It is an oversimplification to summarize George Soros' investment philosophy
based on the theory of reflexivity into a single sentence, but it is
useful to think of the theory as telling us that a trend will continue
until it reverses.
Reflexivity also points out the direction of
the trend can be influenced by underlying economic factors and the
perception of traders and policy makers about the trend. That makes
analyzing trends more complicated because we need to consider what
policy makers might do and how traders will react in addition to prices.
The
entire global economy might be thought of as a group of trends under
the theory of reflexivity. What happens in the U.S. impacts Japan, for
example, just as policies in Japan have an impact on the U.S. These
impacts can be seen in exchange rates, a market in which Soros has
demonstrated mastery. His most famous trade -- a bet against the Bank of
England -- made him $1 billion in one day.
Recently,
Soros said that after a period of remarkable stability in currencies,
he expects to see "more fireworks, more volatility." Traders benefit
from volatility because volatile markets are the ones that offer large
gains in short periods of time. (more)
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