| |   |  I’ve never subscribed to him, and from what I recall, I had  decided he wasn’t really worth following that closely -- especially in terms of  market timing.  Maybe he’s just  capitalizing on a current fear, but I can’t recall a prediction that he’s made  that had this level of consequence. Here’s a summary conclusion of Armstrong’s predictions at  tacticalinvestor.com:
      Martin Armstrong’s  blog is a masterclass in bold conviction, but conviction alone doesn’t cut it  in markets. His Economic Confidence Model promises cyclical precision, yet it  often delivers drama over detail in practice. The issue isn’t that Armstrong is  always wrong—he’s not. Being directionally correct means nothing if your timing  blows up portfolios. A missed turn in the road at 80 miles an hour can be just  as deadly as driving off a cliff. His repeated misfires  on the Euro, gold, and global financial dominance reveal a deeper problem: the  seductive power of a single model. Markets are messy, reflexive, and fueled by  human behavior—trying to reduce them to a neat cycle or algorithm is  intellectually attractive but operationally dangerous. That’s where mass  psychology and behavioral awareness come in. If Armstrong’s readers—or  Armstrong himself—factored in crowd behavior, sentiment inflection points, and  cognitive distortions like confirmation bias and anchoring, many of these  botched predictions could’ve been salvaged or avoided altogether. The Euro  didn’t collapse because investors believed it would. Gold didn’t hit $5,000  because faith in fiat never crumbled the way gold bugs expected. Perception is  the market. So here’s the brutal  truth: Armstrong isn’t 100% wrong, but he’s not right enough to follow blindly.  He offers sparks—moments of clarity drowned out by noise. His blog should be  read not as gospel but as a lens—useful only when paired with independent  thought, a working BS filter, and a deep understanding of how crowds actually  move. Use  his forecasts as potential scenarios, not fate. Combine them with sentiment,  structure, and the ever-undervalued art of timing, and you may turn scattered  signals into a real edge. |  
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