It's almost surreal how desensitized market participants have become to rallies. When the S&P 500 hits yet another all-time high, it barely registers as noteworthy anymore. There's no Bloomberg red headline, no sense of alarm—just a collective shrug. "That's what stocks do," the narrative goes. Risk appetite has become so normalized that record levels in major indices feel like background noise rather than milestones worth discussing.
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OnchainArchaeologist
· 14h ago
Numbness is just numbness, a new high is a new high, anyway no one cares when it drops.
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HalfPositionRunner
· 14h ago
Numbness has set in; new highs are no longer valuable. This is the monster the market has bred with its daily rise and fall.
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CryptoPhoenix
· 14h ago
Numbness? This is actually the most dangerous signal, brother.
Wait, think about it the other way—maybe this is what the bottom range should look like?
It's almost surreal how desensitized market participants have become to rallies. When the S&P 500 hits yet another all-time high, it barely registers as noteworthy anymore. There's no Bloomberg red headline, no sense of alarm—just a collective shrug. "That's what stocks do," the narrative goes. Risk appetite has become so normalized that record levels in major indices feel like background noise rather than milestones worth discussing.