Next week is Groundhog Day, not to mention the 30 th anniversary of the theatrical release of "Groundhog Day."
The ensuing market retreat culminated in the October low at more than a 25% decline from the S & P's record high.
Inflation is decidedly in retreat, fourth-quarter GDP was slow-ish but solidly positive, Fed officials did nothing to push back against market expectations for a quarter-point bump in rates next week.
But none of the interim S & P 500 rallies in that period made it as far above the 200-day moving average as the index currently is.
Yet even with obligatory macro scares and market switchbacks along the way, it doesn't mean investors necessarily remain stuck in the same old doom loop.