A market-beating day-trader says stocks at record highs aren't a reason to sell, but he's wary of one key market signal

Orientul Mijlociu

As a full-time trader , Erik Smolinski is always watching the markets. Lately, he says, conditions have become especially interesting. "It's actually really anomalous where the market is right now," Smolinski, who started trading in 2007 and consistently beats the S&P 500 , told Business Insider. Stocks have been on a record-setting run lately, with investors shrugging off the Iran war while stellar earnings fuel unbridled bullishness. At the same time, the interest-rate backdrop has become