It’s the highest level of concern we’ve seen since the Dot Com Bubble. What does this mean? The U.S. economy is heading into dangerous territory. But it’s not just the stock market that’s in trouble. The U.S. government’s interest expense has gone off the charts, pushing past a staggering $1.1 trillion. And if current trends hold, that number is expected to skyrocket to $1.7 trillion by 2034. Is this sustainable? No. This is a ticking time bomb, and the longer we let this go on, the worse it will get. If we don’t act, the consequences will be catastrophic.
🚨This is one of the most OVERVALUED markets in history:
The S&P 500 is expensive on 19 out of 20 metrics, according to the BofA analysis.
Some metrics such as the Buffett Indicator (Market Cap to GDP ratio) are over 100% above historical averages..
Is this bubble going to… pic.twitter.com/ZyJ5lHFU9Q
— Global Markets Investor (@GlobalMktObserv) February 20, 2025
We saw this same divergence between the Dow Transports and the S&P 500 back in December 2021 and guess what happened?
The S&P 500 imploded.
It's called Dow Theory non-confirmation. The Transports must confirm a new high for it to be valid. pic.twitter.com/5chP5eEHse
— Mac10 (@SuburbanDrone) February 19, 2025
89% of Fund Managers now believe U.S. Equities are overvalued 🚨 That's the most since the Dot Com Bubble. Probably Fine? pic.twitter.com/CzZkfB1snc
— Barchart (@Barchart) February 20, 2025
This is truly a historic moment for the US economy
US government interest expense has gone parabolic in the past few years
It has now crossed a staggering $1.1 TRILLION
At this rate, it is expected to reach $1.7 trillion by 2034
US debt is now becoming a major concern pic.twitter.com/LDtJwtHStr
— Bravos Research (@bravosresearch) February 20, 2025