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Tuesday, October 7, 2014
Bruce Lee - Motivation Speech
The principles apply when trader is trading in the markets, very wise words which can be related to one's trading strategy.
Tuesday, September 30, 2014
PAEL Chart 29th September 2014
This is the daily chart of PAEL. The script has made a high of 34.39 on 05/09/14 and right now the price of the script stands at 26.41 which is a difference of 7.98 rupees. it has broken the support of rising wedge, current correction on fibonacci recognition stands at -111%, RSI of 32.21, volatility of -18.74, momentum of -4.05, MFI 11.53. The last support from the last bull run stands at 26 which if broken will lead to the support levels of 24 to 24.40.
No one can predict when will it take a bottom and start to resume its bullish run again because in trading you will never know the bottom price of a script, but an investor would buy this script right now because he/she will know the potential of this script in long term.
All the technical indicators suggests right now to jump in this script when everyone is selling this script in panic, which means a risk to the buyer, but high risk means high return and only those will win who will take high risk in it.
Thursday, September 25, 2014
Tuesday, September 23, 2014
Thursday, September 18, 2014
Tuesday, September 16, 2014
The Market Is Never Wrong
Steve Nison on "market is never wrong"
"One of my non candlestick
seminars is called the "Techniques of Disciplined Trading Using Technical
Analysis." In it, I discuss the importance of a disciplined approach to
trading. To convey this idea, I use the word "discipline" as an
anagram. For each letter of the word DISCIPLINE I offer a trading rule. For the letter N my rule is
"Never trade in the belief the market is wrong.
What do I mean
by the expression, "the market is never wrong?" It means do not try to impose your beliefs on the market.
For example, if you are firmly convinced crude oil is going to rally, wait
until the trend is heading north before buying. Say crude oil is in a bear
market. If you buy in the expectation that a bull market will materialize, you
are then trying to impose your hopes and expectations on the market. You are fighting the trend. This could be disastrous.
You may ultimately be correct in your bullish viewpoint, but by then it may be
too late.
As an analogy,
imagine you are driving along a one-way street. You notice a steamroller going
down this one-way street the wrong way. You stop your car, take out a sign
(that you always carry with you) that reads, "Stop, Wrong Way!" and
hold it in front of the steamroller. You know the steamroller is going in the
wrong direction. But the driver may not see you in time. By the time the
steamroller turns around, it could be too late. By then you may be part of the
pavement.
So it is with
the markets. If you are bucking the trend, your outlook may turn out to be
correct. But by then it may be too late. Margin calls in futures may force you
out of the position before your expected move occurs. Or, worse, in the end,
you may be right, but by then you could be broke.
Do
not try to impose your will on the markets. Be a trend
follower, not a trend predictor. If you are bullish, jump onto up trends,
if bearish, hop onto downtrends. one of the Japanese books I had translated expresses
this idea almost poetically, "buying or selling from the beginning without
knowing the character of the market is the same nonsense as a literary man talking
about weapons. When faced with a large bull or bear market they are sure to
lose the castle; what seems safe is infinitely dangerous. . . . Waiting
for just the right moment is virtuous and essential."
Sunday, September 14, 2014
Importance of Number three in Technical Analysis
The following is a quote from John Murphy's book Technical Analysis of the Futures Markets:
"It's interesting to note how often the number three shows up in the study of technical analysis and the important role it plays in so many technical approaches. For example, the fan principle uses three lines; major bull and bear markets have three phases (Dow theory and Elliott Wave Theory); there are three kinds of gaps some of the more commonly known reversal patterns, such as the triple top and the head and shoulders, have three prominent peaks; there are three different classifications of trend
(major, secondary, and minor) and three trend directions (up, down, and sideways); among the generally accepted continuation patterns, there are three types of triangles-the symmetrical, ascending, and descending; there are three principle sources of information-price, volume and open interest. For whatever the reason, the number three plays a very prominent role throughout the entire field of technical analysis."
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