In the Market and Off the Grind
I am a millennial (maybe), but I don’t look or think like one. If you paid attention to my previous post, you’d see that I was able to objectively point out the flaws in my supposed demographic. I can also objectively discuss Canada’s bizarre social experiments and how the perceived military losses in Vietnam were actually a win for the United States.
These perspectives require a complete detachment from identity (ego) or identity politics and a genuine intellectual commitment to first principles. In fact, I just used my first principles understanding of the pre-market to capture high probabilities based on ideas discussed in my book, The Big Trade.
It really got me thinking about how I know of no one quite like this. From the school of thought to the product instruments and frequency, as well as the overall business model, all aspects are objectively quite high on the hierarchy of a relative comparison SWOT.
Put yourself in my shoes for a minute. Consider encountering a person from Bank of America with a very shallow understanding of markets touting products and instruments to his client base while generating income from it. It’s all very mind-numbing.
Yet, it’s very detrimental for me to say much as someone with a true, in-depth understanding of markets and their nuances, especially given that one is truly an outlier.
Silent Killer