Arraigned “in court”? Oh, no! Saying that, as we’ve lamented before in this space, is to entertain tautological nonsense, for the word “arraign” in itself means, “call or bring (someone) before a ...
It’s not a call based on asset fundamentals (in part because these are often missing), but a self-aware, even self-mocking form of belief. Its reasoning may be tautological, but it at least helps ...