Archives of “January 10, 2019” day
rssTrading Quotes from Way of Turtle by Curtis Faith
Dont spent all your time admiring the fancy tools in the magazine.
First learn how to use the basic ones well. Its not the size of your tools that counts but how you use them.
Keep it simple. Simple time-tested methods that are well executed will beat fancy complicated method every time.
Trading with poor methods is like learning to juggle while standing in a rowboat during the storm. Sure, it can be done, but it is much easier to juggle when one is standing on a solid ground.
Trading is not a sprint; it is boxing. The market will beat you up, screw with your head, and do anything it can to defeat you. But when the bell sounds at the end of the twelfth round, you must be standing in the ring in order to win.
The market does not care how you feel. It will not prop up your ego or console you when you are down.
Therefore, trading is not for everyone. If you are unwilling to face the truth about the markets and the truth about your own limitations, fears and failures, you will not succeed. (more…)
Banks Are Obsolete & Will Not Exist As We Know Them In 10 Years -VIDEO
18 Cognitive Biases
Day-Trading = Right-Livelihood ???
Day-trading – Is it different from working towards right livelihood ?
Day-trading seems to work out pretty well for brokers, Blue Channels ,Website Analysts and day-trade-seminar vendors, all of whom might appear in the same person.
DT = DT
Day Trading may have more in common
with Delirium Tremens
You don't have to understand why prices are moving to profit from them. The best way to learn to trade is by trading.
Kiss That V-Shaped Recovery Good-Bye: The U.S. "Worse Than Greece," Says Economist
There’s been many letters and symbols used over the last year to describe the shape of the U.S. economic recovery. There’s the strong V-shaped recovery; the square root shaped recovery to connote a strong recovery followed by a period of flat to no growth; and the W-shaped recovery favored by those believing in a double dip recession.
Tech Ticker guest Michael Pento has a new twist on the discussion. Pento, senior market strategist with Delta Global Advisors believes this is a tee-pee shaped recovery with the top of that tee-pee having already formed in the fourth quarter.
Pento is negative on America’s near term economic prospects for three main reasons: too little bank lending, too few jobs and too much public and private debt. “I’ve never seen a v-shaped recovery occur when commercial bank lending was down 7% year over year. So, small business are not getting loans to create capital goods and to expand and hire individuals,” he observes.
Exacerbating the problems at home, is what he describes, as a weak economy abroad. With China looking to clamp down on growth, the EuroZone struggling with its own debt problems, Pento asks, “Where is the growth going to come from in demand from overseas?
When he says “demand” he’s referring not only to products and services but also to our growing debt burden. As the price of servicing our deficit grows, when the Federal Reserve tightens monetary policy, Pento is confident others will realize what he already does: the situation in the U.S. is “worse than Greece.”
The way he sees it, there’s a strong potential for a bond and dollar crisis when China starts selling Treasuries. “Tell me which shape recovery that will yield for the United States?”
Upcoming Webinar on 6th Jan :ATR ,Gann Square -By Anirudh Sethi (Now 100% Booked )
Date : 6th Jan ‘2018
Time :10 :00 AM to 12 :00 Noon
Subject :ATR & How To Trade GANN SQUARE
To know More ,Join us…………….send mail to : [email protected]
Yes ,220 Traders are booked !!
Trading quote
“The word ‘trading’ is not the way I think of things. I may be a trader in the sense that my frequency of transactions is relatively high, but the word ‘investing’ would apply just as much, if not more. In my mind, trading implies an anticipation of a sale at the time of purchase. Good trading is a peculiar balance between the conviction to follow your ideas and the flexibility to recognize when you have made a mistake. The balance between confidence and humility is best learned through extensive experience and mistakes. There should always be respect for the person on the other side of the trade. Always ask yourself: Why does he want to sell? What does he know that I don’t? All great traders are seekers of truth. The markets are always changing, and the successful trader needs to adapt to these changes.”