As Dow nears 17,000, the worrywarts still speak loudest

Maybe we should call it Wall of Worry Street.

Even as stocks stroll blithely through the neighborhood all-time highs, an abundance of investors are meeting Winston Churchill’s definition of a pessimist  seeing the difficulty in every opportunity. Rather than embracing and celebrating the bull market bounty, Wall Street seems to greet each new theme animating it as a worrisome omen of its undoing.

This is not one of those claims that “everyone is bearish” and therefore the crowd-humbling market will jet higher from here. For sure, on a very short-term basis stocks appear a bit frothily overbought and the mood of active traders has turned toward aggressive greed. This argues for a rest period or a scary little air pocket at minimum to let some speculative fizz dissipate.

But the broader market conversation is skewed toward the recitation of risks rather than opportunities. Commentators habitually rush to identify trends related to rising risk appetites and ample liquidity as fatal excesses. And, tellingly, each time we do get one of those smallish market pullbacks of the sort that might be in the offing now, angst over these supposed excesses comes right to the surface and stokes fears that the Big One is nigh.

The list of market attributes being offered as evidence of bubbly dangers grows weekly.

-Over the weekend, Mark Hulbert of Hulbert’s Financial Digest cited the full merger-and-acquisition pipeline as an indicator of a “dangerously overvalued” market. (That characterization, included in the headline, came from a European academic.) The late-2013 flurry of technology IPOs drew a similar display of finger-wagging toward investors supposedly blinded by greed.

-The extreme quiet in global asset markets has been presented as a harbinger of an imminent storm since before Memorial Day. Here’s a chart of news coverage of this phenomenon.

-The generous credit markets, with rates low and terms loose for corporate borrowers, are cast not as a sign of refreshed, central bank-supported lifeblood to the economy but as reckless underpricing of risk. Investors’ grab for such exotica as subprime auto-loan securities has raised alarm about a rerun of the mortgage bust.

-Stock buybacks, a central feature of this bull market for years now, are typically seen as a prudent, if unimaginative, use of excess corporate capital. Yet now that they are scooping up public shares at a near-record pace, some are worried that shareholder funds are being squandered on overvalued equity.

-The recent uptick in inflation  from extremely low levels and toward the range of the Federal Reserve’s long-term target – is likewise being presented as cause for anxiety. Fed Chair Janet Yellen last week dismissed such concerns as premature, calling recent inflation data “noisy,” which quickly prompted some inflation-fearing commentators to suggest she was already falling “behind the curve.” This debate is the new “noise” around inflation.