
Imagine that there was only one car dealership in the whole of Great Britain. The display shows the number of used cars. The price of cars is a solid topic of conversation in every dining room and barber shop in the country. Usually the showroom sees massive crowds of shoppers arriving at the gate on Saturday morning. Deals force the cash ring to ring all day, until the last Uier leaves at sunset.
At this moment, statistics dive to satisfy the nation's great desire to find out the average price of a car. On this occasion, they discover that 1,000 cars were sold that day, and since the day small cars, large cars, budget and luxury cars were sold, the average price reached £ 10,000. When news breaks the population like last Saturday, the average price was only £ 9,500. Everyone feels good, because for some strange reason they are inextricably linked this figure with the price of their own cars on the disk.
Now, one Saturday disaster stuck. You see that the national exhibition hall was built on the island, and the bridge that connected the mainland with the island was destroyed by a massive storm. The only people who could get into the exhibition hall were people who lived on the island itself. Being residents of a small island with small roads, they did not need luxury cars. They needed only small hatchbacks that could get them to the shops and back.
The same day, the showroom is closed, and, despite the sales, the statistics were still doing their job. There were a total of fifty sales, and the average sale price dropped to 5,000 pounds. The demand for luxury cars was still there - it was just blocked for a while. For all of you, philosophers, mathematicians, or other parishioners, I ask you one question: did the script give the value of a luxury car that has fallen due to truncated demand?
This, of course, is an allegory of the British market. There are no buyers at the moment, but even the biggest bears freely admit that this is not so long. My philosophical question goes to any buffs. Please explain this to me - an answer can mean a lot of money!

