If there is one lesson I wish more investors understood, it's this: Stocks rarely move because of what happened. They move because of what people suddenly believe is going to happen next. That realization changed the way I look at markets. When I first started investing, I thought stock prices were primarily driven by earnings reports, economic data, and company announcements. If a company reported great earnings, the stock should rise. If a company missed expectations, the stock should fall. Simple. Logical. Completely wrong. What I eventually discovered is that markets are not pricing machines. They're expectation machines. And expectations are constantly changing. That's where consensus revisions and capital flows come into play. These two forces quietly shape stock performance every day, yet most investors spend almost no time thinking about them. Instead, they obsess over headlines. Meanwhile, the professionals are watching where expectations are moving a...
If there's one lesson the stock market has taught me over the years, it's this: The story always changes before most people notice. Not the facts. Not the earnings. Not the economic data. The story. And in modern markets, stories move money long before fundamentals catch up. That's why I've become obsessed with institutional narratives and market leadership rotation. Because once I started paying attention to who was leading, who was lagging, and what story institutions were telling themselves, the market began making a lot more sense. Most investors think they're investing in companies. They're not. They're investing in narratives. At least in the short and medium term. The market likes to pretend it's a giant weighing machine carefully calculating intrinsic value. That's a nice bedtime story. Reality is much messier. The market is a giant storytelling machine that occasionally remembers earnings matter. Institutional investors don't wake up eve...