Profit has no place to hide!

Our Market Paradigm

The market is a self-organizing and self-developing system that is inherently unpredictable. Economy and market are "far-from-equilibrium" systems that, in contemporary scientific language, belong to the class of open, dissipative systems that require the infusion of energy and matter to sustain themselves.

In a system like this, the structures appear and disappear as a result of complex interactions of energy, matter and entropy in a spontaneous and unpredictable manner.
Belgian scientist Ilya Prigogine, who pioneered research in the field, had won the Nobel Chemistry Prize in 1977.
These systems are constantly in flux, changing as you read this brief and, what's very important, changing irreversibly. Open dissipative system can be moved out of equilibrium by a very small force or change. This change in itself can cause a string of events that may produce an effect sometimes called a "butterfly effect".

The market can also be described as a price discovery mechanism. The price discovery is in itself a function of information flows between market participants of all kinds. As bits of information get lost along the way, the system (market, economy) moves out of equilibrium towards some bifurcation point at which pure chance will decide the direction in which the system will develop further.

Contrary to the common view mandated by traditional economic theory, the market is not efficient but it gravitates toward efficiency all the time. This concept is counterintuitive and therefore is difficult to grasp.

The price of anything on the market is not a given "thing", it's a process.