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traider replied Nov 28, 2011True. However, I would need to migrate my 5 minute rules to other time frames where my trades cross rollover which is why I stick to what I am doing at the moment. I average 100 pips a day which is enough for my needs at the moment. But yeah, I will ...
Illusion of Time(frames)
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traider replied Nov 28, 2011Due to limiting myself to day trades, I have not really given trending much thought. Having said that I tend to position myself for mini trends that start during Asia and finish during NY. I guess I should be working on the other timeframes however ...
Illusion of Time(frames)
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traider replied Nov 28, 2011PA is a hard one. It took me years to get to grips with momentum. I would characterise market data as a minefield so for me its a living, evolving exercise in making my way through it safely. And extremely tiring.
Illusion of Time(frames)
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traider replied Nov 28, 2011Just wondered. You seem rather knowledgeable on a broad range of issues.
Illusion of Time(frames)
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traider replied Nov 28, 2011Don't clutter your mind up. Find a time frame that works for you and go for it. I both bought and sold the Euro last night (NZ time), using candles. 70 and 60 pips each and on 5 minutes. Candles are way more testing than the labels would suggest but ...
Illusion of Time(frames)
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traider replied Nov 28, 2011Objectivity in a forum dedicated to the art of making money, is something of a rare beast. Quite natural given the circumstances.
Illusion of Time(frames)
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traider replied Nov 27, 2011The markets are essentially an auction and the participants with any influence will react at those levels. Whether one is fortunate enough to observe those reaction could be a matter of simple chance or something more metaphysical. However, beyond ...
Illusion of Time(frames)
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traider commented Nov 27, 2011This is where the deflationary descent that will accompany the rest of globalisation, begins. Of course, it will involve making Europe cheap enough to wrest some business away from China without killing the consuming goose in both places.
Weekly preview - A point of no return?
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traider replied Nov 27, 2011Markets are awash with momentum cycles; strong, weak, indifferent and confused. These cycles are a function of specific points in time. Assessing these cycles uses a variety of time based tools, some more magnifying than others. With greater ...
Illusion of Time(frames)
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traider commented Nov 25, 2011You are quick Aaron. That's good. The other point is that Europe and America's crises are not as profound as some might think and in fact merely underline the shift that capital is in the process of making from the old Cold war regionalism to the ...
Germany Buys Itself First-Class Ticket on Titanic
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traider commented Nov 25, 2011The ideas are as follows: 1 Speculation is set to increase as competition spreads and old styles of investing evaporate. The concomitant outcome will see a rise in volatility, the gradual shift to day from position trading for retailers, a rise in ...
Germany Buys Itself First-Class Ticket on Titanic
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traider commented Nov 25, 2011The Third Reich was a feudal manifestation and clumsy in its utilisation of value, not dissimilar to the Islamic Empire with it's subjective notions of usury and the extension of value. Capitalism on the other hand is a progressive development in ...
Germany Buys Itself First-Class Ticket on Titanic
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traider commented Nov 24, 2011The consuming classes are irrelevant in the globalising of profit (other than for their conversion of the dormant into the active). So to the extent that balance sheets are being reset by way of social wealth, any beneficial effect on the grazing ...
Germany Buys Itself First-Class Ticket on Titanic
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traider commented Nov 24, 2011There is no need for a top heavy semi-socialised Europe any longer now that the markets are becoming borderless and deregulated. It must be made to live within the means of capital's requirements......value efficiency.
Germany Buys Itself First-Class Ticket on Titanic
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traider commented Nov 23, 2011Globalised capitalism will be preceded/accompanied by the maximisation of return in the West. At the moment, Western labour enjoys a Cold War premium (bribe) which is no longer necessary as the market place for labour and consumption extends to the ...
How the US is quickly becoming a Third World country
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traider commented Nov 23, 2011Capital has no loyalty.
How the US is quickly becoming a Third World country
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traider commented Nov 22, 2011A good trader does not need much seed capital.
Wall Street Unoccupied With 200,000 Job Cuts
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traider replied Nov 21, 2011What was the lot size and pip take?
I fail again and again and bite the dust
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traider commented Nov 19, 2011The use of private capital is premised on increasing returns as compensation for that use, which invariably comes in the form of the surplus value available in labour and heavily discounted commodities such as oil (with the surplus value of 100 ...
Germany Is Preparing To Kick Countries Out Of Eurozone