It's pretty funny to see all the Trading Range screamers on the media. They're about to get their range traded, alright.
Reminds of the history channel, all these guys who fought in ww2 sit down in front of the tv and watch the history channel. They were there, why are they watching it? What is the big draw? So many things were happening in so many places, no one could keep up, only afterwards can we put together the pieces of the puzzle and the context of our view of the markets in proper persepective. We have plenty of world propoganda, various combat zones and the market is trying just like us to make sense of this nondirectional bs. A few winning battles here or a losing battle there is not going to matter much if you missed a few days. You can catch up later at your own speed. Think of the various scenarios in the finance sector before Lehman, took a while before all these cards came tumbling down. There'll be follow up news and point men telling us what we missed, nothing urgent that's going to make or break this market in the short term. It's all damage control for the time being. Imo.
Spot on mate. Ten years from now all this stuff will seem both obvious and inevitable. Things that we might give equal weight to . . . some of it will be pretty meaningless, other pieces will be of primary importance. It's pretty clear that we have not learned our lesson yet, since we are still trying the same things.
been saying for decades that I didnt understand how so many people with the skills of a window cleaner were living so large. now we know how. on the backs of the future generations.