Pradžia Rubrika Markets

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Markets (4)

Pirmadienis, 07 Birželis 2010 15:57

Greenspan A., A cushion against risk

·  An event shocks the markets when it contradicts conventional wisdom of how the financial world is supposed to work. The uncertainty leads to a dramatic disengagement by the financial community the almost always requires sales and, hence, lower prices of goods and assets. We can model the euphoria and the fear stage of business cycle. Their parameters are quite different. We have never successfully modeled the transition from euphoria to fear.


 

Šeštadienis, 22 Gegužė 2010 16:36

Kay J., The truth about markets

If I introduce myself to a dinner guest  as an economist I encounter expectations that I shall be boring, opinionated, obsessed by money, and usually wrong. People ask what I think is going to happen to exchange rates, without much interest in the answer. If i respond that I am not that kind of economist, they express surprise that there is other kind of economist, and turn to talk to the person on the other side.

 

Šeštadienis, 22 Gegužė 2010 10:56

History will judge

History will judge whether Greenspan was the man who made millions of Americans rich- or the man who could not bear to tell them that they had only imagine it.
Ketvirtadienis, 13 Gegužė 2010 18:28

"Flat Crash" single trader theory

  • They say your first loss is your best loss
  • Trading is an art, not a science, and you gotta plan your trade and trade your plan
  • Origins of the mini-crash are both irrelevant and probably not even discoverable. What is important is to understand the conditions that caused the crash to happen in the first place. If you peel back the layers of market activity from March 2009, you'll find that the majority of the market's surge occurred in overnight trading on virtually no volume.
  • That's where the irony lies; policymakers have essentially created the very master they serve by attempting to control it. Their hands are literally tied by markets, and everything that is implemented to prevent the market from exerting control (really, from enforcing price discovery) results in ever tighter binds.

    The good news is I believe markets will eventually win this battle for control.