Hmm, I am surprised you don't get it. Your first part was right and then you went diwn the entirely wrong street. Insider trading is trading on non public, material information. The material information is NOT knowledge of bitcoin or doge. It is knowledge of the timing and content of tweets and interviews and appearances that have a material impact on the pricing of different assets. I thought this was crystal clear, but I repeat it anyways.
Insider trading causes market impact through market manipulation. Those are the causal relationships.
Sorry, still don't get it, maybe I'm being dumb, how's what he is doing any different from what many other people do on social media? He can't be charged with anything criminal just because he expresses his point view or having a laugh and happens to have millions of followers. Maybe he can get banned from Twitter, but not much else IMHO. How can this be even remotely compared to what Hunt brothers did with silver as an example?
That is utter bullshit. He was paid that as cash salary but was awarded millions of shares. Please don't play dumber than you really are.
You don't get the point at all. There are also hundreds of thousands of companies that are run by CEOs who understand the actual products they are making, rose through the ranks (necessary to actually learn), conduct themselves ethically, are paid a reasonable amount, and treat their employees with respect. Their heart bleeds for each laid off person and their families and they try everything to keep those who show loyalty and work hard. That is the point. Not that everyone can try to become a crooked and unethical CEO.
No change of opinion so far. I'm with Gates & Buffett on this one, it's a mania, there are no fundamentals behind crypto, just momentum based on crowd sentiment which can change like the wind. Chart says it's a sell.
That's why I used behavioral finance as the basis where I build my trading system on.
I am impressed, not with your model, which surely looks like a polynomial that totally overfits the data. But that you show interest in the more technical aspects of financial data. Did I miss any similar of your past posts?
y = ((((25869.4 + (768.416 * x)) +
(-4.60808 * (x * x))) +
(4610.53 * cos ((0.216499 * x) + 5.74516))) +
(1754.01 * cos ((0.342944 * x) + 5.3832))) +
(2676.64 * cos ((0.185219 * x) + 5.10898))
Extrapolation from polynomial fit curves, particularly high order fits, are not predictive and I'm surprised that anyone thinks they are.Here is a graph with:
View attachment 258930
- the past 123 calendar days from yahoo finance data for the close prices of BTC-USD (I think the prices are for just before midnight in London -- 12 AM GMT or 12 AM BST).
- curves of 10 models each fit to the prices with a trend plus cycles and extrapolated for 21 days.
The + signs are the input prices, and the overlapping lines have the models' predicted prices.
I don't think I'd bet on it, but the models are in close agreement that there is some room for prices to continue downward for about 14 more days.
Example of a model:
y is the predicted BTC-USD price, and x is the number of calendar days from the beginning of the period.Code:y = ((((25869.4 + (768.416 * x)) + (-4.60808 * (x * x))) + (4610.53 * cos ((0.216499 * x) + 5.74516))) + (1754.01 * cos ((0.342944 * x) + 5.3832))) + (2676.64 * cos ((0.185219 * x) + 5.10898))
Extrapolation from polynomial fit curves, particularly high order fits, are not predictive and I'm surprised that anyone thinks they are.

Typical Masshole logic above ^
If the power goes out, how do you plan on posting here on ET when the internet is down?