If the stock market was a person -- gosh, if corporations can have the same rights as people, why can't the stock market have thoughts and feelings? -- he could be diagnosed with a wide range of psychiatric disorders (I don't mean to be sexist, but the majority of people in the stock market are male and, if it was a female, I can't imagine it acting so strangely): multiple personality disorder, borderline personality disorder, bipolar disorder, generalized anxiety disorder and, of course, depression, just to name a few. Or perhaps the worst diagnosis the stock market could be given is that of flawed humanity. The real question I have been asking myself of late is: What is the stock market thinking?
I pose this question because I am at a loss to explain the impulsive, seemingly irrational, and oftentimes self-defeating behavior exhibited by the stock market. Of course, the market has always shown volatility, but
recent analyses indicate that it has been particularly unstable in the last few years. The last few weeks have exemplified this instability, with swings of hundreds of points up and down from day to day repeatedly.
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