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The stock market and the real economy operate on different time horizons. The economy is a day-to-day measure, while the market is a discounting machine that extrapolates every piece of new information "from infinity back to the present," causing massive valuation swings from seemingly small events.

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Unlike physical sciences where observation doesn't change the subject, the stock market's behavior is influenced by participants watching it. A market can rise simply because it has been rising, creating momentum loops. This "self-awareness" means price and value are not independent variables, a key distinction from more rigid scientific models.

The primary driver of market fluctuations is the dramatic shift in attitudes toward risk. In good times, investors become risk-tolerant and chase gains ('Risk is my friend'). In bad times, risk aversion dominates ('Get me out at any price'). This emotional pendulum causes security prices to fluctuate far more than their underlying intrinsic values.

A company can beat earnings and still see its stock fall if its actions (e.g., high CapEx) contradict the prevailing market narrative (e.g., the AI bubble is popping). Price is driven by future expectations, not just present-day results.

Michael Mauboussin argues the market is inherently long-term oriented. For major Dow Jones stocks, nearly 90% of their equity value is derived from expected cash flows beyond the next five years, debunking the common narrative of market short-sightedness and a focus on quarterly results.

Long-term economic predictions are largely useless for trading because market dynamics are short-term. The real value lies in daily or weekly portfolio adjustments and risk management, which are uncorrelated with year-long forecasts.

Stocks can remain stable despite major short-term disruptions, like an energy crisis. Their valuation is based on the discounted value of all future earnings, making a single weak quarter mathematically less significant if the long-term outlook remains intact.

The stock price and the narrative around a company are tightly linked, creating wild oscillations. Investors mistakenly equate a rising stock with a great company. In reality, the intrinsic value of a great business rises gradually and steadily, while the stock price swings dramatically above and below this line based on shifting market sentiment.

The stock market is not overvalued based on historical metrics; it's a forward-looking mechanism pricing in massive future productivity gains from AI and deregulation. Investors are betting on a fundamentally more efficient economy, justifying valuations that seem detached from today's reality.

The expectation that universal, instant access to information would lead to more efficient markets has been proven wrong. Instead, it has amplified sentiment-driven volatility. Stock prices have become less tethered to fundamentals as information is interpreted through the lens of crowd psychology, not rational analysis.

Today's market is dominated by centralized asset management and systematic flows, making it a "giant derivatives trade." Price action is driven more by positioning warfare and reflexive volatility from options than by traditional fundamental analysis, creating extreme and rapid price swings.

Markets React Dramatically to Small Nudges Because They Extrapolate to Infinity | RiffOn