userque
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Forgot to ask. Is Nugt still a buy or should I ask the former playmate.
Ken,
I'm sure there are better questions you can ask the playmate.
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Forgot to ask. Is Nugt still a buy or should I ask the former playmate.
Yeah. That's about all you can say if you want to be politically correct.![]()
Ken,
I'm sure there are better questions you can ask the playmate.
you could ask her what positions she likes.
Yes!! A beauty with brains. Just goes to prove shes just not another pretty face! She is not wasting any God-given asset or talent.Interesting.
Just a follow up on latest market thoughts from Miss K. Summers. Premium services on her web site.
Great stuff USQ. I haven't done game theory since I finished my Masters years ago and I have a lot of respect with folks that can play with math at that level. All the best to you in your efforts.
FS
2. Patterns repeat, because human nature hasn’t changed for thousand of years
There is nothing new on Wall Street or in stock speculation. What has happened in the past will happen again, and again, and again. This is because human nature does not change, and it is human emotion, solidly build into human nature, that always gets in the way of human intelligence. Of this I am sure.
All through time, people have basically acted the same way in the market as a result of greed, fear, ignorance, and hope. This is why the numerical formations and patterns recur on a constant basis.
I absolutely believe that price movement patterns are being repeated. They are recurring patterns that appear over and over, with slight variations. This is because markets are driven by humans — and human nature never changes.
25 Market Insights From Jesse Livermore
ON SEPTEMBER 15 | IN MARKET WISDOM | BY IVANHOFF
...
2. Patterns repeat, because human nature hasn’t changed for thousand of years
There is nothing new on Wall Street or in stock speculation. What has happened in the past will happen again, and again, and again. This is because human nature does not change, and it is human emotion, solidly build into human nature, that always gets in the way of human intelligence. Of this I am sure.
All through time, people have basically acted the same way in the market as a result of greed, fear, ignorance, and hope. This is why the numerical formations and patterns recur on a constant basis.
I absolutely believe that price movement patterns are being repeated. They are recurring patterns that appear over and over, with slight variations. This is because markets are driven by humans — and human nature never changes.
...
So, how does HFT factor into this?
194840d1437936334-if-you-can-draw-straight-line-you-can-become-successful-trader-slacondt2.pdf - DocDroidCharts are among the most mysterious aspects of the financial markets that the beginning
trader will face. For many people, charts look like a child's experimentations with a
Spirograph. But charts are really nothing more than stories, using symbols rather than
words, like algebra uses symbols instead of numerals (yes, I know that words and numerals
are technically symbols, but you know what I mean). They are a bit like the storyboards
used in producing movies and cartoons, except we use dots and lines rather than drawings
or photographs. Understanding the stories these charts are trying to tell can make you
money. Or, at the very least, save you what could become a great deal of money. ...
There is no course of instruction that anyone can give you.
Nearly every trader follows the same path on his own.
First you will learn about indicators and think they are the best thing ever. You will see all these instances where they would have been profitable. Then you will realize they don't work either alone or in any combination.
Then you will look at other price pattern things like head and shoulders, cup and saucers, etc., and then you will realize those are no more reliable than indicators.
Then you will get pissed and give up for a while.
Then you will read about some other nonsense like Fibonacci levels or magic harmonics or whatever, but you will also realize that those don't seem to work in real time (although they sure look nice in hindsight!).
Then you will hear about "price action" but you will struggle for years to even get a definition of what that means despite hearing traders who claim to be profitable talking about how they only use price action.
You will encounter dozens of traders online who claim to be profitable yet never provide any proof and who also cannot give you direct answers to questions you may ask. They will also never make calls in real time, but they will be sure to post winning charts after the fact showing how they entered exactly at the bottom and sold exactly at the top! In the beginning you will see them as gurus, but eventually you will realize that 100% of them are just trolling people online and your BS detector will develop nicely as a result.
You will develop your own ideas... you will develop your own indicators, they will work better than the commercial ones you learned about when you were a beginner, but they still won't be profitable over time.
You will hear about things like grid trading and think holy crap... that is the holy grail... and then you will learn about the people who blew their account doing it.
Somewhere along the line you will get the genius idea that all you have to do to make money is take a losing system and reverse the buy and sell signals. You'll have dollar signs in your eyes. And then you will test it and realize that the opposite of a losing system is quite often still a losing system. This will cause you much internal struggle as it will make no sense.
Trading seems to be a field of stripping away what doesn't work. You must go through it yourself. I can tell you that I've backtested every commercialy available indicator and system in every possible combination and with every possible parameter and none of them is profitable, but you will not actually believe me when I tell you because you want to believe that something works. You must go through that path alone. It takes months/years before you are finally convinced that "nothing works" and once you finally realize that, THEN you have a framework in your mind for how to begin designing a system that may be profitable.
If you make it that far, you have a chance to be successful. If not, you will be like every other person who is still searching for that holy grail indicator, falling for the hype, and wasting their money on "gurus" who don't teach them anything quantifiable and indicators that don't work, as well as watching their account shrink from losing trades.
It's best if you use a practice account during these steps. Once you are consistently profitable for 3 months on a practice account, then you can start using a real account with small size. Beware, trading with a real account feels entirely different.
6 Stages Of A Trader | Bramesh Technical Analysis
Very interesting description of how traders evolve over time. The pieces of advice Bo Yoder and Vadym Graifer give at the end of the article are spot on. Definitely worth reading as every trader worth his salt can relate to all the different stages. Enjoy.
Published August 1, 2015 by Bramesh
Stage One: The Mystification Stage ...
User 1a2b3cppp posted this in another forum: "Trading seems to be a field of stripping away what doesn't work. "
...Practically everyone goes through this, but few understand that this is all part of the win-lose cycle. They do not yet understand that loss is an inevitable part of any system/strategy/method/whathaveyou, that is, there is no such thing as a 100% win approach.
He accepts fully the responsibility for his trades, including the losses, which is to say that he understands that losses are inevitable and unavoidable. Rather than be thrown by them, he accepts them for what they are, a part of the natural course of business. He examines them, of course, in order to determine whether or not some error was made, particularly one that can be corrected, though true trading errors are rare. But, if not, he simply shrugs off the loss and goes on about his business. He understands, after all, that he is in control of his risk in the market.
He doesn’t rant about his broker or the specialist or the market maker or that vast conspiracy of everyone who’s trying to cheat him out of his money. He doesn’t attempt revenge against the market. He doesn’t fret. He doesn’t fume. He doesn’t succumb to hope, fear, greed. Impulsive, emotional trades are gone. Instead, he just trades.