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I want to start a thread for discussion on why some traders go down the path of complicating trading, when there is so many possibilities that require only some experience and a bit of risk/trade management.

 

I don't necessarily want to talk about actual trading setups, just in general.

 

There are many ways to trade, the most common boil down to S/R bounces, breakouts of S/R.

 

Now to trade these just requires some charts a few line tools and practice.

 

There are others who want to understand how/why/who/where/when/color of socks etc.... price moves, suggesting once they know this they will trade risk free, or with high rate of wins.

 

They will study all sorts of theoretical stuff on order flow trying to understand complex maths and other complex material

 

I am suggesting that people keep it simple, stupid.

 

Would a poker player learn how cards are made, in which factory, who made them etc. It might be nice to know, but pointless to his performance

 

Discuss...

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Would a poker player learn how cards are made, in which factory, who made them etc. It might be nice to know, but pointless to his performance

 

Discuss...

 

He would want to know how well, say, A9s holds up preflop when there are 5 players seeing the flop and he called and was raised.

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I want to start a thread for discussion on why some traders go down the path of complicating trading, when there is so many possibilities that require only some experience and a bit of risk/trade management.

 

In KISS --- Why.....why not? :)

 

...........................

First I would like to quote from a book I just read, and a point I wholly agree with - Attacking currency trends - Greg Michalowski (not a bad read - keeps it simple, has some good points)

 

KISS stands for "Keep is Simple to be Successful" ---- a simple but good recommendation IMHO

 

'''''''''''''''

as to why people complicate things?

 

I have seen people answer with responses such as - we over think things, we dont understand the basics, we think complicated works better etc;

 

my personal theory (I this can be applied to many aspects of live and is just a personal idea I have) is that we have primal urge to control - or at least feel the need that we are in control.

 

When it comes to trading this manifests itself in many ways and comes out in expressions such as 'masters of the markets', the "truth" in how markets work/move etc, 'tame the markets', 'control your emotions', 'discipline', 'rules based', even when we hope and pray - we think we might have some influence on the outcome etc; etc;

 

So when we cant accept that most things are out of our control, or we often cant even control ourselves (impulse trading, anger, adrenaline etc) we believe that by adding more complications it is a way to improve the control we think we have.

Edited by SIUYA

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A large part of the problem revolves around this:

Rarely do any of us grow up learning how to operate in an arena that allows for complete
freedom of creative expression, with no external structure to restrict it in any way. In the trading environment, you will have to make up your own rules and then have the discipline to abide by them.

 

The problem is, price movement is fluid, always in motion, quite unlike the highly structured events that most of us are accustomed to. In the market environment, the decisions that confront you are as endless as the price movements you intend to take advantage of. You don't just have to decide to participate, you also have to decide when to enter, how long to stay in, and under what conditions to get out.

 

There is no beginning, middle, or end - only what you create in your own mind.

Beginners feel as though they're being dropped off in the middle of the woods without a map or compass. If they don't read, indicators represent a rope, or at least bread crumbs. And everybody seems to be using them. Never mind that they are the antithesis of KISS. And then there all the elaborate schemes to create structure and make sense out of what seems chaotic and senseless. Few beginners, however, ever bother to address the question of why people buy and sell. If they did, perhaps the clouds would part and they could at least see the sun.

 

I read something here yesterday posted by somebody who'd been at this for twelve years and the trader's progress was "slim". Twelve years. That's pitiful.

 

Db

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KISS is relative.

 

An analysis or trade signal strategy that is simple to you will be complex to someone else. Just the same, an analysis or trade signal strategy that is complex to you is simple to someone else.

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....as to why people complicate things?

 

I have seen people answer with responses such as - we over think things, we dont understand the basics, we think complicated works better etc;

 

my personal theory (I this can be applied to many aspects of live and is just a personal idea I have) is that we have primal urge to control - or at least feel the need that we are in control.

 

When it comes to trading this manifests itself in many ways and comes out in expressions such as 'masters of the markets', the "truth" in how markets work/move etc, 'tame the markets', 'control your emotions', 'discipline', 'rules based', even when we hope and pray - we think we might have some influence on the outcome etc; etc;

 

So when we cant accept that most things are out of our control, or we often cant even control ourselves (impulse trading, anger, adrenaline etc) we believe that by adding more complications it is a way to improve the control we think we have.

 

couldn't say it better myself :)

 

there are things that became common belief, expensive is better, beautiful is better, complicated works better...you can hear people saying ooohh it is so shiny! or come on trading can't be so simple, lets fill our chart with tons of indicators!

 

everything is hard and complicated at the beginning, practice makes things easy although they are simple or complex...

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KISS is relative.

 

An analysis or trade signal strategy that is simple to you will be complex to someone else. Just the same, an analysis or trade signal strategy that is complex to you is simple to someone else.

 

 

I cannot agree with you wrbtrader ... KISS is KISS, it is not relative

 

SIUYA and DbP have a far more realistic approach to the problem of Trading

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I cannot agree with you wrbtrader ... KISS is KISS, it is not relative

 

SIUYA and DbP have a far more realistic approach to the problem of Trading

 

That's exactly my point...what is KISS to me and you...I've seen others say its "too complicated". Just the same, I've seen some complicated stuff and others say to me "its very simple".

 

Yet, I don't debate with someone when they say something is simple or complicated. I know that as traders we have a different perspective via your education background, trading experience, communication skill of educator and so on. Therefore, if one person say its simple and someone else say just the opposite (complicated) about the same analysis or trade signal strategy...what matters is the perspective of the user because its his/her money on the line.

Edited by wrbtrader

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I want to start a thread for discussion on why some traders go down the path of complicating trading,

 

Because of their personality.

 

when there is so many possibilities that require only some experience and a bit of risk/trade management.

 

I don't necessarily want to talk about actual trading setups, just in general.

 

There are many ways to trade, the most common boil down to S/R bounces, breakouts of S/R.

 

Now to trade these just requires some charts a few line tools and practice.

 

 

Maybe price changes for some of these basic reasons:

 

  • The actual value changed and enough people know that to change the price.
  • The perceived value changed for the majority of people for some fundamental reason.
  • People are entering orders on speculation or short term technical reasons. There might not be any real concept or method being used concerning valuation.

 

NOTE: I'm not saying that I can correctly value the market. I don't know that anyone has a perfect way to do that.

 

There are others who want to understand how/why/who/where/when/color of socks etc.... price moves, suggesting once they know this they will trade risk free, or with high rate of wins.

 

I'm sort of like that. Is this thread for people like me?

 

They will study all sorts of theoretical stuff on order flow trying to understand complex maths and other complex material

 

I don't study order flow, or do any complicated math or employe statistical analysis. Maybe this thread isn't for me after all.

 

I am suggesting that people keep it simple, stupid.

 

Would a poker player learn how cards are made, in which factory, who made them etc. It might be nice to know, but pointless to his performance

 

Discuss...

 

Is the thread about trying to convince people to Keep It Simple, Stupid, or why people make it complicated? I'm not exactly sure where this is going?

Ultimately I'd like to match cause and effect. I want to see reliable correlations between something and what price does.

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I believe that new traders add and complicate trading the markets because they are not used to operating in a field filed with uncertainty - and they crave confirmation. The inevitable result is hesitation which leads to either missed trades or worse, getting in the trade at a worse price and higher risk.

 

Then the answer seems to be to increase the stop size and accept larger losses as a part of doing business rather than deal the with uncertainty and enter the trade with a smaller risk and increased uncertainty.

 

Simplifying ones approach takes screen time, and for me years or it.

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The formula E = MC^2 seems simple. What it took to for Einstein to get to that simplicity was not simple. There is a difference between the simplicity of the end result, and the amount of work to achieve that simplicity.

It would be interesting to see the results of a study comparing a trader's profitability to the simplicity of their strategy. But unless that study gets done, I don't know how to verify whether simplicity equals better success.

How much work will it take to find a strategy that is simple and profitable? I don't see any way around:

 

  • TIME - it takes to learn.
  • VERIFICATION - of the profitability.
  • DISCIPLINE - To execute the rules.

 

The verification process can filter out what works for someone and what doesn't. As you discard what doesn't work, maybe get simpler.

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To make something simple is very difficult to do. It is a complicated thing to design something simple. Especially, in the trading world where there are so many variables. Every event you can conceive of has probabilities. Even events you have not yet thought of or conceived. Just a few years ago how many of us would have conceived the role algos would play and in fact do play now in trading?

 

It seems to me one has to go back to basics and answer questions such as "why do people or algos buy and sell?" Other than to make money, that is. Designs system around the basic questions for whatever time frame you looking at trading. Reduce things as much as possible to a lowest common denominator.

 

Simple systems are easily reproduced. Easily duplicated. Easily understood. They can be implemented easier. They can be multiplied and repeated easier and faster.

 

To make things simple and keep them simple can be complicated but the end result is that they are usually more profitable. At least for me. And I am one who likes to jump on my motorcyle and feel the wind in my face and smell the freshly cut grass....

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Reminds me of the following Zen Buddhist story that applies to trading equally well:

 

A martial arts student went to his teacher and said earnestly, "I'm devoted to studying your martial system. How long will it take me to master it?" The teacher's replay was casual, "Ten years." Impatiently, the student answered, "But I want to master it faster than that. I'll work very hard. I'll practise every day, ten or more hours a day if I have to. How long will it take then?" The teacher thought for a moment and replied, "Twenty years."

 

This story version from 'Mindfulness for Dummies' book. The moral - hard work and attaining a goal do not necessarily go together. Let things unfold in their own time. If you are anxious you may just block your understanding. KISS for sure.

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A new trader opens up their exciting new trading platform which their new broker has so 'kindly' provided for 'free' and furnished with 'useful' indicators and the trader inevitably looks through various indicators and visually assesses their efficacy. The trader's mind is drawn to those clear cases where the market generates a 'signal' based off some 'indicator' and they think they've nailed it. However, the market does not concur when they attempt to apply it to trading. "I must have missed something" the trader thinks, without even a second thought to the relevance of the indicator at all. After all, it was included in the charting platform so it has to be good, right? "So lemme see what happens if I cross indi A with indi B" is the next thought. "Eureka! Jackpot! I'm gonna be rich!" says the trader possibly even out load, actually counting the soon-to-be-in-their-account money before it's been made. And it continues. Time spent acts as shackles too as the trader can't face the possibility that they've wasted their time and just move on. Then when they do finally move on, they're in danger of repeating the same mistake again. :doh:

 

Anyway, my point is that I disagree with the idea that traders want to use lots of different indicators to 'complicate' things because they think complicated = better, personality, lack of understanding, need to be right or anything else in particular. It's because a new trader sees something and thinks it works and gets stuck in a mindset. Lots of problems imho originate from far, far simpler beginnings than most would have you believe.

 

Overall I probably would say the brokers play a big part in this. Step up I'd say to any responsible broker reading this and take action. Provide simple basic education on auctions and a simple, basic, fast and reliable charting/trading platform with no indicators as such. Just some simple drawing tools and ability to read volume well in real time. It would be an interesting read to see the difference in new trader failure rate between this broker and usual brokers. Anyway. :2c:

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A new trader opens up their exciting new trading platform which their new broker has so 'kindly' provided for 'free' and furnished with 'useful' indicators and the trader inevitably looks through various indicators and visually assesses their efficacy. The trader's mind is drawn to those clear cases where the market generates a 'signal' based off some 'indicator' and they think they've nailed it. However, the market does not concur when they attempt to apply it to trading. "I must have missed something" the trader thinks, without even a second thought to the relevance of the indicator at all. After all, it was included in the charting platform so it has to be good, right? "So lemme see what happens if I cross indi A with indi B" is the next thought. "Eureka! Jackpot! I'm gonna be rich!" says the trader possibly even out load, actually counting the soon-to-be-in-their-account money before it's been made. And it continues. Time spent acts as shackles too as the trader can't face the possibility that they've wasted their time and just move on. Then when they do finally move on, they're in danger of repeating the same mistake again. :doh:

 

Anyway, my point is that I disagree with the idea that traders want to use lots of different indicators to 'complicate' things because they think complicated = better, personality, lack of understanding, need to be right or anything else in particular. It's because a new trader sees something and thinks it works and gets stuck in a mindset. Lots of problems imho originate from far, far simpler beginnings than most would have you believe.

 

Overall I probably would say the brokers play a big part in this. Step up I'd say to any responsible broker reading this and take action. Provide simple basic education on auctions and a simple, basic, fast and reliable charting/trading platform with no indicators as such. Just some simple drawing tools and ability to read volume well in real time. It would be an interesting read to see the difference in new trader failure rate between this broker and usual brokers. Anyway. :2c:

 

Neg - problem with this idea is that if you go to the platform boards you will constantly see 'users' requesting more stuff - so what would happen is that a simple platform would then evolve into something more complicated.

A simple platform exists already - all of them have the ability to draw lines and watch a chart - yet people want more things. We are all free to throw off the shackles any time we want.....So while interesting - my guess is a reversion to the mean of wanting more complicated tools to simplify things would result.

 

Also based on the idea....."It's because a new trader sees something and thinks it works and gets stuck in a mindset", then surely if you showed all new traders a simple idea, that works reasonably well then everyone could be shown this and then they would be profitable and happy. If only imprinting was that easy........:)

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Neg - problem with this idea is that if you go to the platform boards you will constantly see 'users' requesting more stuff - so what would happen is that a simple platform would then evolve into something more complicated.

A simple platform exists already - all of them have the ability to draw lines and watch a chart - yet people want more things. We are all free to throw off the shackles any time we want.....So while interesting - my guess is a reversion to the mean of wanting more complicated tools to simplify things would result.

 

True. On the other hand, if it were appropriately demonstrated to them why the platform was created this way and were given the knowledge of how to use it, there would be a good few who at the very least would give it a good go. The question is whether more proportionally would be successful or not. This isn't to say it would make lots of successful traders. A prospective retail trader with no knowledge of trading has no criteria to base their suitability and potential upon other than their ego (and greed).

 

Also based on the idea....."It's because a new trader sees something and thinks it works and gets stuck in a mindset", then surely if you showed all new traders a simple idea, that works reasonably well then everyone could be shown this and then they would be profitable and happy. If only imprinting was that easy........:)

 

Back to the last point I made. A new retail trader decides they will be a good trader themself. So their would be plenty who still fail. Even if a firm experienced in picking good traders were to 'authorise' all new accounts retail or otherwise, there would surely be those who would fail, those who would be okay but make plenty of losing trades and those who would be great, but still take losing trades. The point is that simple ideas which work reasonably well are rarely presented to new traders and when they are they often miss out a critical aspect which people have an aversion of - hard work.

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The point is that simple ideas which work reasonably well are rarely presented to new traders and when they are they often miss out a critical aspect which people have an aversion of - hard work.

 

That's largely it: the work. An extraordinarily small number of people want to do the work. They are not dissimilar from those who think they can become big winners at poker just by sitting down at the poker table, even though they know nothing about the game. They think that making trade after trade after trade constitutes "work", but it is no more so than playing hand after hand after hand. What is learned from the experience, if anything, is negligible.

 

There's nothing new about any of this, of course. Wyckoff and Livermore complained about the same thing a hundred years ago, only then it was wannabes who hung around brokers' offices and clubs and so forth looking for tips and inside information. Not much different than fiddling with stochastic settings.

 

Db

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True. On the other hand, if it were appropriately demonstrated to them why the platform was created this way and were given the knowledge of how to use it, there would be a good few who at the very least would give it a good go. The question is whether more proportionally would be successful or not. This isn't to say it would make lots of successful traders. A prospective retail trader with no knowledge of trading has no criteria to base their suitability and potential upon other than their ego (and greed).

 

 

 

Back to the last point I made. A new retail trader decides they will be a good trader themself. So their would be plenty who still fail. Even if a firm experienced in picking good traders were to 'authorise' all new accounts retail or otherwise, there would surely be those who would fail, those who would be okay but make plenty of losing trades and those who would be great, but still take losing trades. The point is that simple ideas which work reasonably well are rarely presented to new traders and when they are they often miss out a critical aspect which people have an aversion of - hard work.

 

Aha - the critical thing - Db beat me to it. :)

its not about the platform, its about the desire/motivation/drive to actually put in the work, and so even if people were presented with simple things, a simple platform, etc; then they would still complicate it because they would rather have something that is complicated if it can avoid them doing the hard work.

In other words could it be suggested we want to make things more complicated because we dont want to actually do hard work.....makes sense some what for all manner of 'labour saving' devices.....but I dont think that really applies here.

The hard work is about thinking, time, analysis.....review, more thought...

 

I do agree that it would be interesting if brokers gave out more tools to help people with this.....eg; a series of practice trade journals, spreadsheets with trade statistics etc; etc....problem is most people would find out they are over trading - and dont the brokers love that :)

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I'm reminded of this because of the renovation I'm in the middle of, though it may not even apply. I'm truly astonished -- though I shouldn't be -- at how few people are willing to do the scraping and the sanding and the washing and the priming and the first and second coats. The vast majority would rather just slap on a topcoat, without even cleaning the surface, then bitch about how it doesn't cover in one coat.

 

How different is this from the whining about how whateveritis "doesn't work"?

 

Db

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I'm reminded of this because of the renovation I'm in the middle of, though it may not even apply. I'm truly astonished -- though I shouldn't be -- at how few people are willing to do the scraping and the sanding and the washing and the priming and the first and second coats. The vast majority would rather just slap on a topcoat, without even cleaning the surface, then bitch about how it doesn't cover in one coat.

 

How different is this from the whining about how whateveritis "doesn't work"?

 

Db

 

LOL, renovations - always overbudget, over time and a pain....especially if not dont properly.

From my own renovation experiences ---Best labour saving device for those who don't want to do it.....pay someone else to do it for you.....otherwise, you are 100% correct prepare properly which is hard, and largely unseen and hidden work for a great job.

If you are just patching up and flogging it off to the next punter then ....buyer beware. :)

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From my own renovation experiences ---Best labour saving device for those who don't want to do it.....pay someone else to do it for you.....

 

Likewise, if one isn't prepared to do the necessary work to manage his own money, hire someone else to do it, e.g., funds.

 

Db

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Likewise, if one isn't prepared to do the necessary work to manage his own money, hire someone else to do it, e.g., funds. Db

 

Sure... I am one of the many that left hard-earned money with so-called financial 'experts', in big banks to manage. And like many others learnt about the conceited BS that the industry has been pushing for years after losing lots. Buy and hold, yeah sure. Biggest con ever. Sorry, but that's why so many of us 'Muppets' are taking their funds off these idiots/crooks.

 

You are right to say we do need to do the necessary work to manage our own money so please forgive the naive (Muppet) questions sometimes. We've all been there, right? :)

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Sure... I am one of the many that left hard-earned money with so-called financial 'experts', in big banks to manage. And like many others learnt about the conceited BS that the industry has been pushing for years after losing lots. Buy and hold, yeah sure. Biggest con ever. Sorry, but that's why so many of us 'Muppets' are taking their funds off these idiots/crooks.

 

You are right to say we do need to do the necessary work to manage our own money so please forgive the naive (Muppet) questions sometimes. We've all been there, right? :)

 

There are a great many terrible professional money managers. Most of them can't even match the S&P. However, that doesn't necessarily mean that one is going to do better managing his own simply because it's his.

 

And there's nothing wrong with asking questions. But at some point, one has to move on to the plan, and in the nearly five months since I've returned, I've seen only one person post what even begins to look like a plan. Even if one discounts the alleged 78,000+ members number, there are well more than a hundred members logging into the site every day. How many of them have posted a plan*? As far as I know, none.

 

So when someone complains about how difficult and complicated it all is, ask about his plan. Odds will be high that he has none.

 

* And by "plan", I don't mean some computerized backtest that has only a marginal -- if that -- connection with reality. I mean a well-thought-out, thoroughly-tested, consistently profitable plan.

 

Db

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A new trader opens up their exciting new trading platform which their new broker has so 'kindly' provided for 'free' and furnished with 'useful' indicators and the trader inevitably looks through various indicators and visually assesses their efficacy. The trader's mind is drawn to those clear cases where the market generates a 'signal' based off some 'indicator' and they think they've nailed it. However, the market does not concur when they attempt to apply it to trading. "I must have missed something" the trader thinks, without even a second thought to the relevance of the indicator at all. After all, it was included in the charting platform so it has to be good, right? "So lemme see what happens if I cross indi A with indi B" is the next thought. "Eureka! Jackpot! I'm gonna be rich!" says the trader possibly even out load, actually counting the soon-to-be-in-their-account money before it's been made. And it continues.....

 

for many years people have been creating trading systems by combining a couple of indicators...I guess it is how new traders see trading...that is why there are thousands of so called systems-strategies...they need more indicators to create more strategies...

 

without knowledge, experience and hard working, nobody can survice for a long time...keeping charts clean does not mean trading is simple...and trading is not simple for a beginner

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keeping charts clean does not mean trading is simple...and trading is not simple for a beginner

 

Keeping charts clean makes trading simpler than cluttering them up. And, yes, trading can be simple even for a beginner, assuming he can tell up from down (not everyone can).

 

This is not to equate "simple" with "easy". It's still work. But it's not a root canal.

 

Db

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Others are also trying again to talk to Trump to get some sort of agreement that limits the impact.   Much of the rally appeared to be driven by dip-buying, as well as hopes that the intensifying trade war could still be defused through negotiations.   China Strikes Back: ‘We Will Fight to the End’   Tensions reached a boiling point after Trump threatened to impose an additional 50% tariff on all Chinese imports unless Beijing rolled back its retaliatory measures by April 8. ‘If China does not withdraw its 34% increase above their already long-term trading abuses by tomorrow... the United States will impose additional tariffs on China of 50%,’ Trump declared on social media.   If implemented, the new tariffs would bring total US duties on Chinese goods to a staggering 124%, factoring in the existing 20%, the 34% recently announced, and the proposed 50%.   In response, China’s Ministry of Commerce issued a stern warning, stating: ‘The US threat to escalate tariffs is a mistake on top of a mistake... If the US insists on its own way, China will fight to the end.’ The ministry also called for equal and respectful dialogue, though signs of compromise on either side remain scarce.   Beijing acted quickly to contain a market fallout. State funds intervened to support equities, and the People’s Bank of China set the yuan fixing at its weakest level since September 2023 to boost export competitiveness. Additionally, five-year interest rate swaps in China fell to their lowest levels since 2020, indicating potential for further monetary easing.   Trump Talks Tough on EU Too   Trump’s hardline approach extended beyond China. Speaking at a press conference, he rejected the European Union’s offer to eliminate tariffs on cars and industrial goods, accusing the bloc of ‘being very bad to us.’ He insisted that Europe would need to source its energy from the US, claiming the US could ‘knock off $350 billion in one week.’   The EU, meanwhile, backed away from a proposed 50% retaliatory tariff on American whiskey, opting instead for 25% duties on selected US goods in response to Trump’s steel and aluminium tariffs.     Volatile Wall Street Adds to the Drama   Wall Street experienced wild swings on Monday as investors processed the rapidly evolving trade conflict. The S&P 500 briefly fell 4.7% before rebounding 3.4%, nearly erasing its losses in what could have been its biggest one-day jump in years—if it had held. The Dow Jones Industrial Average sank by as much as 1,700 points early in the day but later climbed nearly 900 points before closing 349 points lower, down 0.9%. The Nasdaq ended up 0.1%.   The brief rally was fueled by a false rumour that Trump was considering a 90-day pause on tariffs—rumours that the White House quickly labelled ‘fake news.’ The market's sharp reaction underscored how desperate investors are for any sign that tensions might ease.   Oil Markets in Focus: Goldman Sachs Revises Forecasts   Crude prices also reflected the uncertainty, with US crude briefly dipping below $60 per barrel for the first time since 2021. As of early Tuesday, Brent crude was trading at $64.72, while WTI hovered around $61.26.   Goldman Sachs, in a note dated April 7, lowered its average price forecasts for Brent and WTI through 2025 and 2026, citing mounting recession risks and the potential for higher-than-expected supply from OPEC+.       Under a base-case scenario where the US avoids a recession and tariffs are reduced significantly before the April 9 implementation date, Goldman sees Brent at $62 per barrel and WTI at $58 by December 2025. These figures fall further to $55 and $51, respectively, by the end of 2026. This outlook also assumes moderate output increases from eight OPEC+ countries, with incremental boosts of 130,000–140,000 barrels per day in June and July.   However, should the US slip into a typical recession and OPEC production aligns with the bank’s baseline assumptions, Brent could retreat to $58 by the end of this year and to $50 by December 2026.   In a more bearish scenario involving a global GDP slowdown and no change to OPEC+ output levels, Brent prices might fall to $54 by year-end and $45 by late 2026. The most extreme projection—based on a simultaneous economic downturn and a full reversal of OPEC+ production cuts—would see Brent plunge to below $40 per barrel by the end of 2026.   Goldman noted that oil prices could outperform forecasts significantly if there was a dramatic shift in tariff policy and a surprise in global demand recovery.   Cautious Optimism, But Warnings Persist   With both Washington and Beijing showing no signs of backing down, markets are likely to remain volatile in the days ahead. Investors now turn their attention to upcoming trade meetings and policy decisions, hoping for clarity in what has become one of the most unpredictable trading environments in recent years.   Always trade with strict risk management. Your capital is the single most important aspect of your trading business.   Please note that times displayed based on local time zone and are from time of writing this report. Click HERE to access the full HFM Economic calendar.   Want to learn to trade and analyse the markets? Join our webinars and get analysis and trading ideas combined with better understanding of how markets work. Click HERE to register for FREE!   Click HERE to READ more Market news.   Andria Pichidi HFMarkets   Disclaimer: This material is provided as a general marketing communication for information purposes only and does not constitute an independent investment research. Nothing in this communication contains, or should be considered as containing, an investment advice or an investment recommendation or a solicitation for the purpose of buying or selling of any financial instrument. All information provided is gathered from reputable sources and any information containing an indication of past performance is not a guarantee or reliable indicator of future performance. Users acknowledge that any investment in Leveraged Products is characterized by a certain degree of uncertainty and that any investment of this nature involves a high level of risk for which the users are solely responsible and liable. We assume no liability for any loss arising from any investment made based on the information provided in this communication. This communication must not be reproduced or further distributed without our prior written permission.
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