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

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I wonder how much of the steadiness/calming is regular institutional buying related to retirement accounts. There has to be a huge chunk of cash heading into the markets every day as folks automatically contribute to their 401Ks. I just don't know how huge that is.


Index funds have to keep buying, Michael Burry talks about this.


Only as long as young people are saving more than old people are selling.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I wonder how much of the steadiness/calming is regular institutional buying related to retirement accounts. There has to be a huge chunk of cash heading into the markets every day as folks automatically contribute to their 401Ks. I just don't know how huge that is.


Index funds have to keep buying, Michael Burry talks about this.


Only as long as young people are saving more than old people are selling.


Haven’t you noticed all the articles revising people’s bond to stock ratio — it used to be you should stocks % = 100 - age , but hand waving living longer and low interest rates, people should stay in stocks 20 or more years longer (120 - age) etc.

That will goose things quite a bit, and of course if they die with the stocks in tact the children in inherit will keep it in stocks as well.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
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.


So you just take big swings and so far have gotten lucky. That is true.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
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.



Goldman Sachs? They probably went to the same business school as Trump!
Anonymous
They just released another "empty" statement to manipulate the futures market. They said countries have now AGREED to escort ships.

This time thankfully the market is not listening.

I predict by tomorrow the dow will be down 1000 points.
Anonymous
Another empty, fake and false statement was just made. And yet again the market is responding very positively.

This is just bizarre. Every single time it works. Crazy.
Anonymous
I know, when markets opened before dawn things looked realistic. Then a stupid meaningless statement and the price of oil tumbles. ??
Anonymous
Well the thing is, it will either be proven correct, or actions/facts on the ground will make it reverse course. The empty statements only buy time.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Well the thing is, it will either be proven correct, or actions/facts on the ground will make it reverse course. The empty statements only buy time.


The goal is to manipulate the market in the short time and it works. For how long? We don't know.
Anonymous
Guess what? He lied.

“Iranian media deny that negotiations have taken place... it takes two to TACO
Iran’s Fars news agency has quoted a source as saying there has been “no direct or indirect connection” between Iran and Donald Trump, in contradiction to the US president’s statement.

Citing an unnamed source, Fars said Trump had retreated after hearing that Iran would respond by attacking all power plants in the region.

This has punctured some of the optimism in the markets.”

Oil already up again.
Anonymous
“Today’s drama in the markets shows that the Bank of England should “sit tight” rather than react rapidly to events in the Middle East, says Professor Costas Milas, of the University of Liverpool’s management school.

Prof Milas tells us:

Trump’s predictably unpredictable post is puzzling. Having repeatedly stated that there is nobody to negotiate with, now Trump reveals that negotiations have taken place. All this creates large swings in financial markets and notably so in market expectations of UK interest rates. At the start of the war, money markets predicted no interest rate changes.”

A voice of reason!
I don’t know why anyone thinks trump can tell the truth.
Anonymous
Greed greed greed greed. That's all it's about. Greed and more greed. We want up up up up and up..So any statement that will take us back to the upward trend the market reacts because it's participants are incredibly greedy.
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.


This is funny. The whole world is in debt? To whom? Maybe it’s time to wipe out everyone’s finances and start anew.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
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.



Goldman Sachs? They probably went to the same business school as Trump!


They did.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote: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.


Yes, but then where do they go for stability? What’s the point if college time all this money if there’s no safe place to spend it or put it?
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