U.S stocks are up. That's good. The euro, gold, silver and most other commodities are down. Is that bad?
It's unusual, that's for sure. The last time the S&P was above 1,370, the euro (CCY: EURUSD - News) was at an 18-month high, silver (NYSEArca: SLV - News) was at an all-time high, gold (COMEX: GCJ12) traded at a nominal all-time high and oil (NY Mercantile: CLJ12) traded near $115 a barrel.
QE2 had the proverbial 'water in tub' effect that lifted everything from the rubber duckies to stocks and well, gold, silver and the euro.
The European Central Bank's (ECB) euro1 trillion worth of LTRO seems to have a more concentrated effect on equities, domestically and abroad (NYSEArca: EFA - News) than QE2.
What's the Message of the Declining Euro?
The last time we saw the euro (NYSEArca: FXE - News) head south unconfirmed by stocks was in late August 2011. Shortly thereafter stocks tumbled to their October low... read more.
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