The Market Trends of the “Supply and Demand Demon” Tetsuo Inoue – Professional Market Analysis Know-How and Notable Stocks Revealed! | Episode 14
Tetsuo Inoue Profile
Inoue, Tetsuo. Representative of Spring Capital, member of the Association for Determination of Japanese Securities Analysts. After graduating from Sophia University, he served as head of operations at a domestic insurance company, then transitioned to become Chief Strategist and Head of Japanese Equity Operations at UAM Japan Inc. (now Old Mutual Group). Subsequently he held similar roles at Proud Investment Advisors and MCP Group, one of Asia’s largest fund-of-funds operating companies, before becoming independent. Known as the “demand and supply demon,” he also serves as a personality on Nikkei CNBC TV programs “Night Express” and “〜Aggressive IR〜 Market Breakthrough,” and on Radio NIKKEI “Asazi.”
From original technical analysis and supply-demand trends, he analyzes the direction of the stock market (stock indices) from his unique perspective in his e-newsletter “Market Trends,” and a video school where he and Bコミ (Shintaro Sakamoto) explain the market and introduce selected stocks, “Winner’s Screening - Stock Hybrid Battle -” is well received on GogoJungle.
Newsletter:Market Trends
Video School:Winner’s Screening - Stock Hybrid Battle -
*This article is a republished and edited version of an article from FX Tactics.com May 2021 issue. Please note that the market information written in the body may differ from current market conditions.
New Words Born in the Market
In markets, new terms are constantly created, and the term “Robinhooders” was coined for users who buy and sell using the commission-free securities investing app provided by Robinhood Financial in the United States.
Originally, they bought up stocks with high short interest relative to liquidity, such as GameStop (video game retailer), AMC Theatres (cinemas), and Express (apparel), aiming to force short sellers to cover through margin calls (additional collateral), targeting even commodities like silver futures. While this movement initially appeared to have peaked, with GameStop’s stock price falling from a January 27 peak of $347.51 to $40.59 as of February 19, the action seems to have subsided.