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  1. W

    OMG I can't believe this fallacy still exists in trading!

    Have you even read the original post? They are not only talking about a 50% drop...they also mention a 20% drop and apply the same theory about having to overcome a 20% drop will require a greater than 20% increase to return to break even, and therefore traders need to be aware of this. No they...
  2. W

    OMG I can't believe this fallacy still exists in trading!

    Yeah look how easily every downturn resumed to previous price and beyond. BUT I thought your math said price would have a difficult time doing this since whatever percent it pulled back, it would need a greater percent to recover?
  3. W

    OMG I can't believe this fallacy still exists in trading!

    Yeah like when I'm picking up your gf. :)
  4. W

    OMG I can't believe this fallacy still exists in trading!

    fundamentals are irrelevant...all stocks follow the same 5 cycle patterns regardless. Is the professor driving a Lambo to school? While he was having his morning coffee at starbucks I was across the street loading up a prepaid credit card to buy Bitcoin back in 2018. :)
  5. W

    OMG I can't believe this fallacy still exists in trading!

    Not in an uptrend.
  6. W

    OMG I can't believe this fallacy still exists in trading!

    I didn't say EASILY I said JUST AS EASILY
  7. W

    OMG I can't believe this fallacy still exists in trading!

    The market should be more balanced like if there was a cap at 1% of the float. Currently institutions own 58% of AAPL according to google. If an institution owns enough shares that managing those shares can affect the price of the stock in a measurable way then that is manipulation and should...
  8. W

    OMG I can't believe this fallacy still exists in trading!

    the math is the dubious part. it's a fallacy. I mean it is being interpreted as an indication of probability which is a fallacy.
  9. W

    OMG I can't believe this fallacy still exists in trading!

    Gapping is not a characteristic of price action ..it's a characteristic of the market being closed and manipulated. The only reason to close markets is to f retail and make their stop losses useless...and make sure all the big moves happen before retail can react. It's all rigged markets...
  10. W

    OMG I can't believe this fallacy still exists in trading!

    It's hard to keep up with all the correcting I'm doing...you are describing the traders fallacy. The stock will go from $5 to $10 just as easily as it went from $10 to $5...and so will your portfolio recover just as easily. There is no math involved here only price action
  11. W

    OMG I can't believe this fallacy still exists in trading!

    A stock can only move up or down one tick at a time. It doesn't concern itself with P/L. Therefore neither should you to determine the probability of a stock returning to any level based on your P/L. This is the fallacy ..you are trying to use your own P/L as a way to determine the probability...
  12. W

    OMG I can't believe this fallacy still exists in trading!

    The article being referred to at the beginning of this topic picked a 50% drop only as an example to show the math...not as an example of a capitulation. The traders fallacy IS the math being presented in the article. Price action is only affected by external forces of the market...not by YOUR...
  13. W

    OMG I can't believe this fallacy still exists in trading!

    Explain to me how chart patterns such as channels, triangles, double tops. triple tops, support/resistance happen SO FREQUENTLY if a stock is mathematically challenged as you claim? In all these patterns price routinely returns to previous levels.
  14. W

    OMG I can't believe this fallacy still exists in trading!

    Sigh...you are sooooo close to grasping the concept.
  15. W

    OMG I can't believe this fallacy still exists in trading!

    We aren't talking about options...but they are incorrectly priced anyway. I am just pointing out that the article is wrong to imply that because your stock would have to increase by 100% to recover from a 50% loss is somehow mathematically challenged to do so. It is not.
  16. W

    OMG I can't believe this fallacy still exists in trading!

    No. It's the same thing. This is a perfect example of the traders fallacy. The stock can just as easily return to $10. It is not burdened by math. Basically what you would be saying is that mathematically it is harder for stocks to recover than it is to drop...but logically the stock doesn't...
  17. W

    OMG I can't believe this fallacy still exists in trading!

    All of that is irrelevant. And one can only be a directional trader...even no direction is a direction. Short vol is the only way to make money in options.
  18. W

    OMG I can't believe this fallacy still exists in trading!

    Ok let's simply this since most of you are struggling with the concept. If you have a stock that is $10 and it drops 1% to $9.90, then if it increases by 1% you only have $9.99...so theoretically the price would have to increase more than 1% to return to break even. Using this logic would you...
  19. W

    OMG I can't believe this fallacy still exists in trading!

    You are getting fixated on the factors that would bring a stock down 50%...ignore that as these numbers were used as just an example....this is a logic question not a stock question so much...kind of like the plane on the conveyor belt sort of thing
  20. W

    OMG I can't believe this fallacy still exists in trading!

    I've got Padu on my side!
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