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Fisher Investments’ founder, Executive Chairman and Co-Chief Investment Officer Ken Fisher addresses fears related to market breadth-the percentage of stocks that drive the market higher or lower. Ken says those that fear “bad breadth,” meaning few companies lifting the stock market, often do not have their pessimism based on data. Ken says rapidly falling breadth is, historically, a very bullish feature.
While investors of old praise large market breadth as a sign of healthy market growth, Ken says wider breadth usually occurs in mid- to late-stage bull markets. Investors often see rising breadth as a positive surprise, leading to further bull market gains. Fears of narrow breadth, Ken says, are another brick in the “wall of worry” that bull markets climb in their early stages.
For more of Ken Fisher’s thoughts on the markets, visit us at www.fisherinvestments.com.
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