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by veyron
5435 days ago
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"If you're making a profit it means you bought inventory when the price was below fair value (your customers didn't need it and wanted to sell as fast as possible), and you sold it when the price was high (your customers really needed the shares right now)." It's a bit more complicated than that, because it's fully possible that the seller in a trade is selling above his fair value and the buyer in that trade is buying below her fair value. Supply/demand certainly plays into it (a trader with a very large position is definitely willing to take some price hit if they are able to quicky their position), which will invariably lead to a discussion of utility functions and slowly bore everyone :P |
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But that's the crux of the matter - both sides of the trade are getting some utility gain (otherwise the trade would not happen) and thus it is not a zero sum game.
It is still zero sum in short term dollars, which just obscures the subject for the people who equate utility with dollars.