Quote from Rabbitone:
I agree 100% with you and what Jesse Livermore said about âTradingâ general market conditions (and your fine quote below). I have read this work several times. Many of these fine sentiments are also part of my trading plan. I believe no one to this day has described better than he has how to define the probable trend and take advantage of that trend.
We seem to be at odds with the terminology and use of the word rigged. So let us scrap that word since it seems to be at odds with classical writings and draws out such deep held feelings about how these markets operate. There are other ways to express what has happened.
For all of accolades and honors I would bestow on Livermore he has IMO failed in one area that is critical to understanding how markets are influenced. By this I mean he did not to any great degree stipulate a set of rules of thumb for the trader in dealing with the influence of government on their trading.
To get a better prospective on the role government has played for centuries in destroying commerce (and trading) it is better documented IMO in Extraordinary Popular delusions and the Madness of Crowds. For example the south sea bubble it was stated:
ââ¦.In a prophetic spirit he added, that if the plan succeeded, the directors would become masters of the government, form a new and absolute aristocracy in the kingdom, and control the resolutions of the legislature. If it failed, which he was convinced it would, the result would bring general discontent and ruin upon the country. Such would be the delusion, that when the evil day came, as come it would, the people would start up, as from a dream, and ask themselves if these things could have been true. â¦â
This bubble of cheap housing was no different than the government madness of the Mississippi and south sea bubble: the Florida and Las Vegas boom of 2009 sounds no different to me than Florida boom of the 1920s. They are all bubbles that break.
Our government in recent times has created undue direct or indirect influence on how businesses and markets may function (which can facilitate bubbles.) This was also the case in the Livermore era. The trader can no longer sit back and trade with blinders on and ignore the role of government in their trading. This undue government influence is costing us the tax payers trillions and slowly redefining how we all trade.
So the question is: where is all of the printing of government money by the truck loads going to settle? Is it going to evaporate on its own or create a new bubble? Is it finding its way in to our stock market and buoying (notice I did not say rigged) prices?â Or will it âGo into the hands of consumers to create spending, then hyper inflation and the collapse of the dollar?
If inflation takes off I want to be prepared with trading strategies that will handle these markets especially if they become volatile. If money continues in to flow in to these current stock markets than I may trade them like I did from 2004 to 2007. But the bottom line is I as trader can no longer sit idle and ignore the economic affects that government is pushing at the markets. I must be proactive in deciding how this will influence the trading strategies I select. If we are not prepared for government actions we may be crushed by them on the trading floor.