Stampede
The stampede effect probably is more due to liquidity drying up. Absence of buyers and bids lead eager seller wishing to reduce their exposure to bid further down, leading to cascading effect." Get me out at any cost" becomes the mantra. With most of the professional money managers and traders following risk management strategies, as market start going down more selling comes in to keep risk in control.Capital preservation becomes the mantra. So absence of willing buyers leads to more panic.
At some stage the stampede runs its course, the stocks reach compelling valuation zones and a set of buyers step in and the market stabilises.These set of buyers are usually the big speculators. Either it takes time or lot of selling in short time frame for the buyers to step in. If you study market turns over several years, most rallies after stampede selling start on a dime and offer some of the best buying opportunities. The question to ask is what happens after a crash. Markets rebound ferociously.
3 comments:
The following page is interesting as it show the stock markets worldwide. All are down.
You can see that for today, Asia is in the red, Europe too and when the US open, I bet that it will be in the red too.
http://online.wsj.com/mdc/public/page/mdc_international.html?mod=mdc_h_intlsctnhd
>>>The question to ask is what happens after a crash. Markets rebound ferociously.
Is is far too early yet to ask you for 1 or 2 that you think might well be among the leaders of that ferocious pack?
thanks
Too early.
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