I used to think I was clever. Not in a “genius investor” way—more like a “guy who reads a few earnings transcripts, watches macro videos at 1.5x speed, and suddenly feels like he understands the global economy” kind of way. I’d build narratives. Tight ones. Convincing ones. Narratives that made me feel like I was one step ahead of the market. Then the market did what it always does—it ignored me completely. That’s when I started paying attention to something far less poetic and far more useful: capital flows. Not headlines. Not opinions. Not forecasts. Actual money moving through the system—specifically, ETF inflows and outflows. And once I started watching that, something clicked. Because unlike narratives, capital flows don’t argue. They don’t rationalize. They don’t tweet. They just… move. The Market Doesn’t Lie—It Just Speaks in Flows Here’s the uncomfortable truth I had to accept: the market doesn’t care what I think should happen. It cares about positioning. It cares ...
I used to believe price action told a story. Not just any story— a rational one . Earnings go up, stock goes up. Fundamentals deteriorate, price adjusts. Supply meets demand somewhere in a tidy equilibrium where logic wins, spreadsheets reign, and everything eventually makes sense. Then I started paying attention to ETF flows. And just like that, the illusion cracked. I Thought I Was Trading Companies. Turns Out I Was Trading Plumbing. There’s a humbling moment every investor hits when they realize they’re not actually trading businesses—they’re trading vehicles. In my case, it hit while watching the Nasdaq. I’d be deep in analysis mode—revenue growth, margins, guidance, TAM expansion—feeling like a disciplined, rational market participant. Meanwhile, the price would whip around like it just drank three energy drinks and forgot what gravity is. Why? Flows. Not fundamentals. Not valuation. Not even sentiment in the traditional sense. Just… flows. Money in. Price up. Money o...