1 00:00:02,520 --> 00:00:15,080 Speaker 1: Bloomberg Audio Studios, podcasts, radio news. A single best idea 2 00:00:15,600 --> 00:00:19,760 Speaker 1: and the single best idea over twenty years ago was 3 00:00:20,079 --> 00:00:26,160 Speaker 1: some people trusted me to generate conversations and to generate 4 00:00:26,640 --> 00:00:31,560 Speaker 1: longer conversations and the media a typical American conversation. It's 5 00:00:31,640 --> 00:00:35,680 Speaker 1: very difficult for Europeans, where there's a much longer conversation. 6 00:00:35,760 --> 00:00:38,560 Speaker 1: But it was three four minutes. Anything over for zero 7 00:00:38,720 --> 00:00:42,000 Speaker 1: zero was sacrilegi. I mean, you can't do that. Nobody 8 00:00:42,040 --> 00:00:45,720 Speaker 1: can go longer. And a major shout out to people 9 00:00:45,800 --> 00:00:50,080 Speaker 1: like don Imus Howard Stern, A major shout out to 10 00:00:50,200 --> 00:00:55,800 Speaker 1: Charlie Rose, who had the courage to develop longer conversations 11 00:00:56,160 --> 00:00:59,880 Speaker 1: from a time ago. Today was one of those magical 12 00:01:00,800 --> 00:01:05,080 Speaker 1: we're back to back. We had Alicia Levigne, but first Robert, 13 00:01:05,280 --> 00:01:09,280 Speaker 1: excuse me, look at me. Robert Stovall, his father, Sam Stovall, 14 00:01:09,440 --> 00:01:15,000 Speaker 1: his son. I believe Sam Stovall showed up curious Sam Stovall. 15 00:01:15,520 --> 00:01:16,560 Speaker 1: On Clint Eastwood. 16 00:01:16,880 --> 00:01:19,440 Speaker 2: I got the best bit of investment advice from Clint 17 00:01:19,480 --> 00:01:21,920 Speaker 2: Eastwood when he was playing Dirty Harry in the movie 18 00:01:21,959 --> 00:01:26,160 Speaker 2: Magnum Force. A man's got to know his limitations and 19 00:01:26,360 --> 00:01:30,960 Speaker 2: basically emotions tend to be an investor's worst enemy, and 20 00:01:31,040 --> 00:01:35,800 Speaker 2: so extracting your emotions and using declines in the market, 21 00:01:36,200 --> 00:01:39,160 Speaker 2: using technical analysis to see how far the decline is 22 00:01:39,280 --> 00:01:42,880 Speaker 2: likely to go, etc. Can then help you to buy 23 00:01:43,000 --> 00:01:46,720 Speaker 2: on the dips, also realizing, as I mentioned, it takes 24 00:01:46,760 --> 00:01:49,200 Speaker 2: only about four months on average to get back to 25 00:01:49,240 --> 00:01:53,360 Speaker 2: break even from declines of up to twenty percent. By 26 00:01:53,400 --> 00:01:56,000 Speaker 2: the time you freaked out your financial advisor to lighten 27 00:01:56,080 --> 00:01:58,840 Speaker 2: up on your equity exposure, the market's probably already on 28 00:01:58,880 --> 00:02:01,480 Speaker 2: its way back to break even, and on average the 29 00:02:01,520 --> 00:02:06,200 Speaker 2: market gains an additional ten percent after the conclusion of 30 00:02:06,280 --> 00:02:08,840 Speaker 2: a correction or a decline of up to twenty percent 31 00:02:09,040 --> 00:02:09,480 Speaker 2: runs it. 32 00:02:10,000 --> 00:02:12,280 Speaker 1: That's all I can say what he just said there, 33 00:02:12,320 --> 00:02:15,480 Speaker 1: which is all the heritage of a Stoveall family, what 34 00:02:15,600 --> 00:02:19,840 Speaker 1: happens at CFRA and goes back to the research of 35 00:02:20,560 --> 00:02:24,160 Speaker 1: John Murphy and Ed Heyman and the rest. To use 36 00:02:24,200 --> 00:02:28,960 Speaker 1: technical analysis to figure out where you are within the 37 00:02:29,000 --> 00:02:32,760 Speaker 1: fear is the number one use of the lines that 38 00:02:32,880 --> 00:02:37,040 Speaker 1: charts the exes and the o Sam Stovall there classic. 39 00:02:37,160 --> 00:02:39,760 Speaker 1: Then we got better. Alicia Levine showed up with their 40 00:02:39,800 --> 00:02:43,840 Speaker 1: prodigious mathematics from B and Y let's listen. 41 00:02:44,200 --> 00:02:46,079 Speaker 3: It's hard for me to see us getting to three 42 00:02:46,080 --> 00:02:48,520 Speaker 3: percent growth, right. What you had in the eighties was 43 00:02:48,560 --> 00:02:51,800 Speaker 3: three percent growth. So that's really what you need for 44 00:02:51,919 --> 00:02:56,679 Speaker 3: nominal earnings, right, because earnings are nominal and growth is nominal. 45 00:02:57,520 --> 00:03:01,040 Speaker 3: The thing here is, I just think what everybody's missing 46 00:03:01,200 --> 00:03:06,360 Speaker 3: is the resiliency of corporate America and the resiliency of households. 47 00:03:06,600 --> 00:03:09,320 Speaker 3: Of households, I have a chart that I use which 48 00:03:09,360 --> 00:03:14,560 Speaker 3: shows the crushing of the household's balance sheet of debt 49 00:03:14,639 --> 00:03:18,480 Speaker 3: to assets. It is a crushing from fifteen years ago 50 00:03:19,560 --> 00:03:23,000 Speaker 3: of the global financial crisis. It's basically been cut in half. 51 00:03:23,320 --> 00:03:27,079 Speaker 3: Households are so resilient and there are fifty three trillion 52 00:03:27,160 --> 00:03:31,040 Speaker 3: dollars wealthier than they were five years ago. So your assets, 53 00:03:31,320 --> 00:03:36,840 Speaker 3: your financial assets, are going higher and your liabilities as 54 00:03:36,880 --> 00:03:39,520 Speaker 3: a percent of assets are going lower. So you've got 55 00:03:39,520 --> 00:03:42,160 Speaker 3: healthy balance sheets in the household sector. All that debt, 56 00:03:42,200 --> 00:03:45,000 Speaker 3: of course was transferred to the government. But the households 57 00:03:45,040 --> 00:03:49,680 Speaker 3: are resilient, and corporate America is resilient. Large cap are resilient, 58 00:03:49,880 --> 00:03:52,600 Speaker 3: less so for small cap because they've got floating right debt. 59 00:03:52,920 --> 00:03:57,160 Speaker 3: But during a place where there's much more resiliency than 60 00:03:57,200 --> 00:03:59,960 Speaker 3: the conversation we're hearing Alicia. 61 00:03:59,600 --> 00:04:03,640 Speaker 1: Levine of BNY across the nation and your commute thank 62 00:04:03,680 --> 00:04:07,320 Speaker 1: You on Apple car Play, Android Auto Serious XM Channel 63 00:04:07,360 --> 00:04:11,760 Speaker 1: one twenty one. Older digital technology seems bigger and bigger 64 00:04:12,200 --> 00:04:15,600 Speaker 1: each and every day in the heat wave. Good Morning 65 00:04:15,840 --> 00:04:19,520 Speaker 1: ninety nine one FM in Washington, ninety two nine FM 66 00:04:20,279 --> 00:04:25,080 Speaker 1: in Boston, and Bloomberg eleventh forreoh. After a mayoral election 67 00:04:25,640 --> 00:04:29,280 Speaker 1: in New York, a major shout out Lauren Emaus absolutely 68 00:04:29,440 --> 00:04:36,279 Speaker 1: fabulous as our city hall correspondent on podcasts, on YouTube podcasts. 69 00:04:36,520 --> 00:04:49,839 Speaker 1: It is a single best idea