One way or another, investors are starting to recognize that stocks and higher-yielding bonds are risk-bearing assets.
The Fed Is About To Kill The Credit Boom
Did seven years of zero percent rate policy, three rounds of quantitative easing (QE) and “Operation Twist” provide a consequence-free credit boom?
Taking Stock Of A Devitalized Bull Market
Stocks rarely fall from severely overvalued to fairly valued. They frequently overshoot; they typically wind up in undervalued territory.
The Big Bad Bull Gets Meeker And Weaker
Can the U.S. economy grow without the federal government overspending? Apparently not. Since the financial crisis in 2008, GDP has only grown alongside massive Treasury debt issuance.
Stocks, Bonds And Real Estate: The High Probability Of A Wealth Effect Reversal
The bond market does not seem particularly concerned about inflation getting out of control. Longer-term yields have remained somewhat contained, even as the Fed lifts shorter-term rates.
Do Not Blame China For U.S. Dependence On Debt, Deficits And Low Rates
Volatility is inversely related to financial system liquidity. It follows that as long as the Federal Reserve remain committed to removing liquidity by reducing bloated balance sheets, one can expect the volatility to increase.
Comeuppance: Stocks Will Not Be Able To Shake The Overhang Of Higher Borrowing Costs
Stocks face an unusually arduous task in breaking out to new record peaks.
Why Aren’t Stocks Climbing The Wall Of Worry Anymore?
Anyone who has experienced a stock bear probably remembers months and months of extraordinary price swings.
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