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Euro Last Support or Hope :136

EURO -WEEKLY CHART

Last week ,The epicenter of many of  questions seems to be southern Europe, where Greece, Portugal, Spain and to a lesser extent the remainder of the so-called PIIGS (Portugal, Italy, Ireland, Greece and Spain) have flamed investor concerns that burgeoning public debt may significantly weaken investor demand for sovereign debt and exacerbate an already trouble budgetary crisis.

Many investors have taken to selling the euro is as a means by which to reduce exposure to these problem areas and/or speculate on one or more of these crises spiraling out of control.

-Just look at above chart :Weekly chart includes a powerful rally of Year 2009 and more recently and two-stage selloff, starting in the first half of December and picking up steam over the course of the past 3 ½ weeks as traders looked to capitalize on weakness stemming from the problems in Greece, Portugal and Spain.

ALERT25

Just watch 136 level.Three consecutive close below this level+ Weekly close will take to 131.70-130 level.

-If not breaks 136 & trades above 138 level will create buying upto 140-141 level.

-Best Strategy :Sell on Rise.

-Will update more very soon.

Updated at 13:10/8th Feb/Baroda

3 Trading Wisdom Thoughts

1) Focus on being profitable for the week – Individual trades may go against you and individual trading days can offer little opportunity. As a senior trader once explained to me, for the active trader, however, there are enough fresh opportunities in a week to make it reasonable to set a goal of being profitable for the week. You won’t reach your goal every single week, but the mere act of setting the goal keeps you focused. For example, you don’t want to lose so much money in a single day that you can’t make it back during the other days of the week. You also don’t want to lose so much money on a single trade that you can’t come back during the remainder of the day. When you really push yourself to be profitable every week, you don’t let individual days get away from you. And when you don’t let individual days get away from you, you start managing each trade carefully to ensure that your largest loss won’t exceed your largest gain. Time and again I’ve seen a consistent sign of progress among developing traders: they stop digging themselves into holes.
2) Take what the market gives you – Today I peeled out of several short positions after a spate of very negative TICK readings in the afternoon. I’ve learned that such concentrated selling often precedes nasty short-covering rallies. My S&P position hadn’t made as much profit as my NASDAQ and Russell positions, but the market doesn’t care about that. I took what the market gave me and started the week green. Did the market go down even further after I exited? Absolutely. As one experienced trader explained to me, when the market rewards your position right off the bat, you want to take something off the table. You might let a piece of your position ride if you have a longer-term opinion, but never give green a chance to become red. A winner that turns into a loser is a double loss. (more…)

Thoughts About Traders and Trading

* Risk Management – If you lose 10% of your trading account, you need to make 11.1% on the remaining capital to get back to even. If you lose 20% of your account, you need to make 25% on the remaining capital to return to breakeven. At a 30% loss, you have to make 37.5% to become whole; at 40% loss, you have to make 67% to return to even. Once you’ve lost half your trading capital, you need to double the remainder to replenish your account. Much of trading success is limiting losses and avoiding those fat tails of risk.
* What is a Trader? – If you ask a trader what is a good market, he will tell you that it’s a market that has good volatility; a good market is one that moves. If you ask an investor what is a good market, he will tell you that it’s a rising market. Lots of people try to succeed as traders with the mindset of investors. It doesn’t work.
* Refutation – The story goes that Samuel Johnson, upon hearing Bishop Berkeley’s theory that objects existed in mind only, kicked a rock in front of him, announcing, “Thus I refute Berkeley!” The incident came to mind when I met with a trader today who trades very actively every day, has made money on more than 80% of days this year, and has made several million dollars this year. His performance was clearly documented by his firm and the firm’s risk manager. Thus he refutes efficient market theory. 
* Success – When I see traders like the one above (quite a few at his firm are up more than a million dollars this year), it’s an inspiring reminder that success *is* possible to those who work diligently at trading as a career. The support of a superior firm doesn’t hurt, either.

Bernard Baruch’s 10 Trading Rules

While pure trend followers and technical analysts will not agree with all of Mr. Baruch’s principles it is interesting to read through them, they are the same as some of the top traders and investors of our age. Some of these all traders can agree on.

Bernard Baruch was a millionaire in his early thirties after a few good runs in the stock market and devoted the remainder of his life serving the public and helping the U.S. win World Was I and World War II. He was a big believer in serving his country and that was the main purpose for the remainder of his life after he made his fortune.

Here is a summary of his 10 rules summarized:

1. Only speculate if you can do it full time.
2. Ignore inside information and tips.
3. Have a complete understanding of a companies fundamentals before you buy the stock.
4. Don’t try to buy bottoms or sell tops.
5. Cut your losses quickly.
6. Focus on and buy only a few stocks.
7. Review and update your investments periodically for changes.
8. Study your tax position to know when to sell at greatest advantage.
9. Never invest all your funds. Keep a reserve.
10. Stick to the field you know best in investments.

His biography is a great read for anyone interested in this great man and master trader who counseled presidents and was a close associate of Winston Churchill. It is interesting that it shows how far ahead of his time Mr. Baruch was in not only stock speculating but also discrimination and economics.  If you are reading it for only his advice on stocks just read Chapter 19: My investment philosophy. It is one of the greatest chapters you will find anywhere on advice for successful market speculation. He will explains to readers that economic conditions do not drive prices, peoples perceptions do. Cut your losses fast. Sell your worst performers and keep your best. Know what you are investing in. You can only truly learn the rules of stock trading by experiencing the losses personally.

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