"The dumbest reason in the world to buy a stock is because it's going up." VS "A trend has a higher probability of continuation than a reversal." - * Warren Buffett often emphasizes the importance of investing with a long-term perspective and a focus on fundamental value. When he made the statement, "**The dumbest reason in the world to buy a stock is because it's going up**," he was highlighting a common mistake that many inexperienced investors make: chasing short-term price movements without considering the underlying fundamentals of the company.
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* Mark Minervini on the other hand tweeted the statement **"A trend has a higher probability of continuation than a reversal"** reflecting his belief in the principles of momentum and trend-following trading strategies. Minervini believes that timing your trades is critical and recommends you to combine technical analysis, fundamental analysis, and risk management.
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* Warren Buffett by contrast believes trying to time the market is a waste of time and hazardous to investment success. As far as technical analysis is concerned, he once said "**I realized that technical analysis didn't work when I turned the chart upside down and didn't get a different answer.**"
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* Jesse Livermore gave the advice to never buy at the bottom, and always sell too soon.
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* Buffett however once said, "**Be fearful when others are greedy and greedy when others are fearful**".
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* Livermore was a strong advocate of stop-loss orders and would always have them in place to minimize potential losses.
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* Buffett in contrast joked that “using a stop loss has always struck me as like having a house that you like, and you’re living in, and it’s worth $100,000 and you tell your broker, ‘You know, if anybody ever comes along and offers $90 \[thousand\], you want to sell it."
​Stockmarket
"The dumbest reason in the world to buy a stock is because it's going up." VS "A trend has a higher probability of continuation than a reversal." - * Warren Buffett often emphasizes the importance of investing with a long-term perspective and a focus on fundamental value. When he made the statement, "**The dumbest reason in the world to buy a stock is because it's going up**," he was highlighting a common mistake that many inexperienced investors make: chasing short-term price movements without considering the underlying fundamentals of the company.
​
* Mark Minervini on the other hand tweeted the statement **"A trend has a higher probability of continuation than a reversal"** reflecting his belief in the principles of momentum and trend-following trading strategies. Minervini believes that timing your trades is critical and recommends you to combine technical analysis, fundamental analysis, and risk management.
​
* Warren Buffett by contrast believes trying to time the market is a waste of time and hazardous to investment success. As far as technical analysis is concerned, he once said "**I realized that technical analysis didn't work when I turned the chart upside down and didn't get a different answer.**"
​
* Jesse Livermore gave the advice to never buy at the bottom, and always sell too soon.
​
* Buffett however once said, "**Be fearful when others are greedy and greedy when others are fearful**".
​
* Livermore was a strong advocate of stop-loss orders and would always have them in place to minimize potential losses.
​
* Buffett in contrast joked that “using a stop loss has always struck me as like having a house that you like, and you’re living in, and it’s worth $100,000 and you tell your broker, ‘You know, if anybody ever comes along and offers $90 \[thousand\], you want to sell it."
Buffet indicator is showing some wild times ahead perhaps, combine that with Berkshires record high cash hoard of 30%... chart via barchart.com / Longtermtrends
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