I think the future is ultimately unknowable. Every prediction is just a guess, at the end of the day. You have to decide how much to bet on any particular guess.Centeron631 wrote: ↑Wed Mar 08, 2023 8:38 pm Why does Market Update keep changing so many times in one month ? To me it does not instill confidence in TI - not to mention all the work involved in keeping up with my alerts - there r other chores to attend to.
Risk management is boring, but the #1 priority in any trading decision, irrespective of your risk appetite.
I've often stated that 8/9 retail investors lose over time - it's much higher for options' and futures' traders as a group, something along the lines of >95%, depending on which survey you read, who you talk to, etc.
So most focus on trying to find the Holy Grail of investing - to be in that profitable group of 1/9 positions' investors, or top 3% - 5% of futures/options traders - and most generally fail, over time. For a time, they may be successful, but over time ... they are doomed to a long-term negative CAGR.
Perhaps a more contrarian, simpler overall mindset is to examine what the 8/9 losing investors (or >95% of futures/options traders) do, and avoid doing those things, and often do the opposite instead, to win in the markets, long-term.
If you know 8/9 investors are going to lose, it may be simpler and more profitable to investigate what they do, instead of trying to find the Holy Grail - because there isn't one. Then do the opposite of what they do.
What do 8/9 traders do? The following are just a few things that popped into my mind atm, and I am sure there are many more:
-follow financial newsletters blindly; one has to always ask, if a particular financial advisor is so amazing, why would she need to sell a financial newsletter? i.e. she would already be rich and trading independently, quietly ...
-read a bunch of MSM headlines, mainstream financial journals, etc. (e.g. Economist, Barron's, WSJ, etc.) and then decide they understand "the markets" - those who buy headlines will eventually sell newspapers.
-not being honest about one's investing methodology and different theses by not regularly auditing her results and being a bit too stubborn about clinging to a particular idea when it's obvious it's not quite right - in investing, it's okay to be wrong, but it's not okay to _stay_ wrong; not if you want to be profitable, anyways;
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Many more to list, I am sure, but if you do the opposite of those three, you're prolly on your way to long-term profits.
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Keep it simple:
Any given year, there's a greater than 75% chance that the SPX will end the year higher than it started.
It's also somewhat rare to have two consecutive negative years in the SPX.
There has never been an official NBER-declared recession in Year 3 of the POTUS cycle (2023).
From what I remember the last time I researched, the last time Year 3 of the POTUS was negative for the SPX was 1931.
Just based on those four statements above, I am overall bullish on equities this year. It sets the background rate for the context of what to expect.
Plus, I am sure you remember about the JBS - you were partially responsible for that Divine Buy Trigger. Merci beaucoup! Jesus generally doesn't lie, although His Words often get misinterpreted.
