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- bobart replied Aug 1, 2015
You know, sideways is also a direction. When the fundamentals seem to say that a move has been spent, that is, if the reason for the fall or rise has been accounted for, then the market usually goes "trendless." That's when I mostly switch to a ...
- bobart replied Jul 10, 2015
wow, great explanation there, venivividici. Thanks!
- bobart replied Mar 29, 2015
NOTHING on a chart tells you what is going to happen, but price action is one way to organize your entries, targets and risk management.
- bobart replied Jan 10, 2015
image Here is Gold to USD daily. Underneath is USDCAD inverted and CrudeLight Feb futures line graphs of closing prices. I wish I'd seen this when crude broke in July.
- bobart replied Jan 9, 2015
Hi, I'm back to work now, so won't be posting much, but fundamentals with a directional bias reminds me of punctuated equilibrium. Stephen Jay Gould was one of my favorite writers (I really liked "The Panda's Thumb.") Anyway, if the markets are like ...
- bobart replied Jan 4, 2015
JP, Yeah, what I posted is like a heat map. I've tried, and heard of others trying, to build a chart or spreadsheet on fundamentals by giving a number to each (fundamental) release weighted by it's importance and it's change up or down from the past ...
- bobart replied Jan 3, 2015
Here's something I do with indexes for each currency - ATR weighted indexes. Below shows USD strength. image Anyway, tell me more about catching (and staying with a breakout.) !
- bobart replied Mar 8, 2014
Is there enough liquidity in stock options for tight stops? (I'm trading a system that depends on having much smaller losses than the winners.) and, by the way, making money...I think the percentage of profitable traders is much higher than 5% - so ...
- Posts by Member Search: 'bobart'