Normal
You have to take the predictions and analyses of the big guys with a generous quantity of salt. Especially if you're still even remotely considering taking the likes of GS at face value rather than seeing that they're deliberately pushing the narrative they want you to believe for their own benefit, not at all just openly sharing their honest thoughts to help you (heh heh heh, it feels ridiculous even typing that).Very clearly, GS did not believe what they were saying, but they knew what their absurd words would do to the market, and they were correct.You really need to be able to do some of your own thinking and analysis. Simply following what others want you to think will serve them but not you.In the short term, they can play fun games and push the price in whatever direction they want it to go, but in the big picture and longer term, prices will more or less follow the realities of supply and demand. For that reason I'm very bullish on lithium prices over the next few years. Evil as they are, I thank Goldman Sachs for providing me with the opportunity to buy up lithium stocks at bargain prices along with their cronies. I'm already on a multibagger and looking forward to further gains on my lithium investments.Just remember that almost everyone, especially the big players, say what they want you to think, not what they think. The only person you can trust to be honest with you is you (and for most people even that is very dubious), and perhaps people you know personally. Every bit of analysis or data you get online needs to be backed up by understanding of your own or it's worthless, often worth less than zero, other than being used as a guide for what others are likely to think in the very short term (eg GS puts out an absurd bearish narrative, so you know over the next few days the market will probably become bearish and then probably recover quickly when they wake up to the scam - that one was incredibly predictable, thanks again, GS, I made a quick and very easy few grand off that one).
You have to take the predictions and analyses of the big guys with a generous quantity of salt. Especially if you're still even remotely considering taking the likes of GS at face value rather than seeing that they're deliberately pushing the narrative they want you to believe for their own benefit, not at all just openly sharing their honest thoughts to help you (heh heh heh, it feels ridiculous even typing that).
Very clearly, GS did not believe what they were saying, but they knew what their absurd words would do to the market, and they were correct.
You really need to be able to do some of your own thinking and analysis. Simply following what others want you to think will serve them but not you.
In the short term, they can play fun games and push the price in whatever direction they want it to go, but in the big picture and longer term, prices will more or less follow the realities of supply and demand. For that reason I'm very bullish on lithium prices over the next few years. Evil as they are, I thank Goldman Sachs for providing me with the opportunity to buy up lithium stocks at bargain prices along with their cronies. I'm already on a multibagger and looking forward to further gains on my lithium investments.
Just remember that almost everyone, especially the big players, say what they want you to think, not what they think. The only person you can trust to be honest with you is you (and for most people even that is very dubious), and perhaps people you know personally. Every bit of analysis or data you get online needs to be backed up by understanding of your own or it's worthless, often worth less than zero, other than being used as a guide for what others are likely to think in the very short term (eg GS puts out an absurd bearish narrative, so you know over the next few days the market will probably become bearish and then probably recover quickly when they wake up to the scam - that one was incredibly predictable, thanks again, GS, I made a quick and very easy few grand off that one).
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