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Flat Market


A market condition in which stocks are traded within a relatively flat range. That is, prices fluctuate around the average level, without exhibiting a discernible trend. Investors dread a flat market because in such a market it is hard for them to make money. Market indexes attempt to make an upward or downward move but end up just about at their starting level.  Flat trading is typically indicative of investor uncertainty. An example is the flat market of 1966-1982 (markets tended to swing endlessly from boom to bust and then the other way around (the market was stuck in a trading range over a long period of time).

A flat market is also known as a sideways drift or a sideways market.



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This section covers a wide-ranging array of terms and concepts, among others, in the area of exchanges and financial marekts at large ...
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