Buy the dips is the battle cry of retail army: Since mkt peaked recently, retail traders have plowed cash into US stocks at a rate 40% higher than they did in 2020, which was record year. Retail investors snapped up an avg of $6.6bn in US stocks each week. t.co/VK3UBDkrJN pic.twitter.com/n1LTjyDEq4
— Holger Zschaepitz (@Schuldensuehner) March 7, 2021
Over the last 3 weeks, retail investors snapped up an average $6.6 billion in U.S. equities each week, according to data from VandaTrack. That’s up from an average $4.7 billion in net weekly purchases in 2020 @markets
+ a mention of @ParikPatelCFA 💎🙌🏻t.co/4HJCkrLB5e pic.twitter.com/G3TfgJJtnO
— Sarah Ponczek (@SarahPonczek) March 7, 2021
Ok, so apparently somebody paid $639 for a tweet that was then deleted, and now someone is selling a tweet making fun of this.
We all now live inside an absurd joke.#FedHistory t.co/sBkQEN5HCc pic.twitter.com/jOXVkQfRQG
— Rudy Havenstein, Problematic. (@RudyHavenstein) March 7, 2021
How it started: How it’s going: pic.twitter.com/Cy4lqqbsAs
— Luther Heggs Capital, LLC (@ConsensusContr1) March 7, 2021
where’s all this “pent up demand”? (Pic from last night in fells point) pic.twitter.com/BYi9Gl4tUl
— Alastair Williamson (@StockBoardAsset) March 7, 2021
Yes it will target poverty but not in a good way. Debts are now paid by Monetary policy. Targeting higher inflation and low rates helps the rich and targets the poor. Societal rift is only just beginning. pic.twitter.com/A4pgbFuJ4V
— Michael Lebowitz, CFA (@michaellebowitz) March 7, 2021
Current equities risk/reward in one chart 👇 ht @vixsquared pic.twitter.com/7bfYOhIUk9
— Michael Arouet (@MichaelArouet) March 7, 2021
#bonds pic.twitter.com/s0HvGATX45
— David Scutt (@Scutty) March 7, 2021