A structural component of markets…
…are its hands.
There are weak ones.
Then, other hands are strong.
Weak hands can be snatched from…
…easily.
They panic fast, and throw their holding during mild turmoil, …
… they are afraid, …
…not possessing holding-power, because they haven’t created the circumstances, and have prematurely jumped into a market.
Buying without margin of safety is one such premature jump.
Without fundamental, technical and / or general knowledge are others.
They are the mythical ‘pigs’ that get ‘slaughtered’.
Evert cycle produces new ones.
The ‘pig’ of one cycle eventually goes on to become a strong hand of another future cycle.
Strong hands know.
They study fundamentals, or technicals, or are generally savvy from experience, having developed market intuition. Strong hands have come prepared, perhaps, with a combination of all these traits.
They are liquid.
The’ll buy through the fall, piece by piece.
You can’t throw them off, …
…because they have holding-power.
It didn’t come for free, for once upon a time, they too were ‘pigs’ that got slaughtered, but they survived to live another day, learn, and rebuild.
As we grow in market experience, our hands tend to get stronger.
Some ‘pigs’ don’t make it to the next market.
Their slaughter moment might come late, paralyzing them financially, with no time, or energy, or both, to recover.
Some just give up on markets after an early slaughter experience.
We need to make many mistakes, early in the game, by sheer doing, learning, and not repeating, these. Early on, the numbers that we play with, are generally small. That’s when we need to get fatal errors out of the way.
As our numbers grow, and as our hands become strong, we then position ourselves…
…to thrive in the markets.
Any market.
