Exchange Currency

wall of worry

An expression coined in the 1950's that depicts a sustained stock market rise during a time of economic or financial stress in which stock prices are said to be ascending a "wall of worry". It sometimes results from a herd mentality of investors who "buy on bad news".

Related information about wall of worry:
  1. Wall Of Worry Definition | Investopedia
    The financial markets' periodic tendency to surmount a host of negative factors and keep ascending. Wall of worry is generally used in connection with the stock ...
     
  2. Wall of Worry - All Articles | Minyanville's Wall Street
    Nov 13, 2012 ... Tangled Financial Terrorist Webs, Stocks for Foodies, and the Audacity of Twitter: The Top Stories of the Week · Minyanville Staff · Get Ready ...
     
  3. Lloyds Wall of Worry - Minyanville.com
    Nov 13, 2012 ... What is Lloyd's Wall of Worry? Welcome to my at-a-glance guide to the issues facing investors this week -- a unique tool for traders and money ...
     
  4. Global Macro: What's In A Wall Of Worry - Seeking Alpha
    Oct 2, 2012 ... As the economic environment continues to deteriorate, many speculators are calling for the next correction. The term 'Climbing a Wall of Worry" ...
     
  5. Wall of Worry - Financial Dictionary - The Free Dictionary
    Informal; a market uptrend that occurs when there is significant uncertainty about its sustainability. For example, if the market is concerned about potential, new ...
     
  6. Stocks climb a wall of worry | Money - Home
    3 days ago ... U.S. stocks pushed higher Wednesday, but gains were modest as investors remain on edge over fiscal cliff negotiations. The Dow Jones ...
     
  7. Climbing the wall of worry - The Cody Word - MarketWatch
    Aug 19, 2012 ... The markets continue to climb the wall of worry, meaning that all those bears and shorts and money managers who are underexposed to stocks ...
     
  8. A Wall-of-Worry Strategy - Barrons.com
    A recommendation to simply buy calls may seem flippant, and it feels that way to say it. But mixed investor sentiment supports the idea.