Giving Up on Wall Street or How I Kissed Manipulation Goodbye!
Last December, I had an epiphany about bitcoin and the entire cryptocurrency complex. For years, I've been a "silent proponent" of digital currencies. I witnessed firsthand their enormous investment potential, having dabbled in both trading and transacting. I took it for granted as a "thing" that I do, and never appreciated it for the groundbreaking revolution that it is.
So yes, I am very slow to the cryptocurrency party, but as they say -- better late than never! But what first opened my eyes was not the benefit of digital currencies like bitcoin, ethereum, or my personal favorite -- STEEM!. Instead, it was the sense of betrayal that what I once thought was an investing platform has long since become antiquated.
Again, I'm very slow to this realization, but I wanted to share some personal insights. Perhaps they can help others that are still stuck in the "Wall Street mentality."
Virtually all industries have undergone a dramatic paradigm shift thanks to advancing technologies. We no longer transport ourselves by horse and buggy. We can travel anywhere in the world in under 24 hours. Written communication now takes seconds, not weeks or months.
But as new technology revolutionizes procedures, obsolete methodologies must necessarily be abandoned. For many, that's a plus. However, those with a vested interest -- such as factory workers facing obsolescence -- are on the opposite end of the spectrum.
Eventually, even these technologically displaced workers receive training and find new opportunities. But the one industry that has ardently kept technology at bay is the Wall Street machinery.
It's funny that the investment market displays a pretense of advancing -- high-frequency trading, internet brokerages, etc. But the same archaic traditions and rules apply -- open at 9:30am EST, close at 4:00pm EST. And if you want to do afterhours trading, forget it if you don't have the proper credentials. In other words, it's the same old machinery but with a technological facelift.
More importantly, we don't live in a world defined by a singular hegemony. The markets are global, and the rules of investing need to reflect that. Does a Chinese person care that we're celebrating Martin Luther King Jr. Day? Or some other holiday that only government workers -- and hello, hello...bankers -- receive?
This is a joke. Business operates 24/7, 365. We don't play by New York's rules. We play by the true free market. And free markets don't have holidays.
Welcome to the new game:)
Thank you kindly! :)
Your journey is a familiar tale - many of us have been down a similar path. It's taken me years, personally, to grasp blockchain's true potential.
Yup, but once that light bulb appears, it's that epiphany moment ... and also, why the hell did I not think about this before? :)
I feel like the title should be "Giving Up on Wall Street or How I Kissed Manipulation Goodbye and Learned to Love the Bitcoin!"
Too right! And it's so funny, I was just reading your post about converting STEEM to Bitcoin :)
We have had the same thoughts recently, well done!
Hopefully, not all the same thoughts...Lol! Thank you! :)
Reading this makes me evermore interested in starting trading.
following!
Thank you so much! I'll be posting more finance and investment related content for your enjoyment :)
I've never touched traditional markets before.. except for forex (and sucked in it). Loving cryptos by staking up and participating in them :)
It's funny that traditional market analysts all talk about the fundamentals -- and it's part of the game, I play it too -- but in reality, fundamentals are bullcrap. The insiders get the best information, and only insiders are able to trade in privileged sectors such as "afterhours trading" (i.e. let me get the juiciest portions, and you peons fight for the scraps). It's a joke which most people think they're in on, when actually the joke is on them!