Several months of a churning, up and down market going nowhere, or a very boring,
dull market would probably do the trick.
A dull market is when the price is hanging around a certain price area and the volume is low.
If the volume is low in
a dull market, chances are high that the price will follow its previous trendline.
Also in the drawn «triangel»
a dull market can be discovered.
I don't try to add temporary excitement to
a dull market by deviating from our investment approach.
As the brilliant Dow Theorist William Peter Hamilton wrote a century ago, in 1909, «One of the platitudes most constantly quoted in Wall Street is to the effect that one should never sell
a dull market short.
One of the platitudes most constantly quoted in Wall Street is to the effect that one should never sell
a dull market short.
However,
a dull market might not move enough to offer reasonable profit in fast time frames.
· a changing market ·
a dull market — too much product but with buyer interest · not enough of the particular property type (unique, lake front, etc.) · an emerging market — for example, a new development whose sales could take off once some properties are auctioned · a seller's market with high demand and high competition SELLER Do these characteristics describe the seller?
What had been a very vital market where homes were selling quickly, turned into
a dull market, over the summer months, in June and July, and that affects what a seller can get too.