You're kidding, right? I assume your comment is tongue-in-cheek. But if it's not, you must've overlooked the part where CM said even "some of their ardent fans began fearing that they were likely to get crushed like stepped-on crickets as soon as the big players start ramping up operations in the EV space."
So CM cashed in his shorts at the same time your fictitious "young person" knew it was time to bail as well. How is that taking advantage of anyone?
You obviously don't have a clue how markets work (again, assuming your post wasn't meant as humor) if you think the first time a fledgling investor loses money he/she should "disengage" and timidly flee forever lol.
Now go hold Tiny's hand and console him for getting crushed in those short positions he described in post #156 of this thread. We wouldn't want him to "drop out and never accumulate wealth" for the rest of his lifetime, would we?
https://www.eccie.net/showpost.php?p...&postcount=156
Originally Posted by lustylad
Tongue-In-Cheek? Hard to say. On one hand Chung Tran probably knows more textbook macroeconomics than any poster here save you and Captain Midnight. But admittedly he's not in the same league, like he's playing high school football while you and CM are in the NFL. On the other hand his comments about taxation of capital gains would lead you to believe that he thinks stocks are pieces of paper instead of ownership shares in a business.
My second largest loss in recent years on the short side was in Gamestop. I am not proud that snot nosed kids trading on Robin Hood took my money. And the little bastards who did it learned all the wrong lessons. Now they believe investing in bankruptcy candidates is a good strategy. Not only that, Gamestop was able to raise lots of money in new equity offerings because the little bastards pushed up the price of the shares. Money that probably will be largely squandered.
Captain Midnight on the other hand SHOULD be proud of himself. Why should he be proud?
1. He was buying puts, not selling short like me. While I believe puts are on average a more expensive way to profit from a decline in share price, psychologically I'm just not disposed to risk the potentially huge losses if the little bastards push up the price to the moon. Or to pay triple digit rates to borrow stock.
2. He made money.
3. The snot nosed little bastards learned a lesson about investing in hype.
4. Short sellers and people who buy puts inject rationality into the market. They cause the prices of equities to more closely reflect actual values. And that causes capital to be used more efficiently. Take Nikola for example. Fuck, they couldn't get the EV to work so they pushed it down a hill and put that in a promotional video. Does it make more sense for money to flow to Nikola? Or to Ford or Tesla?