easy56 schreef op 24 maart 2018 22:07:
[...]ik begrijp t wel,jij niet denk ik.
Zie t maar als een(index) beleggingsfonds.
Als iedereen geld in beleggingsfondsen blijft storten moeten de beheerders aandelen kopen op de beurs waardoor de koersen omhoog bliven gaan en vaak nog meer geld instroomt omdat iedereen mee wildoen met stijging en dus nog meer kopers en verdere stijging.....
Als iedereen gaat verkopen uit angst daling kan dat dus ook omgekeerd werken.
daling meer verkopers,meer aanbod op de beurs, koers daling en nog meer verkopers....
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lees dit maar goed
www.zerohedge.com/news/2018-03-23/ret...It's time for JPMorgan to start worrying again that retail investors are no longer buying the fucking dip (as it did three weeks ago).
Just one week after Bank of America was "stunned" by record inflows into equities, this week everything went in reverse, following the latest Facebook-inspired sharp drop in stocks which brought the market back to the verge of a correction. The result was a "huge" $19.9 billion equity outflows, with the $18.6 billion in ETF outflows the second highest ever according to BofA.
The redemption follows record inflows of $43.3BN last week, and huge $151.7BN in YTD.
Predictably, the US was the focus of outflows, with $24.9BN in redemptions from US-based funds, the 2nd largest ever. And while more modest outflows continued from Europe ($1.5bn), investors continued to allocated capital to Japan, which has had inflows for 16 straight weeks, as well as EM, which saw another $2.0bn in inflows.
Broken down by style, the target of outflows was US large cap, which suffered $18.3bn in outflows, and US value ($7.2bn outflows), as well as US growth ($3.4bn), US small cap ($2.2bn), as hit with near record outflows just one week after record inflows.