Happy Holidays! I hope you had a great weekend.
For Christians, today is Easter Sunday - the holiday celebrating the Resurrection.
For Jews, it's still Passover - the holiday recounting the Exodus from Egypt.
The overlap can be seen in DaVinci's Last Supper, a Passover Seder, and last meal Jesus ate before his crucifixion.
For both, it's a holy and family-centric time. A reminder to appreciate what we have, and how we stand on the shoulders of our ancestors.
One of the memorable phrases from Exodus is when Moses says "Let my people go!" For generations, people assumed he was talking to the Pharoh about his people's freedom. After a week of eating clogging matzoh, matzoh balls, and even fried matzoh ... for many Jews "Let my people go" takes on a different meaning.
For Jews, a notable part of the ritual Seder dinner is naming each of the 10 plagues that rained over Egypt and saying "never again".
Perhaps, this year, COVID-19 gets added the list?
Yet, just like the Jews making it through slavery, the plagues, and 40 years wandering through the wilderness and desert before entering the Promised Land ... we too will make it through this.
With that said, some of what happened is good. Mine your experience for the things you want to keep doing (or continue not doing) once things go back to "normal". In addition, some of those close to me continue to remind me that being sheltered-in-place is a great excuse to do both a physical and mental spring cleaning.
Hope you had a great weekend.
Onwards!
What Can My Dogs Teach Us About Trading?
I wrote this back in 2008. With minor updates, it seems relevant again.
At the other end of the spectrum are our two small dogs, Boo and Jasper. Boo, our 20-pound mix between a Beagle and a Boston terrier. Let's just say that he has a higher metabolism than Duke.
When Boo hears a noise, he lets out an involuntary, barely audible, sound. His body becomes rigid and his head cocks. He becomes alert and carefully tunes his ears to their most sensitive setting, seeking any information that will help identify the "danger." He's now primed for the next intrusion.
Usually, there are no other disturbances to follow, and the noise is cataloged and soon forgotten. His alertness level slowly subsides over the next 10-15 minutes or so. He'll go back to napping, a little more fitfully this time … and just a little bit on edge.
Things get a little more interesting when another noise surfaces shortly after the first one. What could once be dismissed now must be treated as a threat – and just to be safe, a threat of the highest order. Now the appropriate response is a series of barks, nervous glances, pacing, rushing off in the direction of the noise to investigate, and a barrage of barks meant to sound more menacing than the source of the noise. Who or what is it? How much harm can they cause? How grave is the threat?
Jasper, our high-anxiety mutt, is never off alert. He doesn't know what's a threat, and what's not, so he's always creating threats out of nothing and riling up our other dogs.
The same thing happens in the market with people.
In the market, it is the second noise - and subsequent noises - that creates the equivalent of the Homeland Security "Red Alert." Once an elevated level of alertness has been established, it takes a long period of relative calm for it to subside. And when on "Red Alert" … any additional noises (for example, the responses of the other market participants) - big or small - will highlight, magnify, and further validate the issue.
But, like in the story "The Boy Who Cried Wolf," even legitimate threats are ignored after too many false alarms (or prolonged periods of constant alert). So, bad news about the economy isn't as likely to get people excited after the past few weeks.
As people (or bots) become "used" to today's new normal, It'll be interesting to see what sprouts up. The longer away from the initial episode, the more real the effect can be attributed.
The unfortunate reality is that the Boo and Jasper style "overreaction" to a crisis can exacerbate the long-term effects of the crisis. To balance that, on the macro level, a stronger pandemic response has been shown to increase economic recovery.
This has been the theme from the beginning. Don't personally panic, but respond aggressively on the city, state, and national level.
Food for thought.
Posted at 07:06 PM in Business, Current Affairs, Ideas, Market Commentary, Personal Development, Science, Trading, Trading Tools | Permalink | Comments (0)
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