Bad news for the bulls.
Syriza surges in latest poll.
http://graphics.thomsonreuters.com/12/05/GR_GreecePolls.html
Syriza surges in latest poll.
http://graphics.thomsonreuters.com/12/05/GR_GreecePolls.html
Quote from flipside21:
Bad news for the bulls.
Syriza surges in latest poll.
http://graphics.thomsonreuters.com/12/05/GR_GreecePolls.html
Quote from flipside21:
Bad news for the bulls.
Syriza surges in latest poll.
http://graphics.thomsonreuters.com/12/05/GR_GreecePolls.html
Quote from logic_man:
I would have to guess that the people making these predictions are discretionary traders because systematic traders only care about their rules and following them. A systematic trader might say that the market is configured in such a way as to make a crash more likely than it is at other times, but, if their system is a good one, I doubt that it would ever put a crash at a high probability, precisely because they are so rare. There have been, what, 10 great crashes in US market history (just a guesstimate)? That means the odds are 10 divided by however many days of trading there have been in US market history. At those odds, starting a thread about a crash is 99.999% likely to be a waste of bandwidth.
You might, given the past month-plus of market declines, be able to construct a context where the likelihood of a crash goes up to 1%, e.g. a 10% decline in a month after a 100%+ run-up in 3 years on 33% less volume than the prior 3 years, etc., etc., but even then you're going out on a limb with very little data to support the hypothesis of a crash.

Quote from AK100:
90% on this thread are expecting further weakness AFTER the market has already made a big move down. This relates to the famous 3rd Law.