An emotion based stock indicator developed by Maison Matthews. This indicator aims at identifying a bearish/bull trend if he buys/sells a stock position. This is typically used by traders betting the opposite direction. In layman’s term you do the opposite of what he is doing.
A stock indicator developed by VUX to identify bear/bull trends in the market. The indicator tracks whenever VUX enters or exits a stock that belongs to the biotech sector. This is usually used by traders betting in the opposite direction of the stock. In simpler terms, you inverse whatever position that VUX takes.
VUX: I just bought $3000 worth of BPMX
Market: The VUX indicator dictates that you immediately short BPMX
A reliable indicator for the bursting of financial bubbles. Popularized by the unpopular YouTube stock-picker by the same name, the "Mr. Pink Indicator" successfully flagged several notable bubble bursts within the span of a one-month period. This indicator has been used to predict the collapse of GameStop (GME), Ehang (EH), Telsa (TSLA), and Luokung (LKCO). The indicator became popular with major trading firms after Mr. Pink posted a video claiming "the party hasn't even started yet for Ehang" only hours before the stock price collapsed by more than 70%. Mr. Pink is also known for his lack of financialknowledge and improper use of trading leverage.
Mr. Pink said he is bullish on Ehang, so it is time to short the stock; the Mr. Pink Indicator flashed sell signals right before he lost $35,000 on GameStop; Mr. Pink says to go "3x" on TSLA, so we should exit our positions.
symbols that are put at the begining or the end of a sentence to clarify the intention of the message. some examples are: /j (joking), /srs (being serious), s/ (sarcasm)
why do you use tone indicators? /gen (genuine question)
tone indicators help, for example, neurodivergent people. the use of tone indicators makes it easier for them to interpret the tone of a text and avoid miscommunication