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Gold/Mining/Energy : NWT Diamond Stocks for 1999

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From: Maple MAGA 6/27/2023 10:35:33 PM
1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Mick Mørmøny

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The Dirty Rotten Secrets of the Small Cap Markets

LAW OF THE PEZ

This is dedicated to Murray Pezim, once the most powerful stock promoter in all of Canada. According to legend, Mr. Pezim, upon hearing that someone had made a killing on his stock play, immediately remarked,

"Shareholder profits are short-term loans." Ultimately, if you continue your small-cap speculations, you will lose. Either the markets will turn or you will drop your guard, but eventually, you will lose.

One should understand that the small cap stock markets run pretty much like a casino.... the longer you stay at the tables, the greater your chances of failure.

MOTTO OF THE STOCK PROMOTER

Sell when everyone is buying and buy when everyone else is selling. Actually, more often it is, sell when everyone else is buying, completely exit the play, and go find something else for them to buy later.

It may even be: Start shorting your deal when you've sold out your entire position so you can score even more profit on the way down. There are corollaries to this motto, such as "never get married to a deal," or "never believe in your own deal," or "have a new deal ready to rock & roll as soon as the current one flops."

LAW OF THE UPTICKS

Stocks that are running higher are said to be upticking. Despite every effort I have made to emphasize that the best time to buy a stock is when it is low and boasts a sorry-looking flatline stock chart, speculators inevitably chase stocks to new highs.

Stock promoters and insiders buy, or obtain a position, at the low and sell during the promotion or "discovery." Sadly, there will always be some type of promotion that will create upticks and speculators will chase that stock to a new level. Greed generates upticks. What stock promoters know that you don't is this law:

A herd of speculators WILL ONLY BUY ON THE UPTICK, every stock promoter knows this.

AXIOM OF GREED

In an earlier essay, I isolated that greed originated from a "perceived" lack of speculative opportunities. This false perception causes a speculator to get greedy and chase a stock to a new level.

If one has a hundred speculative opportunities on their plate, one is less eager to chase any specific stock. The lesser the number of opportunities one reviews, the greedier one becomes to chase a heavily promoted stock. A stock promoter will, thus, make "his stock" appear to look like the only game in town worth playing. Greed essentially emanates from deprivation.

RULE OF CONFUSION

The only time one rushes into a quick decision is when they are confused or disoriented or misled.

The stock promoter's greatest weapon is CONFUSION: Catch a speculator off guard and sucker him into a stock. The more disoriented or confused the speculator, the greater his chances of being snared. Stock promotions include an overwhelming amount of data, reports, corporate reviews and so forth that are packaged in such a way as to confuse the speculator. If, at any time, you are overwhelmed with out-of-control emotions or data which you don't understand, it is better to stay out of the play.

SECRET OF EXCITEMENT

You've heard about the "forbidden fruit" or "unknown pleasures." As long as something remains a mystery, it can create an "excitement." Excitement is a sensation which one commonly associates with pleasure.

Therefore, when an exciting proposition is offered, you may readily accept it in order to experience THAT sensation. When someone heaps excitement after excitement, upon you, in either the written or spoken word and/or with graphics (visuals, photographs, charts, drawings, etc.) and especially in a loud or emphatic manner, you become disoriented and confused.

One overcomes this "sensation of the unknown or forbidden" through experience, often with a rude and unpleasant awakening. Stock promoters abuse your inexperience, and naiveté, to sell you stock. ALL mining speculations are exciting until the assays come back or a mine goes into development. Then reality sets in.

LAW OF WAITING

The longer you wait, the greater your chances for failure. This applies to both holding a stock which is declining and to a stock which is running. The odds are greater than 90% against you... that you will fail in a speculation, if you wait for it to recover or if you chase a stock which has already begun its run.

Generally, a stock moves up in less than two weeks, often in two to five days. The waiting period, for a stock to allegedly recover, is the slow, dragged out retreat you later observe in the share price.

As believers stop believing, the share price declines, often never recovering. Of course, if one wants to wait forever, then eventually the stock may recover. The longer one waits, during a runup, the smaller one's potential profits and the greater one's exposure to losses.

(One important caveat: Occasionally, there are a few good deals--about 20 or 30 annually--when one SHOULD wait for the company to mature. Almost always, they come out of left field and, rarely, does anyone know in advance which company will become tomorrow's success story.)

AXIOM OF BELIEVING

The higher your expectations in a stock, the greater your chances of losing money (toot toot posters )in that speculation. All of the promotion is geared to make you a "believer." Most speculators are betting on a tip or a rumor. They are taking someone else's "word" for the outcome.

Absolutely no one should invest or speculate in a stock without understanding the risks as well as the reward. Stock promoters create believers by providing ONLY the reward potential, without also including the risk factors. Believers eventually discover the risks, long after the stock has begun its decline.

LAW OF LOSERS

Oddly, those most attracted to speculative markets are failures in other aspects of their lives. They may be wealthy, but consider themselves, in some way, as having "failed."

Medical doctors are prime targets of stock promoters, as they are not only affluent may have "settled for less" in their lives or feel they "are owed more" for the work they do. Whoever has failed, in some key aspect of their life, often tries to make up for it by gambling....often speculating in these markets.

The loser is always trying to compensate for a failure in another part of his life and continues to heavily lose as a speculator. (Note: I stay in touch with certain losers and use them as a yardstick for my trading -- when they buy, I sell; when they sell, I buy. The loser has a knack for exiting his position, a day or a week before a major runup; or he/she simply always buys at the top of the runup.

The downside to communicating with losers is that they are so darned indecisive and fretters; their worrying can and does rub off and creates a confusion for oneself.)

LAW OF THE SUCKER

PT Barnum was right: A sucker is born every minute. For every speculator that is wiped out, a fresh one is champing at the bit to start betting. Stock promoters prop up their plays by finding new blood to drain. The greener the speculator, the redder the carpet laid out for him. If there were no new suckers coming into the game, it would all be over.
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