Quote from tradetard:
That was some of the worst reporting and weakest reasoning that I have ever seen by 60 minutes. Aside from dollar weakness, they failed to discuss the market perception that relatively inelastic demand in a world of strained supply would squeeze prices up as developing countries competed in a very tight demand-supply balance. If the market chooses to buy those resources at those prices, then participants must be able to do something with those resources and profit from them or else they will not contniue to purchase and produce with those resources. [How dare people try to profit from a precious resource!]
They also failed to recognize that in capitalist societies such as ours, we acknowledge that the decision to allocate capital - beit speculatively or otherwise motivated - reflects a perception of value through the price action of market participants. Prices are merely an attempt to discount future considerations given present assumptions. While perceived value corresponds with risk, in times of crisis risk is amplified and risks of liquidity trump notions of fundamental valuation. Price manipulation, as they would like to call it, is what traders call order flow! Would they prefer that we use a panel of fools to centrally plan what market forces can do for us?
Were shares of countrywide manipulated on the way up? Has the dollar been manipulated over the last week against the euro? The tendency of the media to analyze unpopular price movement and retrofit conspiratorial schemes upon scattered facts is appalling. The only evidence of manipulation I saw in that reporting was the attempt to manipulate public perception against already unpopular industry.
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