Rules of Manipulation Part 1 THE DEADLY ART OF STOCK MANIPULATION
by an unknown author in Canada, by the translator dedicated to the tireless pushers in our board!
In every profession there are a dozen or more important rules. To know them is what separates the amateur from the professional. Not knowing them? Let me put it this way: how safe would you feel if you were suddenly flying a Boeing 747 alone while it was landing on the runway?
If you are not a professional pilot, you would be scared to death and wet your pants. Keep that in mind as you read this article.
... because I will explain to you how manipulation of the market works!
In order to speculate successfully, you should assume one thing: the Small Cap markets exist primarily to fleece you
I am talking about markets like Vancouver, Alberta, the OTC (Pinksheets, OTC BB and others). You can extend this to other markets like Toronto, New York, Nasdaq, London ....
The average investor will not have much success with the small cap gambling.
In order for these markets to continue, new losers must enter the market. The assumption is not true that such crazy activity can only be short-lived. I suggest a different solution.
What the professionals and the banking regulators know and understand, but the rest of us do not, is this:
Rule No. 1
all violent price movements - whether up or down - are the result of one or more (usually a group) of professionals manipulating the price.
This should explain why a mining company finds something good and nothing happens. At the same time, without any obvious reason, a stock suddenly races up at low volume. Someone manipulates the stock, often with an unfounded rumor.
For these manipulations to work, the professionals assume that
{A} people are stupid and
{B} people buy especially when the price of the share is high and
{C} sell when the price is low
Therefore the market manipulator can be successful as long as he controls the quantity.
Let's be clear: the reason you speculate in these markets is because you are greedy and optimistic. You believe that tomorrow is better and you need to make money fast. It is this attitude that the market manipulator exploits. He grabs you by your greed and fear for a certain stock! If he wants you to buy, the future of the stock looks like the next Microsoft.
As soon as the manipulator wants you to leave the sinking ship, he suddenly becomes very careful with his remarks about the company. This brings us to the next rule:
Rule No. 2
As soon as the market manipulator wants to sell his shares, he will start a Good News Promotional campaign.
Have you ever wondered why a particular company is portrayed as if it were the biggest thing since the invention of the breadstick? This sentiment is deliberately created. Newsletter writers are hired - whether secretly or not - to cheer up a certain value. Public relation companies are hired and let loose on an unsuspecting audience. Contracts to appear on radio talk shows are signed and executed. An advertising campaign is launched (television commercials, newspaper ads, infomercials). The banks get cheap shares to recommend the company in their letters to customers. The company appears at investment conferences to tell you how really different their company is. Strange little enthusiastic threads appear in the boards, always of the same kind of pusher, the more the better. The HYPE starts. The cleverer a stock promoter is, the better his knowledge of the advertising industry. Little tricks are used, e.g. make a completely unknown company look interesting by comparing it to a recent success story. This is the position sermon s. Ries and Trout. The only reason you are invited to this seemingly incredible banquet is because you are the main course! After the market manipulator has sucked you into his investment by exchanging his securities for your money, the walls close around you. Why is this so?
Translated with www.DeepL.com/Translator (free version)