I never hear the term "Black Swan" from winning traders. It just feels like an excuse for being uninformed, and unmotivated to learn how shit really works.
I learned the term from this forum.
I never hear the term "Black Swan" from winning traders. It just feels like an excuse for being uninformed, and unmotivated to learn how shit really works.
People believe in "black swans" like the Covid-related sell-off of March 2020 because they don't believe that there are clues to potential market direction and risks. I'm not even sure 9/11 was a black swan event because if you were reading the market correctly, the trend / momentum was accelerating to the downside as of 9/10. The reality is that you see (or don't see) what you believe.
9/11 didn't affect the economy as drastically as Covid did. Not even close.
I never hear the term "Black Swan" from winning traders. It just feels like an excuse for being uninformed, and unmotivated to learn how shit really works.
Many active traders in smaller than NASDAQ 100 stocks are down 10%-20% in the past few days. There seems to be a flight to perceived quality/stability/safety. The markets are not monolithic.I smile when I read such threads. What bottom??? market is what like 2 percent down from ALTH? It rallied 100 percent over course of last year from last year lows![]()
It wasn't a black swan. Some folks were warning about it in January 2020 and technically there were a number of warning signs that showed up in February 2020 that something wasn't right with the market.
The way I see it, we are getting situations where the mkt craters (pullbacks which at the time appear serious) but they are all turning out to be false signals, time and again.What I see is permabears on here saying that markets are "overvalued" or in a "bubble" pretty much all the time.....
A 'Black Swan' fund posted a massive 4,000% return after the coronavirus blew up markets
https://markets.businessinsider.com...-return-hedging-coronavirus-2020-4-1029076165
Why is that concept so hard to accept? There are known unknowns and there are unknown unknowns. In case of COVID, it was an unexpected event that had nothing to do with market fundamentals or the economy - the very definition of the black swan. Same goes for Fukushima, 9/11 and many more things.I never hear the term "Black Swan" from winning traders. It just feels like an excuse for being uninformed, and unmotivated to learn how shit really works.
Yeah, my hindsight book is up a million percent tooPeople believe in "black swans" like the Covid-related sell-off of March 2020 because they don't believe that there are clues to potential market direction and risks. I'm not even sure 9/11 was a black swan event because if you were reading the market correctly, the trend / momentum was accelerating to the downside as of 9/10. The reality is that you see (or don't see) what you believe.

Why is that concept so hard to accept? There are known unknowns and there are unknown unknowns. In case of COVID, it was an unexpected event that had nothing to do with market fundamentals or the economy - the very definition of the black swan. Same goes for Fukushima, 9/11 and many more things.