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- 13 Results (2 Threads , 11 Replies )
- randomuser replied Sep 9, 2011
I'd be surprised if the SNB were to "lose" any time soon. They can print as much money as they need to sell, live with inflation a bit while those who've bought swiss francs live with negative interest rates and the threat/possibility of further ...
- randomuser replied Sep 8, 2011
Anybody should be happy if they can consistently capture 1 pip a day. IMO it's a dangerous attitude to have. I certainly won't say it's impossible, but the market does not lend itself to rigid targets. You take a trade when there's an opportunity; ...
- randomuser replied Aug 30, 2011
Or maybe you're wrong with your SL. If you put on a trade for a reason with certain expectations, then the invalidation of that reason or the unfulfillment of those expectations is when you should exit. The expectations may or may not involve having ...
- randomuser replied Aug 26, 2011
It depends on the reasons for your having taken the trade. Yes hoping for the best is gambling. When you take a mechanical trade, you are hoping for the best because there's no specific reason for your trade to succeed. You just took some pattern or ...
- randomuser replied Aug 26, 2011
Interesting. You appear to be operating under the premise (illusion) that the market is not predictable, and therefore attempting to predict movement and trading on that opinion is gambling. Of course, if your belief is false (which it is), then ...
- randomuser replied Aug 2, 2011
Trizzle, I get your analysis for deciding to long or short, but entry's a whole 'nother beast - how do you manage to always pick the bottom or top??
- randomuser replied Jan 11, 2011
See Osler's paper Price Discovery in Currency Markets url
- randomuser replied Jan 11, 2011
By consumption I mean market orders consuming limits (bids/offers). If a bunch of market buy orders come in and consume the liquidity at the best offer, boom price moves. Then if there is buying interest to continue consuming offer liquidity, and ...
- randomuser replied Jan 11, 2011
To me they are one and the same. More buyers than sellers causes pressure. Obviously I don't mean *actual* buyers/sellers just net liquidity consumption.
- randomuser replied Jan 10, 2011
In a way yes and in a way no. We (traders) make up the market and our actions cause it to move and behave as it does - therefore to the extent that we use predetermined levels to enter or exit, the market will be "based" on those predetermined ...
- Posts by Member Search: 'randomuser'