
When markets panic, retail investors pay the price

My wife and I once took a twilight cruise out of Waikiki during whale season and things were going great until the captain told everyone there were whales to be seen off the port side. The captain warned everyone not to rush to see the whales to avoid the 100-year-old sailing ship from capsizing. The trouble was 95% of those on board were Japanese with no command of English. The cruise did not end well. That incident reminds me of what’s happening with media coverage right now and the bipolar impact it has on investor behaviour - rushing in the direction of every latest news thread.Trump narrativeGiven the proclivity of the Trump administration for knowingly sewing lies into its messaging to the American and global public, it’s incredulous how wired Wall Street appears to be the latest nuance on the Iran War - drip-fed to the world specifically to drive an expected market outcome. At the best of times, most capital markets take their cue from whether futures traders believe markets will go up or down based on any number of factors, none the least being geopolitical and macrodynamics playing out globally, which become the substance of the next news feeds. Trump knows full well that what he nuances to the media today will i



