Originally posted by lundy
- the randomness in the market can be seen as perceived value
Perceived value is different from real value because someone wants it to be.
In the end, when the money gets taken off the table, prices always go back to real value.
not to be a smart aleck, but:
there is no such thing as 'real' vs. 'perceived' value- as far as markets go it is all perception
as a complex system responding to millions of variables, the market's outcome has little to no correlation w/ individual desires
the money is never taken off the table, if it were the game would stop
If you mapped the extremes of the caribou population in the Yukon for the past 100 years, assuming a stable environment, and you went 'long' perceived low periods and 'short' perceived high periods, you might be able to make money (if someone were to take the other side of your trade). Why? Because cycles are built into the fabric of reality. Price, temperature, ocean currents, political careers, sports teams, quality of elite trader posts: it all goes back and forth.
One of the old commodity sayings is that the best cure for high prices is high prices (supply comes in) and the best for low is low (supply falls below demand). The system reacts to its own outliers, thus it is not the same as a coin flip. Extreme results have reversion tendency for reasons internal to the system, whereas coin flips do not. Thus the "gambler's fallacy" is a little too smug and pat for the real world.
When people buy too much they don't have enough money to buy anymore, so it goes down. When they panic and sell everything the bargains look good, so it goes up.
True genius seeks out simplicity within complexity (and in the case of trading, uses it to make money).