These
are the few phrases that the stock market commentators/self-styled pundits use
in the TV/websites. You are likely to
encounter many of these phrases if you watch any of the English business channels
during any trading day anywhere in the world.
It is a sell on
every rise market. This phrase is used in the bear market
scenarios and/or when the market is not showing any definite upwards trend. This phrase is meaningless because nothing
definite is being said. “On every rise” does
not mean anything, so whenever the market falls from whatever level, the pundit/TV
anchor says “we told you so.”
It is a buy on
dips market. This phrase is used in a bull market scenario
and the same logic as above applies as in the above scenario. The reason being even in a bull market, the
market can dip by as much as 20% and then resume its uptrend.
There is lots of
cash waiting on the sidelines.
This phrase is used especially while justifying the phrase “buy on dips.” If one thinks a little, one will realize that
when a guy sells a stock, he gets cash in lieu of it and when one purchases a
stock he gives cash in lieu of it, so isn’t cash always in the sidelines i.e.,
from buyers pocket to sellers pocket. If
you mean new money, it is again a useless statement because the same pundit is
using the phrase “trade with the trend” if the trend is down why will new money
come?
Trade with the
trend. This is again in hindsight you know what the
market has already achieved (upward or downward) and the trend can change in
any direction at any moment and there is every chance that you get caught in
the wrong foot, especially in the times of algorithmic trading/high frequency
trading.
We are in the
bottom formation zone/we are in bottoming up process. These phrases are used when one is not sure
what the markets will do, i.e., if it falls more the pundit is correct and if
the market stabilizes still the pundit is correct and if the market goes up,
the pundit is still correct. In brief,
this statement means nothing.
The market is topping
up and can plateau if no new triggers are coming. First trick used here is the word
plateau and not abyss. Again, means nothing as the pundit will be
correct whatever the market does and as a caveat any event can be made to sound
as a trigger if the market goes up by more than 5%.
The market is
overbought/oversold. This is a stupid
line because for every trade in any
market (stock, commodity/currency), there are two sides one guy is buying and
the other guy is selling, so the market technically cannot be oversold or
overbought.
Market is going
up because there are more buyers than sellers or market is going down because
there are more sellers than buyers. This
again means nothing as in the overbought/oversold statement, there are never
more buyers or more sellers. For a trade
to happen at any given price there has to be one buyer and one seller. There will always be more buyers at a lower
price and more sellers at a higher price but for a given price there will be
only one buyer and one seller for a trade to happen.
The low hanging
fruits have been plucked/Easy money has been made. These phrases are interchangeable and mean
the same thing. Literally this phrase
means targets or goals which are easily achievable and which do not require a
lot of effort has been achieved. This
phrase is used by the pundits when the markets (stock/commodity/currency) suddenly
go up a lot (5% or more). It is meaningless
because it is a statement that everybody can make with the benefit of hindsight.
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