Posted On: 10/13/2014 3:52:21 PM
Post# of 56323
Re: Santa Baby #39113
What many fail to understand is the stock market works in incrementals on accumulation. Investor A and Investor B will have the same goal - to buy low and sell higher but with different entry points the dynamic difference between IA and IB is such that one is selling and taking a profit,the other is holding or attempting to average down in the hopes the stock rises higher. So some of this selling might well be those who have exited and have attained their goals or stop losses have triggered, whereas others invested high up the price range are holding and either stops have not triggered or they have no stops at all. The market participants do not all work in the same manner and fashion and kudo's to OTC for taking the time to explain his rationale and investment strategy.
Always someone asks the question, as appeared here today: If someone is selling then someone is buying with the implied inference that no one would buy if they felt the stock was going to go lower, or conversely no one would short if they felt the price was going to move higher. The case is simple, there is a limit as to how high a share price will go. The limit is not set for forecasting price movement but more importantly it is set by investor sentiment and how much is one willing to pay for the stock. TA helps to aid investors as to when they should be buying and what targets might be met but or when to sell and when to enter stops. Investor sentiment is tracked by TA (Japanese Candlesticks for instance) but TA is a great way to read the market but eventually investor sentiment decides when the price will move higher or lower. Look no further than this message board. OTC does a great service by explaining what he is seeing but the vast majority invested based their decision on sentiment- their personal belief as to where this is going and its potential. You can see that simply by reading the emotional outbursts as if anything said here is going to affect more than the smallest percentage of investors who may buy based on what taketheredpill says or sells based upon what I might say. That is investor sentiment. If you really want to see how the markets work, simply google this phraseand sit back and be entertained and infomred. Google this phrase"
How the markets really work.
Worth the effort. And I do not take any pleasure or gain in seeing retail investors lose money.
Always someone asks the question, as appeared here today: If someone is selling then someone is buying with the implied inference that no one would buy if they felt the stock was going to go lower, or conversely no one would short if they felt the price was going to move higher. The case is simple, there is a limit as to how high a share price will go. The limit is not set for forecasting price movement but more importantly it is set by investor sentiment and how much is one willing to pay for the stock. TA helps to aid investors as to when they should be buying and what targets might be met but or when to sell and when to enter stops. Investor sentiment is tracked by TA (Japanese Candlesticks for instance) but TA is a great way to read the market but eventually investor sentiment decides when the price will move higher or lower. Look no further than this message board. OTC does a great service by explaining what he is seeing but the vast majority invested based their decision on sentiment- their personal belief as to where this is going and its potential. You can see that simply by reading the emotional outbursts as if anything said here is going to affect more than the smallest percentage of investors who may buy based on what taketheredpill says or sells based upon what I might say. That is investor sentiment. If you really want to see how the markets work, simply google this phraseand sit back and be entertained and infomred. Google this phrase"
How the markets really work.
Worth the effort. And I do not take any pleasure or gain in seeing retail investors lose money.
(0)
(0)
Scroll down for more posts ▼