The Undeclared Secrets That Drive The Stock Market Now
In the short term, the market is a popularity contest. It doesn’t matter if a company has negative cash flow or a CEO who tweets conspiracy theories. If the "crowd" votes for it—if the narrative is sexy, the ticker is trending on Reddit, or the institutional money needs a place to hide—the price goes up.
When central banks print money (quantitative easing) or when the Treasury depletes its cash account, that money has to go somewhere. It flows like water downhill into stocks, bonds, and real estate. When liquidity is high, even bad companies rise. When liquidity is pulled (quantitative tightening), even great companies fall. The undeclared secrets that drive the stock market
If you’ve ever stared at a stock ticker, watching a company’s value evaporate or multiply in seconds, you’ve likely asked the same question: Why? In the short term, the market is a popularity contest
Most retail traders lose money because they confuse the voting booth with the weighing scale. They buy the popularity contest at the peak of the party, then sell the weight when the hangover arrives. Secret #2: Liquidity is the Silent Puppeteer Forget interest rates for a moment. The real fuel of the market isn't optimism; it's liquidity—the amount of cash sloshing around the system. When central banks print money (quantitative easing) or
The secret no one declares is that most market participants know the price is irrational. They don’t care. They are not investors; they are tourists playing a game of musical chairs. Their strategy is simple: buy the insanity, sell the confirmation, and get out before the music stops.