New month, same bullish mood
Kevin Green’s point is basically this: the market looks like it spent April on a treadmill and came out stronger in May. The S&P 500 notched its first close above 7,200, while the Nasdaq-100 also hit a new closing high, which is Wall Street’s way of saying, “Yes, we’d like a little more of whatever this is.”
The market is looking past the scary stuff
There are still some geopolitical headlines lurking in the background — because of course there are — but traders seem more interested in the bigger trend line than the daily drama. When major indexes are pushing into fresh highs, it usually means investors are still willing to pay up for risk, growth, and the idea that the rally can keep running.
Why you should care
For investors, this matters less as a victory lap and more as a vibe check:
- If mega-cap and growth-heavy indexes keep leading, momentum names can stay sticky.
- Fresh highs can attract more money from trend-followers and passive flows.
- But when markets get this comfortable, even a small macro wobble can turn into a “wait, what?” moment fast.
Big picture: the market is acting like it just got a second wind — and for now, the bulls still have the wheel.
