Traders often hear about “tulip mania,”
the “South Sea bubble” and other similar events where traders have followed the
crowd to send prices to extreme levels. You might add the technology dot.com
bubble of the late 1990s or the more recent housing bubble to the list of those
events where traders got carried away with higher and higher prices. Everyone
wanted to be part of the action – the “crowd
psychology” or “bandwagon” theory. The same type of crowd response
applies to price action on a smaller scale, too. For example, when a market is
coming up from a basing area on the charts, “smart money” is responsible for the
majority of the initial buying. As people jump on board, we
see the bandwagon effect, and that bandwagon pushes prices up. Volume tends to surge at its
peak, certainly on the buy side, during the markup phase in the middle. Later,
toward the end of the trend, smart money is not doing the buying; somebody else is. The smart
money is doing the selling. The market tops by rolling over or sometimes with a spike top. We
can see the crowd impact expressed in price and in volume. Just think about what happens
among professional traders when the stock market goes up even when the fundamentals don’t
provide much support for such a move. Prices often rise because institutional money managers
feel pressured to follow the crowd and chase performance. How can they explain why their
results are below the industry benchmarks if they don’t go with the crowd and buy the stocks
everyone else has in their portfolios? That rationale alone can
drive markets
higher than they “should” go.
A trend-focused trader reflecting on market strategies and personal performance enhancement.
trading
Monday, 25 March 2013
Friday, 22 March 2013
trend trading, momentum, swing, price action, trading futures & equities
"If you are ready to give up everything else - to study the whole history and background of the market ... as a medical student studies anatomy. If you can do all that, and, in addition, you have the cool nerves of a gambler, the sixth sense of a kind of clairvoyant, and the courage of a lion, you have a ghost of a chance."
---Bernard Baruch
---Bernard Baruch
Wednesday, 20 March 2013
I think that expertise is the connection between knowing and doing.
"Some degree of derivative learning is necessary - BUT - much learning does not teach understanding. Only through experience and extensive practice and application will understanding and expertise arise."
-Heraclitus, 475 BC
New trader to Master Trader:
"Sir, what is the secret of your success"? "Two words."
"And, sir, what are they?" "Right decisions."
"And how do you make the right decisions." "One word."
"And, sir, what is that one word?" "Experience."
"And, sir, how do you get experience?" "Two words."
"And, sir, what are those two words?" "Wrong decisions."
Tuesday, 19 March 2013
S&P 500 cash market analysis and outlook
the line of least resistance is upward and this pullback is going to present us with a new menu with new low risk setups, manage open positions and be patient with initiating new ones, and for you that want to short now, plain and simple don't, if the market is going to tank there is going to be plenty of time to get on board, read the post below and don't predict, but follow your proven game plan
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