Part 2 Rule No. 3
Once the manipulator has sold his shares, he will start a campaign with bad news or no news at all.
Your favorite stock stagnates or goes down a bit from its high. Suddenly there is a vacuum of news, either no news at all or bad rumors ... No more news "sorry, he's not in the office" or "he won't be back until Monday".
The really slick market manipulators will even feed the boards and journalists with negative stories about the company accordingly. Or start a propaganda campaign with negative rumors on all levels of communication ,even hire someone to push the price down. Even hire someone to attack the analyst who previously wrote enthusiastically about the value (this is not a game for people with a weak heart!).
You see the stock drifting endlessly, you can even develop a feeling of helplessness, as if you are floating in space without a lifeline. This is exactly what the manipulator wants (see rule no. 5). Maybe he does this to avoid the deep disappointment of a failed deal. You often hear the chorus "oh, these are the young companies ... very risky ..." or "9 out of 10 companies go bankrupt every year and this is a venture capital exchange for young companies". Do not think that this was not planned! ...
Rule No. 4
Every share that is traded at a high volume at a high price signals the professionals' selling phase.
When the volume was lower, the price was also lower. The professionals collected. As soon as the price increases, the volume increases. The professionals bought low and sold high. The amateurs bought high (and will soon enough sell lower) .... The market manipulator will do everything in his power to keep you out of the stock, sometimes by shaking you out until the price is two or three times higher and he has collected enough shares himself. Whenever you see a very high volume after the stock has gone up 75 degrees, the selling phase has begun and you will probably be sold at the highest price. buy.
Successful short term traders usually get out of a stock when the volume is high, amateurs get greedy and buy here.
Rule No. 5
The market manipulator will always try to get you to buy when the price is as high as possible and sell at the lowest possible price.
Just as the manipulator uses every possible trick to invite you to the party, he will cruelly and brutally drive you off his stock once he has fleeced you. The first wrong assumption is that the stock promoter wants to make you rich by investing in his company. Thus begins a series of lies that will run for as long as your stomach can stand it.
You get the first hint that he has deceived you when the stock drops at the higher level. Somehow it has lost steam and you don't know why. Well, it lost the steam because the stock manipulator stopped pushing it. She's too bloated and he can't convince anyone else to buy her. The volume dries out while the price seems to sag.
Rule No. 6
If this is a real deal, you are probably the last person to be notified and you will be pushed out at a lower price.
If the manipulator wants to drive you out of the stock, there will be an orchestra of rumors circulating, you will be shot at from different directions... You will see the proof in a very sharp fall of the share price with a huge volume. This is you and your buddies running for the exit. If the deal is real, the manipulator wants all your shares or as much as possible at the lowest possible price. The market manipulator will shake you out by driving the price as low as possible so he can collect as many shares as possible. (the author refers here to several mining companies in Canada).
The phase of collecting was deadly quiet. Only when the insiders had collected all their shares did they tell you their secret!
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