For anyone that doesn't want to watch the video, Ver is set up by the team at CNBC as being a guru in the bitcoin space and he then spends his time outlining a long -
term bearish view for bitcoin, in favor of Bitcoin Cash.
Not exact matches
I am maintaining my oil
view and short
term bias at cautiously
bearish as the current fundamentals remain
bearish and the market seems to be breaking down from a technical perspective.
The current COT situation should therefore be
viewed as a short -
term warning of euro weakness, but not a reason to place a substantial
bearish bet.
Therefore, curve flattener reflects the consensus
bearish volatility
view where asset prices continue to boom under policy accommodation, while curve steepener expresses a bullish volatility thesis where higher
term premium (as a result of «quantitative tightening») would reverse policy - induced private capital displacement and «financial adventurism.»
And while the bullish EUR narrative continues to resonate, both
bearish and bullish
views will be inevitably challenged with Italian elections, January NFP and an ECB meeting due over the next few weeks so near -
term convictions could turn neutral and tarnish the EUR appeal
Despite the recent advance, the long -
term view of DBC is unquestionably
bearish.
While others might
view this dip as
bearish, it is actually healthy for the stock in the long
term.
As the
bearish move already covered significant ground in
terms of percentages, let's see how it changed the long -
term view for the majors.
On the same CNBC segment, Michael Bapis, who heads a wealth management practice affiliated with HighTower Advisors, offered a
bearish view of consumer staples: «Margins are getting compressed so rapidly, and the companies in this space are having trouble to produce better profits, trying to produce earnings, and I don't think they're going to be able to in the short
term.»
Your intermediate -
term view of economics — if things are getting better be bullish, if worse be
bearish.
The covered - call strategy is often employed when an investor has a short -
term neutral - to -
bearish view on the asset and for this reason decides to hold the asset (long) and simultaneously have a short position via the option to generate income from the option premium.