The global economy and geopolitical situation are both worsening, and everyone can see that. But strangely, how are the listed companies performing? Most multinational corporations are struggling and experiencing sluggish growth under the backdrop of de-globalization. However, looking at major stock markets worldwide—they are soaring and continuously hitting new highs. What's really going on? Is it the massive monetary supply creating a flood of funds that is causing this? Or do international investors truly believe that the world economy will experience a new wave of growth? Both possibilities exist, but which one is the real driver behind this rally is worth deep reflection.

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StillBuyingTheDipvip
· 17h ago
Don't be fooled by appearances; this is just a carnival of money printing. Whether performance is good or not isn't that important. There's excess liquidity, everyone. Most of this surge is just a bubble inflated by the Fed's money printing. The stock market hits new highs but earnings are sluggish? What does that mean? It just means there's too much money with nowhere to go. This round of gains is not driven by fundamentals at all; it's purely a capital game. Honestly, I remain bearish on this trend. It will have to correct sooner or later.
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TommyTeacher1vip
· 01-07 08:00
Excessive currency issuance leading to a collapse in this game, it's really obvious --- The stock market hits new highs while performance collapses, how can the spread not lead to a sell-off? --- The flood of funds rushing in, what about the fate of retail investors as bagholders? --- Honestly, it's just pouring water indiscriminately, nothing else --- Poor economy but a good stock market? Uh... I choose not to believe it --- Energy and geopolitics are a mess, why should the stock market soar? Can anyone explain? --- Definitely a bubble vibe, but who knows when it will burst? --- The central bank pumps money, even cabbage prices can be driven sky-high --- Feels like a game of pass-the-parcel, see who takes the last turn --- Performance is poor but the stock still hits the daily limit, what's the logic? Too much money burning a hole?
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FOMOrektGuyvip
· 01-07 07:55
Uh... isn't this just the story of the money printing machine go brrr, with the real economy collapsing and the stock market soaring? Ridiculous. Poor performance, sky-high valuations, who would dare to believe? Basically, it's all about liquidity play. Oh my, it feels like the stock market and reality are in completely different dimensions. Can someone explain why stocks with poor performance are still rising? My brain is a bit stuck. Is this bubble about to burst... it should logically break. The economy is so bad, yet the stock market is reaching new highs, the entire logic is reversed. Another year of a difficult market, is capital really betting on the future?
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Gm_Gn_Merchantvip
· 01-07 07:53
Well... Basically, it's a money-printing game. The fundamentals have long collapsed. --- Wait, why are stocks with poor performance actually rising? That's unreasonable... Unless everyone is betting that the FED will continue to pump liquidity. --- A typical asset bubble, really. The real economy is a mess, but the stock market is soaring to the sky. --- Honestly, right now it's a feast for the wealthy, while retail investors are still sleepwalking. --- That's why embracing crypto is important, at least there's a chance for reflection. --- But think carefully, no one knows how long this rally can last. --- Capital inflows are definitely part of it, but expectations are also crucial—it's all a psychological game.
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JustAnotherWalletvip
· 01-07 07:46
Basically, it's just fake prosperity created by printing money, and sooner or later, it will have to be paid back. Liquidity is flooding the market; it's all just digital games. Don't be fooled. The economic fundamentals are completely rotten, yet the stock market is soaring to the sky. This doesn't make sense. Capital players are just self-indulging, and retail investors' fate has already been sealed. There's so much money that there's nowhere to spend it, so it's piled into the stock market as the only option. Earnings growth has plateaued, yet stock prices are doubling. How is this math supposed to add up? Once the printing presses start, everything rises, but bubbles will burst sooner or later. Wake up, everyone. This rebound is just the last wild celebration before the harvest.
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SerRugResistantvip
· 01-07 07:44
It's outrageous. The poor performance of the stocks hasn't prevented the market from hitting new highs. This clearly indicates a liquidity monster is eating up everything. In simple terms, there's too much money, and it has to be poured somewhere.
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StakeHouseDirectorvip
· 01-07 07:43
Currency devaluation is the truth behind stock market rises; performance growth is just a cover story.
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