Quote from Laissez Faire:
Does it matter?
The financial media are the masters of causality, you should consult them.
Today we can read as follows after an up day on Market Watch: "U.S. stocks mostly rose Wednesday as evidence of strong post-holiday shopping and healthy car sales in December helped assuage concern about Europeâs debt troubles."
If today was a down day, the headline would probably have been something like this: "U.S. stocks dropped Wednesday despite strong post-holiday shopping and healthy car sales in December. Concerns about Europeâs debt troubles is still holding down the market and causing investors to worry."
Perhaps the market is more technical than some of us like to believe? The market goes up when aggregate demand overcomes aggregate supply at a given price level and vice versa. Maybe that is the only reason we need to know and then simply trade accordingly? Maybe it is a dangerous game to start attributing reasons and causality to market movements that simply may be false?
Just my humble opinion, anyway.
Regards.