Why is the market so reactive to "empty" statements?

Anonymous
These are short term investors who either believe the lies or know that other investors out there believe the lies and are just reacting to that. Its all a game.
Anonymous
Also because the richest of the rich are almost certainly getting tipped off about these empty statements beforehand so that they can manipulate and pump the market before the inevitable rug pull.

Why do you think they all donated and manipulated the media to get Trump elected despite being smart enough to know he would be disastrous for the country and rich and powerful enough to manipulate the election the other way? He promised to get them in on the grift and they knew they could personally make more money off corruption than they could in a stable country with a healthy economy.
Anonymous
OP the market has caught on with the lies. The market now wants to see concrete results not just "empty" statements.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:These are short term investors who either believe the lies or know that other investors out there believe the lies and are just reacting to that. Its all a game.


Like 08 with banks knowingly selling juno to other banks lol. Wall street folks are wild. For money they will s**k d**k and tell you with a straight face they are straight.
Anonymous
Selling junks*
Anonymous
No idea, but there has never been a better opportunity for short term gains! It’s so easy to make money in this economy it’s silly.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:OP the market has caught on with the lies. The market now wants to see concrete results not just "empty" statements.

When did this happen? The market just bought the Energy Secretary’s lie that the Navy had successfully escorted an oil tanker through the Strait of Hormuz hook line and sinker.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Market volatility is here to stay. In the years to come the US (and the world) will face big demographic challenges. And we know demography affect everything from social to economic. It comes at the worst possible time when the world is facing crippling debt.


Are you referring to worldwide migration shifts or birth rates?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:No idea, but there has never been a better opportunity for short term gains! It’s so easy to make money in this economy it’s silly.


How? You can’t know and market swings enormously both ways.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Market volatility is here to stay. In the years to come the US (and the world) will face big demographic challenges. And we know demography affect everything from social to economic. It comes at the worst possible time when the world is facing crippling debt.


Are you referring to worldwide migration shifts or birth rates?


Birth rates.
Anonymous
The answer is that the market isn’t driven by facts so much as the headline
Anonymous
These investment analysts assumed the US Military had an active plan to open the Strait of Hormuz, because any normal country who invaded Iran would have one.
Anonymous
Valuations dpmt reflect current reality. They reflect weighted average of possible futures. The volatility you are seeing isn't the market bouncing from best to worst perceived reality. It's the market bouncing between 10% chance and 60% chance of worst case happening in future..
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:These investment analysts assumed the US Military had an active plan to open the Strait of Hormuz, because any normal country who invaded Iran would have one.


The analysts are as stupid as the Executive.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:No idea, but there has never been a better opportunity for short term gains! It’s so easy to make money in this economy it’s silly.


How? You can’t know and market swings enormously both ways.


It's easy to lose money, but easy to make money too.
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