A Quote by Ashish Sharma

We always see a trend on TV, and others follow suit. I think 'Rangrasiya' will be a trend setter, too. — © Ashish Sharma
We always see a trend on TV, and others follow suit. I think 'Rangrasiya' will be a trend setter, too.
I always try to be a trend setter. That's what I always tell young people when I'm giving them advice. To go with their heart and don't follow the trends.
A trend is a trend is a trend. But the question is, will it bend? Will it alter its course through some unforeseen force and come to a premature end?
I'm blessed to be a trend setter.
There is a lot of noise out there. I don't want to follow the trend - I want to create the trend.
I looked at the rap community like street kids wanting their own brand. But now I look at that period with the rappers in the 90s as a trend of the moment. What it taught me was never to follow a trend, because trends move on.
A good trend following system will keep you in the market until there is evidence that the trend has changed.
It doesn't take many observations to think you've spotted a trend, and it's probably not a trend at all.
The market being in a trend is the main thing that eventually gets us in a trade. That is a pretty simple idea. Being consistent and making sure you do that all the time is probably more important than the particular characteristics you use to define the trend. Whatever method you use to enter trades, the most critical thing is that if there is a major trend, your approach should assure that you get in that trend.
There has been, for some reason (or more likely an unfortunate accumulation of reasons) a trend over the past several decades for parents to do the work of parenting in the isolation of their own homes - and not only that, this trend has overlapped with the other trend of much deeper parent involvement in raising kids. That you also represent trend No. 3, more people raising kids solo, has only exacerbated a close-to-no-win situation.
What we are saying is that on top of the warming trend there is a long-periodic oscillation that will probably lead to a lower temperature increase than we would expect from the current trend during the next years.
When a long-term trend loses it’s momentum, short-term volatility tends to rise. It is easy to see why that should be so: the trend-following crowd is disoriented.
I don't avoid trends. You do definitely want to be on-trend, but I do like to pick and choose the things that I'm seeing. And not every trend will work on every client of mine.
You have to be unique in your own ways and the ways that you play to find a way to win. You can't always go with the trend that's going on. Sometimes you have to create the trend yourself and be confident in it.
Generally, a rising trend in rates is bearish for stocks; a falling trend is bullish.
Every bubble has two components: something - some real trend, and a misconception about that trend.
To every trend there is a counter-trend. There are a number of pendulums operating and each creates new business opportunities.
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