The Ministry of Finance and the central bank have been cutting interest rates to promote a loose monetary cycle. Coupled with small-cap stocks being thoroughly suppressed by the large caps over the past five years, this combination makes it hard to believe that the Russell 2000 won't see a significant surge this year. The loose environment is paving the way, historical gaps are accumulating, and opportunities may be brewing.
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MEVHunter_9000
· 01-13 05:07
Yes, yes, yes. Let's wait and see. Hopefully, it's not just another scam to harvest retail investors.
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StablecoinEnjoyer
· 01-13 02:57
Small-cap stocks have been suppressed for five years. It's time for a rebound, or else it would really be unfair to those who held on stubbornly.
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NotFinancialAdvice
· 01-11 00:02
Small-cap stocks have been suppressed for so long, they really need to rebound, or it wouldn't make sense.
Easing measures and interest rate cuts are here, no need to say where the money is flowing.
If the Russell 2000 can't rally this time, that would be too unreasonable.
After five years of suppression, now it's its turn.
Historical data is here; it's time to turn around.
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StablecoinGuardian
· 01-11 00:01
What have the bears been proud of these five years? The rebound is just around the corner.
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ContractCollector
· 01-10 23:58
Small-cap stocks have been pressed to the ground and rubbed for five years. Now that easing measures are in place, they are rebounding directly? I find that hard to believe.
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staking_gramps
· 01-10 23:47
Small-cap stocks are ready to turn around; five years of suppression have indeed accumulated energy.
The Ministry of Finance and the central bank have been cutting interest rates to promote a loose monetary cycle. Coupled with small-cap stocks being thoroughly suppressed by the large caps over the past five years, this combination makes it hard to believe that the Russell 2000 won't see a significant surge this year. The loose environment is paving the way, historical gaps are accumulating, and opportunities may be brewing.