The benchmark ASX 200 index has closed above 9,000 points for the first time in its history.
At the end of trade, it was sitting at 9,019.1, up 1.1% on the day.
It's older cousin, the All Ordinaries index, which covers the top 500 stocks by market value, passed 9,000 a little while ago and closed today at 9,284.2.
But individual stocks continue to be extremely volatile through reporting season, with even minor profit misses like CSL punished hard, and big misses punished very hard, like James Hardie, down a further 9.4% today after yesterday's near 28% slump.
"Big sell-offs in CSL and James Hardie can attest to the fact that, if anything, companies are being punished for misses more than they are being rewarded for beats," notes Capital.com's Kyle Rodda.
But he says there's a bigger threat to the market as a whole than the share price punishment dished out to a few stocks that miss earnings forecasts.
"The risk to the market now is that valuations start to deter buyers," he warns.
"Just like Wall Street, multiples look lofty at the moment. Forward price to earnings multiples are around the levels they were at the start of the year when everyone was screaming 'bubble'.
"Although multiples are never a strong indicator of turning points, they can tell you if the market is likely to be more sensitive to a negative shock."
And what is a possible near-term shock?
"That puts Friday night's (AEST) speech from chairperson Jerome Powell into focus," Rodda notes.
"If the Fed doesn't deliver guidance that supports the rate cuts currently being priced into US rates curves — 82% of a cut is priced-in for September and there's a one-in-three implied chance of 75 basis points of cuts before year end — then equity markets risk having the rug pulled from underneath them."
A magic carpet ride indeed.