Look at the 5 year charts for every big name stock....most hit all time highs in 2021.
Most of these stocks are around 50% today, from the ATH.
Biggest coordinated pump and dump ever? I think so.
Look at the 5 year charts for every big name stock....most hit all time highs in 2021.
Most of these stocks are around 50% today, from the ATH.
Biggest coordinated pump and dump ever? I think so.
Yep the insiders are obvious with their cheating. I wonder if they are desperate for cash due to impending moass and also the executive orders Trump signed.
Crypto was also pumping hard everywhere in 2021, and they handed out stimulus checks and unemployment money like candy.
Bunch of cocky idiots IMO....we see you
The government bought a lot of stocks to keep the stock market afloat.
Just another transfer of wealth.
Is it the government or the Fed? It seems like they’re printing money to keep the market afloat. Makes sense... if the market tanks right now, not only are the Democrats left holding the bag, but it will become nearly impossible for them to achieve their goals of a war with Russia and implementing their radical domestic policy. Only problem is that they can’t do this forever. Eventually the system will implode.
Is that so? They must have not routed any of the buys to the darkpools to let the price fly.
Criminal scum.
It's not just the majors...it's all of them. The reason? The explosion of ETFs. They are required by mandate to own all shares of stocks represented in their respective indexes by proportion to their standing within each index. So, that means a lot of dogs that aren't worth owning. Collectively, the ETFs have been allowed to own many multiples of phantom shares that don't actually exist. If all the shares claimed by all the ETFs were actually "sold," there wouldn't be enough outstanding shares to cover the trades. This is one of the scariest truths about the markets today, that no one talks about.
Another source of market manipulation is the proliferation of institutional trading in the futures markets. Futures contracts, by their very nature, are highly leveraged. Couple that with the fact that the institutional traders make bets on margin, with relatively small amounts of their own actual money, and this represents another house of cards. Borrowing money to trade a speculative instrument that is already leveraged...