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.
Reflexivity is the theory that investors' biased beliefs do not just observe market trends but actively shape them. In a reflexive system, there is a two-way feedback loop between the "cognitive function," where participants try to understand reality, and the "manipulative function," where their actions change that reality. For example, if investors believe a company is a winner and drive its stock price up, the company can use that high stock price to raise cheap capital and hire top talent, effectively using the market's bias to fund the fundamentals that make the company a success.
The Human Uncertainty Principle is the idea that thinking participants cannot base their decisions on perfect knowledge because their very presence and thoughts are part of the situation they are trying to understand. Unlike the natural sciences, where a rock does not change its behavior because it is being studied, social sciences like finance are influenced by the theories and expectations of the participants. This creates a state of "fallibility," where our initial understanding is always partial or biased, and these biases can become self-validating within the market.
A bubble typically follows a sequence starting with a real-world trend paired with a misconception. It moves into an "acceleration" phase where the trend and misconception reinforce each other. A critical stage is the "successful test," where the market survives a minor dip or crisis, making investors even more certain and fueling further growth. This leads to a "twilight period" where growth slows and cracks appear, but momentum keeps prices rising. Finally, the "climax" or reversal occurs when the gap between the misconception and reality becomes too wide, leading to a rapid crash fueled by forced liquidations and panic.
The super-bubble refers to a decades-long reflexive loop starting in the 1980s, driven by the trend of increasing credit and leverage and the misconception of "market fundamentalism"—the belief that markets are always self-correcting. Every time a smaller crisis occurred, central banks intervened with liquidity, which acted as a "successful test" that reinforced the belief in the system's resilience. This allowed leverage to build until the subprime mortgage crisis acted as a detonator, causing the feedback loop to flip and the entire global credit system to freeze.
The survival-first approach prioritizes staying alive in the market over being "right." Practical steps include performing a "Feedback Loop Map" to see how a stock price affects a business's actual operations and conducting a "Reflexive Stress Test" to see if a company would collapse if its stock price dropped significantly. Investors are encouraged to cut losses quickly when the narrative shifts, maintain "liquidity preference" during uncertain times, and ensure position sizes are small enough to survive "hundred-year storms" or extreme market volatility.
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