I will say, though, that I'm not a fan of the dichotomy on communication. By all means take credit when the market is bullish b/c of your policies, but I would've expected something, formal or informal, along the lines of: "Yes, the market went down today. Bigly. And it still may do more as we roll back years of bad fiscal policy. But the legislation we're putting in place makes us all on a more solid footing long-term. Day-to-day market fluctuations and correction are not what my economic team is worried about." or something. I'd guess (though I don't even pretend to be a macroeconomist) that, with more cash in the public's pocket, interest rates will start to climb and make bonds more atractive than lower-dividend stocks at high P/E ratios, which will lower stock prices even further. Again, I don't think we're going to drop all 42% gained since election night, and I think more cash for consumer is good (now, if we could work on less/better spending by the gov't...) but to not be talking about it is, suboptimal.
Do you personally guarantee that as a real estate agent? If so I will buy. If not, well, an investment in barfo chili (Denny Crane likes it! Hey Denny!) will go up 50%-100% every year from now to eternity. barfo