#美国核心物价涨幅不及市场预估 Many people keep an eye on various macroeconomic data—CPI, PPI, unemployment figures, non-farm employment numbers—trying to find trading opportunities from these news. Recently, I came across a viewpoint that I think makes a lot of sense:
Many traders like to play the "news interpretation" game, but in reality, it's like gambling at a card table. But think about it—why do big institutions behind large funds make money? Because they have the ability to access information faster and have larger capital, giving them the capability to know things earlier than ordinary people. Given that, why not change our approach—rather than guessing news, we should observe the price and volume changes, supply and demand relationships in the market itself to understand what these big institutions are doing. Their actual actions are often the best signals, and they tend to act before official news is released. Compared to trying to interpret news ourselves, following the footsteps of big institutions is obviously more reliable.
The key point is this: stop fussing over news-related matters and focus more on understanding the market itself.
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MEVHunterWang
· 11h ago
Basically, don't guess blindly; analyzing the market chart is the key.
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MoonlightGamer
· 11h ago
This guy's got a point. Retail investors are always staring at press releases, hoping to get rich quick, while institutions have already laid their traps.
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CryptoSourGrape
· 11h ago
If I had understood the market early on and didn't hesitate, I wouldn't be trapped so badly now... It's easy to say, but how many people are truly following the footsteps of major institutions?
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EternalMiner
· 12h ago
No problem with that. Instead of analyzing data every day, it's better to watch the market. Institutions have already started acting.
#美国核心物价涨幅不及市场预估 Many people keep an eye on various macroeconomic data—CPI, PPI, unemployment figures, non-farm employment numbers—trying to find trading opportunities from these news. Recently, I came across a viewpoint that I think makes a lot of sense:
Many traders like to play the "news interpretation" game, but in reality, it's like gambling at a card table. But think about it—why do big institutions behind large funds make money? Because they have the ability to access information faster and have larger capital, giving them the capability to know things earlier than ordinary people. Given that, why not change our approach—rather than guessing news, we should observe the price and volume changes, supply and demand relationships in the market itself to understand what these big institutions are doing. Their actual actions are often the best signals, and they tend to act before official news is released. Compared to trying to interpret news ourselves, following the footsteps of big institutions is obviously more reliable.
The key point is this: stop fussing over news-related matters and focus more on understanding the market itself.