Mr. AT
I do not know anything about your investment background. Still, your agenda may be different from ours namely buying and selling stocks. I am not sure whether you make money with your fact-finding around Pink.
Now, to the market. Naz, especially in the tech sector is quick and ruthless. I enjoy the beauty of that market - it's fast action. As a nonresident alien new to the naz, I invested on other, less efficient markets in former times, like Canada and Germany. Market with much hidden information, assymetrical distributed information, where reaction of the stock on the doing of the underlying company is not so connected as here, in terms of timely stock price reaction.
The other advantage is being created right now. We are either in a correction of a long lasting bull run or in real bear mode. At the beginning of a market drop you will not see the difference as stock prices are axed regardless of action. But as the correction develops a "sorting "effect is employed, leaving the companies who tend to have a prosper future.
The US stockmarket is big and heavily diversified in terms of industries and stocks herein, thus making sole investment decisions a lifetime work.
So, every improvement to my portfolio action is welcome. Improvement definitely can be achieved by -looking where some market action is underway or developing, thus avoiding dull times. -getting true guidelines where to invest and where not to by obtaining a second opinion besides the yodelers. -obeying warnings on outright scams, or stocks which are misrepresented in a manner that the ordinary investor is left without any chance of a positive outcome. -At last, obtaining an informal and unbiased view of market direction by taking into account information carrying signals like the certain behaviour of long and short market participants.
Amomgst others, Mr. Pink, regardless of which real person applies to the name, has proven himself to provide information which may achieve higher portfolio returns, in comparison to a random selection of investments.
A random selection of investment in turn delivered a still higher return than following biased investment information in the form of paid stock promoters or other investor relations activity.
Christian |