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by mmarian
727 days ago
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While I do believe it provides liquidity in all cases, let's just focus on the zero-sum aspect. My response is - so what if it's a zero sum game? Why should someone care if that's the case? It's not as if all startups out there add value to the world. |
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There is a fundamental difference between startups and "buy low, sell high" trading. Even if only a minority of startups succeed, they can create significant value for society by introducing innovative products, services, or technologies. In contrast, even if the majority of traders were "successful," there would be no net value created, as one trader's gain is another's loss, and the overall wealth in the system remains unchanged.
> so what if it’s a zero sum game?
While you may not initially be concerned about the distinction between positive-sum and zero-sum activities in society, studying history and economics may change your perspective. Positive-sum activities, such as entrepreneurship and innovation, contribute to economic growth and improved living standards, whereas zero-sum activities, like “buy low sell high” trading, do not.
> why should someone care?
Consider this analogy: if "buy low, sell high" trading is like playing chess, and your opponents are a collection of the best chess engines money can buy, operated by the world's top experts (think Magnus Carlsen), how profitable can you realistically expect your trading to be? The odds are heavily stacked against the retail trader. Some professional traders pay brokers to have retail orders routed to them for this reason much like how professional poker players want to play amateurs for their income.
While a small fraction of professional traders manage to beat the returns of buy-and-hold index investing, the fleeting existence of market-beating strategies is not a valid reason for the average investor to attempt them. Just as you cannot predict which lottery tickets will be winners, you cannot foresee which trading strategies will outperform. If this was possible highly paid professional traders that devote their life to it would be able to do it but only a few actually do and luck plays a big role in their success.
Markets have “seasons” and what seems to work in one season can be devastating in another. Markets also change in response to the trading strategies being used (aka “reflexivity”) and “paper testing” can give false confidence.