Markets aren't always rational; they're reflexive. Learn how George Soros uses feedback loops to spot bubbles and use a survival-first trading strategy.

The market is almost always wrong in the sense that it’s always presenting a biased view of the future, but that bias has the power to make itself come true. It’s a hallucination that shapes itself.
샌프란시스코에서 컬럼비아 대학교 동문들이 만들었습니다
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샌프란시스코에서 컬럼비아 대학교 동문들이 만들었습니다

Lena: You know, Miles, I was looking at some old market charts today, and it’s wild how we’re taught that prices just calmly reflect "reality." But then you look at someone like George Soros, who basically says the exact opposite—that prices actually *create* reality.
Miles: It’s such a trip, right? Most of us are raised on the Efficient Market Hypothesis, this idea that markets are these perfect, rational weighing machines. But Soros’s whole philosophy in *The Alchemy of Finance* is that markets are actually "laboratories" for historical chaos. He argues that our biased beliefs as traders don’t just observe the trend; they literally fuel the boom-bust cycles we see.
Lena: Exactly! It’s that "reflexivity" concept. Like, if everyone thinks a company is a winner, the stock price doubles, which then lets the company raise $500 million in cheap capital to actually *become* a winner. The price wasn't just right; it made itself right.
Miles: Right, and that feedback loop is where the "alchemy" happens, but it’s also why things get so dangerous when the loop reverses. So, let’s dive into how we can actually use these reflexive patterns to spot when a market is lying to us and what action takeaways we can grab from Soros’s survival-first playbook.