>>20912893>you just kept saying "it's too high!"and I was right. You persisting in the wrong direction was your own foolishness, you misvalued everything and refused to hear that no company was actually worth $3.4T. It only happened because you were trading with other deluded fools like yourself, essentially you collectively agreed that everything must go higher because it just must, regardless of how sensible company valuations got, regardless even of any macroeconomic indicators that have been pointing to a looming recession for at least 2 years. You thought that the slow way it all played out meant it wasn't happening, that we were wrong to point to the warning signs because it hadn't crashed the market yet, that price action disproved whatever we claimed about soft landings. You never even cared about macro, your entire model is "line go up because line go up, those who say line go down are always wrong because line went up".
>How can anyone take bears seriously?Because you're a fool, you think the ability to predict the unpredictable is what makes a trader, which is silly and ignorant. The ability to value companies and the market is what matters, you're the one who bought things for too much money and acted like it was a bargain, and you laugh at us for not being able to predict exactly where your foolishness would end. When we said "it's too high!" we were always right, you're too dumb to understand why things going even higher didn't prove us wrong. Now fools and their money are getting parted, because they don't understand that this game isn't quite a matter of predicting the unpredictable.