Best way to make money as the market goes down? (coming recession?)

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It works best in fantasy world though, given that there's always space for a juicy short squeeze or broker declaring "bug in a system"
 
Yes there are those that are smarter, the market has momentum not intelligence, you need to be careful about your asset references, you are mixing them up.
 
Apparently you do not understand the numbers behind contextual analysis via supercomputers, quantum computers and highly experienced professionals.
Yet there are people and entities which did just that and are still around today, people always have that view when they can't do it themselves unknowingly working for free.
 
I acquire businesses and improve them. Downturn creates more opportunities.

I also aquire real estate and improve it. Down turn also create more opportunities there.
 
"The time to buy is when there's blood in the streets, even if the blood is your own." - Baron Rothschild

2001 - equity crisis
2007 - bond crisis
2013 - taper tantrum (emerging market flight to usd)
2023/2024 (my opinion) - sovereign debt crisis (fundamental lack of confidence in Central Banks after weaponization of SWIFT and turbo money printing)

Don't bother timing a recession... keep in mind recession is a lagging indicator. Markets are way to manipulated to predict exactly when. Momentum trading is akin to playing a casino... caveat emptor (buyer beware). Day trading is stressful but can be rewarding for those with the correct appetite for risk.

Stack cash (or precious metals if cash is loosing too much purchasing power) and wait for the crisis to take place. When there is structural failure and chaos you make your move and rotate into assets that are at fair value.
 
the big question is which traditional assets are worth the exposure and cannot be seized, heavily taxed or diluted in the unprecedented times of collapse we are most probably heading towards
 
I agree, that's the quadrillion dollar question. I personally think equity markets are overrated and way too risky. One "bank holiday" away from loosing your shirt. Between bail-in legislation for deposits, shilling for CBDC, AML hysteria, war on cash and fundamentals that dont matter anymore markets are a crapshoot beyond this week.

Concerns about asset seizure and taxation are what brought me here to OCT

Personally I'm looking at traditional service businesses that are recession proof like scrapping/auto recycling, sewage, excavation, etc. Also looking at liquid luxury goods that have global brand recognition and can be sold online globally like collector cars, watches, luggage, etc. Call me old fashioned but I still see good reasons to stick to a contrarian mindset.
 
No, we are not even close to that. Just because of the bankruptcy of a few US bank (interestingly, all had significant exposure to crypto) + a dubious Swiss bank every half way decent local shunned, doesn't mean there is "blood in the streets".
That's a good idea, indeed. No matter what anybody thinks about the current state of the global economy.
Only looks at it. Your luxury luggage has same value as a cheap bag from the store around the corner omce sh.. hits the fan.
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Perhaps take a look at Private Equity.
 
This is so true. And empirically proven. As much as I have strong contrarian views, it is clear historically that momentum-based strategies have delivered far superior returns than contrarian ones.
 
The Theorem of Market efficiency (“investors can’t outperform the market” that @JohnnyDoe keeps referring to) implies that asset prices will follow random walks, with drift and that asset price changes will be white noise, with no autocorrelation.
There are thus only two possible inefficiencies to be exploited when you invest: positive autocorrelation, that’s Momentum, or negative autocorrelation, that’s Value or mean-reversion/contrarian. In this latter case, asset prices need first to go down, or fundamentals need to improve faster than the price.

Empirically, Momentum dominates Value. (Admittedly It is slightly less true in the fixed income world)

iShares MSCI USA Momentum Factor ETF (Blue) vs iShares MSCI USA Value Factor ETF (Yellow)

Since 2013


Last 5 years
 
Where would you go into the offensive?
Emerging Markets, Western World (Europe, USA), biotech, listed PE, bonds???
 
Wait for everyone lose their jobs and you know it's time to buy!
 
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