there is one day per month when manipulation is rampant....options expiration day. I never trade on options expiration day for that reason. Triple witching days are also bad, and now that we have SSF's there may be quadruple witching.

Quote from Tide31:
I think thats a strong word for market makers.
see on the screen.
Quote from qdz2:
Gimme a break, larry. Do not try to be a hypocrites who is deeply brain-washed. Do not even deny that initial hope when you are trading an odd marginally deviated from 50%. There is one exception. That is except you are a confident manipulator knowing you can move it the way you want.

Quote from larrylivingston:
it is unbelievable to me that it is you guys that i trade against everyday...its
ive got news for ya if there are manipulators(which i do not agree with u on) and they are attempting to bring stocks or markets to where they should not be THEN THEY WILL NOT BE ABLE TO STAY THERE FOR LONG WHEN THE MANIPULATOR IS FINISHED WITH WILL THEN GIVE YOU HUUUGE OPPORTUNITY IF YOU GUYS ARE SO SMART AS TO SPOT THESE MANIPULATIONS...nobody can truly control a market so get over it...if you cant spot the sucker...then your it!!
Quote from big_jdez:
Something that isn't talked about often is how option market makers play games with stocks trying to get filled on their option orders. Like driving a stock down with huge size in order to get filled on the options side.
). They pretexted to have done it because Germany and Spain have done it (competition pretext as usual) . I will post a french financial newspaper cover one day (I have to find where I stored it first). Since all markets are correlated in the world and since bonds market through interest rates impacts currency and stock market it is the proof that the buble was partly (if not totally) orchestrated by the market officials themselves perhaps with the consent or incitations of governments. Quote from MondoTrader:
hey Larry, "read reminiscences of a stock operator", its a classic.
Sometimes when a market seems screwy it is because it is reflecting the buying or selling of the biggest player in that market on a given day. Sometimes that is intentional, especially around options expiration for large caps, and far more often for thinly traded small caps.