Fast Eddie B
Philosopher
I'm pretty sure there is no "market" for demons in TV static.![]()
Perhaps.
But have you considered that they may be the Forex manipulators?
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I'm pretty sure there is no "market" for demons in TV static.![]()
no arguments that you can get lucky gambling and waiting a decade too, but each to their own, eh?
But put a speculator who makes multiple trades in a day against an investor who may only have a handful of trades in a year, and I think most dispassioned observers could easily discern which had more in common with real gambling. But the game of "who's the gambler?" does little to advance this discussion, so I'll try to leave it at that.
Sore point with me, since compulsive gambling has had a major effect on my life*.
Gambler's Anonymous guidelines highly recommend that compulsive gamblers stay away from equity trading in any form. It's very easy to go from investing in municipal bonds or a stock fund, which I would not consider gambling except under the broadest use of the term, to much shorter term speculating, which I think shares much more in common with true gambling. Day trading seems to satisfy the need for "action" that long term investing does not.
But, yes, to a random-walker some luck is involved in eithet case. Buying Google or Facebook at or near their IPO's could be called a "gamble", since neither had established that they could, in fact, find a way to monetize their brand recognition.
Similarly, buying Apple when they were struggling and Steve Jobs had just come back was a "gamble", but one informed by past experience and intuition. I took a similar gamble with Chrysler a long time ago and won. I tried to repeat that pattern with Pan Am and lost.
But put a speculator who makes multiple trades in a day against an investor who may only have a handful of trades in a year, and I think most dispassioned observers could easily discern which had more in common with real gambling. But the game of "who's the gambler?" does little to advance this discussion, so I'll try to leave it at that.
*though it matters little, I was not the compulsive gambler.
The Central Scrutinizer said:“Activity is the enemy of investment.” – Warren Buffett Although, you may not want to take investment advice from a "rube" with $50 billion.
"Ineffective Activity means you get bailed out?"
I am not treating this as an investment, it is a job.
The plan is to get up every day and make money. when I am confident enough that I can continue growing the account systematically and it has doubled at least once, then I will probably seed it with a bit more money and look to bank the first 10% profits to cover inflation every year and use the surplus as wages.
Again, good luck with that. Does not sound like the kind of job that would appeal to me, but if you can make it work, great.
As far as how much you could have made had you not been "on the move", it does seem like you're pointing out the extent that this will have to be an all consuming endeavor to work properly. I suspect that even if by Tuesday you're up enough to go to the beach, it's unlikely you'll do so with more profits just there for the taking.
Anyway, let us know when your original stake has doubled - and no fair using the amount the account sank to before you honed your strategy. That's "cherry picking" defined.
PS - do you pay any tax on your gains? If so, what is the rate and is it computed annually?
these kind of predictions im more comfortable with, because this is aligned to what Im doing every day. every time I commit my money to the game, I am making a real prediction and at every TP level it has come true.
so I think I can do significantly better than chance here.
Option 2 at this point, it rallied a bit higher than I expected but retraced leaving only another pin through the upper trend line. I'll be shorting rallies on this until they stoprun the floor (wherever it ends up being) at which point I'll go long.
[qimg]http://clip2net.com/clip/m0/1375558094-clip-30kb.png[/qimg]
because Ive thought from all the way back here it was coming back down to 13500 ish before any breakout higher was possible, I was just early again, see post
so now we've been back down again, I'd be very surprised if the floor wasnt taken out prior to any big move upwards.
[qimg]http://clip2net.com/clip/m0/1375625404-clip-36kb.png[/qimg]
although the cycles seem to run quite well, trading this is another thing entirely, unless you can just get lucky and take the big ones that then gap in your direction, because a $30 gap when you have a $5 stoploss is a 6% hit instead of 1%.
the range of the cycles expands and contracts very fast too, by comparison to Forex where Average Daily Range is quite precise usually.
definitely only swing trading material I think, maybe hit it every month or 2 with smaller positions and wider stops when a really promising looking one sets up. like soon, for a short, by the looks of it. ok what about if I teach myself to trade AAPL and trade it exclusively on the $1m demo, and still pull it off?![]()
at 200x leverage and 5% risk that's er.. $53500 x10? lulz again.
does that help?
Fast Eddie B said:Again, let us know if and when you've doubled your stake. The rest is really just talk (and pretty pictures).
And its good to remember that one can walk into any casino and walk up to the roulette wheel with $10,000 and bet red or black or odd or even or high or low and have close to an even chance of doubling his or her stake.
Sounds like a lot less work!
Again, let us know if and when you've doubled your stake.
why are you avoiding all my questions? why doesn't a single person want to suggest a single alternate theory for the very clear 3 push market cycles in every single thing? how is it, could it be, possible that newsneverrarely breaks this, only interrupts for a bit?
For the same reason we don't "suggest" alternate theories for faces in static or lines on tea leaves. This is a skeptics forum, after all.
Real money, not simulations.
Page 20 Distribution
At the potential top of a bull market, many professional traders will be looking to sell stock bought at lower levels to take profits. Most of these traders will place large orders to sell, not at the current price available, but at a specified price range. Any selling has to be absorbed by the market-makers, who have to create a 'market’. Some sell orders will be filled immediately, some go, figuratively, 'onto the books‘. The marketmakers in turn have to resell, which has to be accomplished without putting the price down against their own, or other traders’ selling. This process is known as distribution, and it will normally take some time for the process to complete.
In the early stages of distribution, if the selling is so great that prices are forced down, the selling will stop and the price will be supported, which gives the market-maker, and other traders, the chance to sell more stock on the next wave up. Once the professionals have sold most of their holdings, a bear market starts, because markets tend to fall without professional support.
Option 2 at this point, it rallied a bit higher than I expected but retraced leaving only another pin through the upper trend line. I'll be shorting rallies on this until they stoprun the floor (wherever it ends up being) at which point I'll go long.
should we look at market correlations? what indices are people personally interested in?
I'm sure we can probably find the ramp and carry currencies for most of them if we look?
although I'm now suspecting maybe you'd just rather not know?![]()
Or we don't care.![]()