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The market runs on money
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the essence of "expectations", "memories", "future", "forecasts" and other tears are alien to it...
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there are no shadows of the future in quotation history. It remains undefined, which is wonderful.
but there are enough variations of the past to justify any bad prediction or "NSE" theories.
And do you invest money in the market just for fun, or do you expect that after opening a position the price will move in the right direction? The counterparty to the transaction has its own expectations, which are therefore opposite.
The market is these entities, everything on it is done for the sake of future results, and we can only think about the future in terms of expectations and forecasts.
Not really.
And how much is "a lot"? 51% or 52% - is it a lot or can it become even more? But to answer this question you need some history.
How do you know for sure? Do you have an aggregator of all open and pending (including virtual, which people have in their heads) positions for all market participants throughout the world? You can't know it, you can only estimate it statistically to some approximation, and for statistics you need history.
Not really.
It is not clear. If there are more sellers than buyers, the price goes down
It is not clear. If there are more sellers than buyers, the price goes down
No
If all buyers have been closed at the current price and sellers are still there, they will sell everything cheaper.
If all buyers have been closed at the current price and sellers are still there, they will sell everything cheaper.
In this case, the new sellers will sell at the average price. Given the spread, the price will be higher and higher.
At what "average price"? Forget the spread.
You have a market price of $100. At $100, all buyers are closed - there are no buyers at that price. There are still sellers at that price. You only have extra buyers at a price below $100.
At what "average price"? Forget the spread.
You have a market price of $100. At $100, all the buyers are closed - there are no buyers at that price. There are still sellers at that price. There are additional buyers only at the price below 100.
Buyers are closed ;). New ones will come in at the asc, i.e. at a price above 100. Which will only make things worse for the sellers. The spread is and always will be, whether you want to forget it or not.
Buyers at the current price. It's written. In the cup, there are sellers' bids at the top and buyers' bids at the bottom. If there are more sellers, the price will go down.