Jump to content

Welcome to the new Traders Laboratory! Please bear with us as we finish the migration over the next few days. If you find any issues, want to leave feedback, get in touch with us, or offer suggestions please post to the Support forum here.

  • Welcome Guests

    Welcome. You are currently viewing the forum as a guest which does not give you access to all the great features at Traders Laboratory such as interacting with members, access to all forums, downloading attachments, and eligibility to win free giveaways. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free. Create a FREE Traders Laboratory account here.

thalestrader

Reading Charts in Real Time

Recommended Posts

Thales - questions on a chart, just put them directly on the screenshot.

 

thanks

 

I took the first and the 2nd trade today myself in the ES.

 

The trade you asked about as to why not a trade, IMO it doesn't look right. I've been doing the 2Test type entry Thales described for a while now.

 

On the one you listed, it seems like there wasn't 2 tests. When I look for the 2tests, I want to see an actual retracement off of the high at least some degree before the actual B.O.

 

A lot of Thales' trades don't fit that criteria and are other types of entries.

 

ALL my trades (and ALL the ones I've posted here) have an entry with the 2 Tests occuring prior to my entry. This means I watch a WHOLE lot of trades go on w/o me(a lot of which look good otherwise), but I figured I'd focus on only one setup for now.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I didn't catch this one, a lot of new tv shows were on tonight, damn Fringe. ;)

 

But the G/U seems to offer something every night.

 

First picture is the micro look, second is the macro in what seems to be obvious levels of support.

17September2099_GU1.jpg.1c988b2dca9cab7e0f9d1aa2568059e0.jpg

17September2099_GU2.jpg.10c32478f96fe6a3a1a7bbd4add1b10c.jpg

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Possible breakdown on the 6B

 

Let's see if "X" marks the spot. I anticipate that 6B makes a new low below 1.6400.

 

Hi Folks,

 

X did indeed mark a spot, if not necessarily the spot.

 

5aa70f28221e3_09-17-20096BXMarkstheSpot1.thumb.jpg.e05954885dd0571222cb835d4d21fbd8.jpg

 

I also have attached a current view of the weekly GBPUSD. I'll be trading a break of the blue line at 1.6100, with first target 11 handles down at 1.500, and second target 26 handles down with a retest of the 1.3500 low. This is not a trade where I place a stop 700 ticks above the entry point above the lower high. This is a trade where I probe the market in order to attack it. I will look for a favorable short entry on 4 hour down to the 15 minute, and look for a move that moves swiftly away from entry so that risk can be minimized while allowing the move to mature.

 

5aa70f2827b41_09-17-2009GBPUSDWeeklySellStop1_6100.thumb.jpg.cafa508f2fa4470d7964112737c5691f.jpg

 

I once heard (or read ... I do not remember) another breakout trader say that, "Money is made in chunks. You can't save a million dollars. You have to make it." I will treat the potential opportunity on the weekly GBPUSD as one where I trade for chunks, not scalp for crumbs, while making sure to keep any loss(es) crumblike, rather than letting it take a chunk out of my capital.

 

Best Wishes,

 

Thales

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
I've been doing the 2Test type entry Thales described for a while now.

 

On the one you listed, it seems like there wasn't 2 tests. When I look for the 2tests, I want to see an actual retracement off of the high at least some degree before the actual B.O.

 

Hi Forrest,

 

I would say I feel the same way ... I want to see price try to rally or try to decline form the second test, and then breakout.

 

A lot of Thales' trades don't fit that criteria and are other types of entries.

 

I look for the second test when trading the ES, but it is the same type of entry as most of the trades I post, wouldn't you say?

 

Best Wishes,

 

Thales

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Hi Forrest,

I look for the second test when trading the ES, but it is the same type of entry as most of the trades I post, wouldn't you say?

 

Most yes. I could be wrong, but it seems like some trades don't meet the 'strict' criteria of the 2tests (unless you are looking on a smaller time frame than the one posted), but I figured that was just because you can tell when a breakout is going to be particularly useful since you've been doing it for a while?

 

Like THIS one. Now I wouldn't have shorted at this point.

 

Or HERE is another one I asked you about before, because I could see why you would enter before you explained it. And while they were indeed breakouts, I would say they don't fit the necessary criteria to give a newb like me the confidence to jump in.

 

Sometimes I do see what seems to be a good area to trade the BreakOut w/o meeting my criteria, and more times than not they work out, but I also get faked out quite a bit. Eventually I think it will become more obvious.

 

Does what I'm saying make sense?

Edited by forrestang

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
1) Trade 1 stop loss was 1062. I mistyped it here as 1062.25. The low prior to the entry was 1062.25, so stop loss was placed 1 tick below. After trigger, price pulled back to 1062.25 and then hit 1070 target. If some had set a stop loss based upon what I typed rather than the chart, then they would have been stopped out. My stop was 1062.

 

2) Trade 2 was entered on an stop at 1062. I believe I did type the correct stop loss in that post, which was 1065.25 for that trade.

 

3) I did not think of that as a short break there in real time, Brownie. And looking at it now, I do not see it as anything special either. Now, if you are going to ask me why I don't se anything there, I can only answer that I do not see that as a favorable place either to go short or to add to a short position.

 

Best Wishes,

 

Thales

 

RE #3: Would you agree that there was a '2 test', meaning price did test the exact same price level twice after a push off in between? If so, would that qualify as a book '2 test' or not? Just trying to see if I am missing something there.

 

 

This one ended in a loss of -.50/contract.

 

Total for the day, in hindsight, wouldashouldacoulda been +8.50 points, as the second half of the first trade should have been a +1.50 stop. I kept a break even stop, so the +1.5 on the chart is theoretical, not actual. The second trade stopped its decline before my 55.25 target, and was stopped out for +1.75 on the whole position. The third trade handed me my only loss today, -.50 on the whole position. Total was a mere +7 points after a whole lot of trading (for me). I will probably not even look at the ES tomorrow.

 

 

Is that b/c this threads recent focus on the ES may have taken you away from other, easier trades? Or b/c it's Friday? Or...

 

:)

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
I took the first and the 2nd trade today myself in the ES.

 

The trade you asked about as to why not a trade, IMO it doesn't look right. I've been doing the 2Test type entry Thales described for a while now.

 

On the one you listed, it seems like there wasn't 2 tests. When I look for the 2tests, I want to see an actual retracement off of the high at least some degree before the actual B.O.

 

A lot of Thales' trades don't fit that criteria and are other types of entries.

 

ALL my trades (and ALL the ones I've posted here) have an entry with the 2 Tests occuring prior to my entry. This means I watch a WHOLE lot of trades go on w/o me(a lot of which look good otherwise), but I figured I'd focus on only one setup for now.

 

To me, that 3rd one did resemble a 2 test. Price was tested at the identical level 2 times, in between the 2 tests there was a push up.

tl1.jpg.5ca60fb301086261a26733f68e97281c.jpg

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
I didn't catch this one, a lot of new tv shows were on tonight, damn Fringe. ;)

 

But the G/U seems to offer something every night.

 

First picture is the micro look, second is the macro in what seems to be obvious levels of support.

 

Other possible 2 tests?

tl2.png.bfb846f301ded4886ccd8469cb2003ea.png

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Other possible 2 tests?

 

I was responding to your last post, but I think I can convey my thouhgts based on your recent post.

 

And this is just the way I see it, I'm still getting a handle on things myself. If anyone has better ideas please post.

 

Brown,

When I look for the testing to occur, I am wanting to see actual swings, that encompass several bars. Not a 5min bar occuring at 8:30 for example(depending on what bar interval you're using), and the next bar occuring at 8:35 that matches the 8:30 bar. I want to give it time to develop, so you've got plenty of time to watch the test develop.

 

What I'm saying(for a long) is that i want to see a swing high, followed by a down retracement, followed by another swing high, followed by a retracement, THEN get ready to enter the Breakout. I have attached a chart showing this and some commentary, the chart of mine you posted with a wider tf.

 

So someone asked me yesterday with the GU short i took why I didn't get long. To me, I was worried about the possible resistance overhead. Which wasn't super solid, but to me it pushed me away. Also what I said earlier to this quote below was that if you look to the left, you'll likely see some resistance overhead, or support below where your entry might be that would make you aprehensive about taking the trade.

this is definitely a good technique thales. I have such a hard time with being patient for this kind of thing though. looking at my chart of gbp/usd i see 4 tests in a row though i expect it to break out soon

 

 

I have attached a chart showign this and some commentary.

2testexplained.thumb.jpg.9e2c3c6ee229e32159d83786c251d7ee.jpg

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
I look for the second test when trading the ES

 

Most yes. I could be wrong, but it seems like some trades don't meet the 'strict' criteria of the 2tests

 

Hi Forrest,

 

I use the double test on the ES.

 

The examples you showed were of Yen futures and Pound futures. I do not need a double test to trade a breakout on a currency future.

 

Best Wishes,

 

Thales

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
To me, that 3rd one did resemble a 2 test. Price was tested at the identical level 2 times, in between the 2 tests there was a push up.

 

Hi Brownie,

 

Well, yes, strictly speaking price did trade at exactly the same low.

 

But I approach it the way Forrest described: I would look for price to stop its decline, and then rally sufficiently to create an identifiable counter swing, followed by a swing back down to test the prior swing low. Now, I'd trade the break of that low on the very next bar. I would not look for yest another swing high before trading the break.

 

What you are pointing to is a double test low that occurred within one down swing, not a double test of two separate swing lows separated by at least one intervening swing high.

 

What you describe as a "push up" did not encompass a range of price movement that would qualify as a swing (it is, after all, an "inside bar," and as such it cannot be a separet swing from the prior bar, the activity of which completely encompasses the activity of the "push up" bar. Now, had there been a lateral consolidation for several bars, even if all of them were inside that first bar that printed the low, then, I would likely have traded a break. But a single inside bar does not, for the purposes of the way I approach this, sufficient to be a range unto itself. And, the whole of the particular pattern you point to is really three bars, of which the range of the second and third is each inside the initial bar of the pattern.

 

Best Wishes,

 

Thales

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Hi Forrest,

 

I use the double test on the ES.

 

The examples you showed were of Yen futures and Pound futures. I do not need a double test to trade a breakout on a currency future.

 

Best Wishes,

 

Thales

 

Good morninh

 

Why are currency pairsd different as far as the x2 test is concerned?

 

Thank you

 

Gabe

 

PS. Thank you for your patience and detailed explanations.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Is that b/c this threads recent focus on the ES may have taken you away from other, easier trades? Or b/c it's Friday? Or... :)

 

I just felt like it was a lot of work yesterday. Friday's have been just as good for me as any other day, though during the summer, I tend not to trade them because I like to do other things on summer Fridays. In general, if I am flat at 11:30-12:00 on a Friday, I will not initiate new positions, even though I will sometimes watch through the close. Today I will flatten at 11:30-12:00 regardless, as I have things to do this afternoon.

 

As far as the focus of the thread, most of my trading is stocks, but it seems that folks are more interested in futures, and so I have decided that I would share futures rather than stock trades here.

 

Best Wishes,

 

Thales

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
I just felt like it was a lot of work yesterday. Friday's have been just as good for me as any other day, though during the summer, I tend not to trade them because I like to do other things on summer Fridays. In general, if I am flat at 11:30-12:00 on a Friday, I will not initiate new positions, even though I will sometimes watch through the close. Today I will flatten at 11:30-12:00 regardless, as I have things to do this afternoon.

 

As far as the focus of the thread, most of my trading is stocks, but it seems that folks are more interested in futures, and so I have decided that I would share futures rather than stock trades here.

 

Best Wishes,

 

Thales

 

Statistically intraday stock swings are larger than index swings. Is that the reason you prefer stocks to index futures?

 

Gabe

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Why are currency pairs different as far as the x2 test is concerned?

 

Hi Gabe,

 

I do not know why it is so - size of markets? relative percentage of retail vs professional traders? number of highly liquid hours/day? I do not know. If you are asking me why I trade that way, I do it because it works best for me.

 

Best Wishes,

 

Thales

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Statistically intraday stock swings are larger than index swings. Is that the reason you prefer stocks to index futures?

 

Gabe

 

I just ran some numbers on the ATR(20) of stocks > $50 devided by the closing price for yesterday.

SPY representing ES.

>> there were 523 stocks in the group.

>> SPY was #434 meaning that close to 83% of Stocks have a daily range larger than that of SPY=ES.

>> ~24% of the stocks have an ATR(20)/Close double that of SPY-ES

 

The above does not take daily volune into account.

 

My point is that if one catches a move in a stock he/she will make more $ than trading index futures. (margin requirements not factored in)

 

Doing the above analisys for stocks >$10 with trading volume > 1million, SPY=ES is out performed by 97.8% of the stocks that meet the criteria.

58% of the stocks move x2 compared with SPY=ES

 

Gabe

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
What you describe as a "push up" did not encompass a range of price movement that would qualify as a swing (it is, after all, an "inside bar," and as such it cannot be a separet swing from the prior bar, the activity of which completely encompasses the activity of the "push up" bar. Now, had there been a lateral consolidation for several bars, even if all of them were inside that first bar that printed the low, then, I would likely have traded a break. But a single inside bar does not, for the purposes of the way I approach this, sufficient to be a range unto itself. And, the whole of the particular pattern you point to is really three bars, of which the range of the second and third is each inside the initial bar of the pattern.

 

If I were to trade the break of a three bar pattern, this is what it would look like.

 

5aa70f2856816_09-18-2009ESTTBShort10631.thumb.jpg.19ce933268f96e5d87c6a25068dcb593.jpg

 

Best Wishes,

 

Thales

Edited by thalestrader
spelling/typo

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
If I were to trade the break of a three bar pattern, this is what it would look like.

 

[ATTACH]13570[/ATTACH]

 

The way I would have managed this, it would have been a -.50 (-2 ticks) loss.

 

I always prefer to short into the abyss and buy into open sky, rather than acting in the middle of a current or recent.

 

Best Wishes,

 

Thales

5aa70f285ca9a_09-18-2009ESTTBShort10632.thumb.jpg.ff9d376ed630f80fcdd1984bc80c6675.jpg

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
I just ran some numbers on the ATR(20) of stocks > $50 devided by the closing price for yesterday.

SPY representing ES.

>> there were 523 stocks in the group.

>> SPY was #434 meaning that close to 83% of Stocks have a daily range larger than that of SPY=ES.

>> ~24% of the stocks have an ATR(20)/Close double that of SPY-ES

 

The above does not take daily volune into account.

 

My point is that if one catches a move in a stock he/she will make more $ than trading index futures. (margin requirements not factored in)

 

Doing the above analisys for stocks >$10 with trading volume > 1million, SPY=ES is out performed by 97.8% of the stocks that meet the criteria.

58% of the stocks move x2 compared with SPY=ES

 

Gabe

 

 

I don't think this is a valid conclusion (the part bold). You cannot ignore margin and leverage. To make an apple to apple comparison and conclusion like that, you need to assume a fixed investment amound, say $5000 and then see which give you more bang for your buck based on that fixed amount.

 

This is probably off topic for this thead though. Feel free to remove my post.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
I don't think this is a valid conclusion (the part bold). You cannot ignore margin and leverage. To make an apple to apple comparison and conclusion like that, you need to assume a fixed investment amound, say $5000 and then see which give you more bang for your buck based on that fixed amount.

 

This is probably off topic for this thead though. Feel free to remove my post.

 

I agree that you cannot ignore the effects of margin and leverage. I may be wrong, but I beleieve this is why the notion of "risk-adjusted" returns is thought to be useful.

 

And I see no reason to have posts removed if they are the result of the natural course of the discussion within this thread. I appreciate your participation But, as a side note, I was a bit thrown by the guy yesterday asking about "Darvas Box Indicators," though. I just presumed he got himself lost, and wandered away. Your "Google" response was perfect.

 

Best Wishes,

 

Thales

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
I don't think this is a valid conclusion (the part bold). You cannot ignore margin and leverage. To make an apple to apple comparison and conclusion like that, you need to assume a fixed investment amound, say $5000 and then see which give you more bang for your buck based on that fixed amount.

 

This is probably off topic for this thead though. Feel free to remove my post.

 

I posted the stats as a continuation of trying to find a reason why Thales prefers stocks to futures but you may be right and this subject should be in a thread of it's own.

As a quick reply to the above, assuming you use $5000, you can buy 2 ES contracts and catch a typical daily range (hypothetical assumption) of 10 point (10%) = $1000, or buy 150 shares of a stock that trades @ $100 (30% margin) that moves 4% = $600 . In this example you are correct that my conclusion was wrong because the futures will make you more $ but I think that stocks trend better throughout the day and while you may be chopped to pieces trading futures, you can survive and do well in stocks.

 

My appologies if this did not belong here. If someone wishes to continue the debate I'll start a new thread for further replies.

 

Gabe

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Statistically intraday stock swings are larger than index swings. Is that the reason you prefer stocks to index futures?

 

Gabe

 

I have no personal preference, really. As a matter of personal preference, I'd trade potatos if they'd bring the contract back and there were sufficient opportunity to make it worth while to do so.

 

Best Wishes,

 

Thales

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
I think that stocks trend better throughout the day and while you may be chopped to pieces trading futures, you can survive and do well in stocks.

 

My appologies if this did not belong here. If someone wishes to continue the debate I'll start a new thread for further replies.

 

Gabe

 

1) There are certainly more opportunities to participate in a trending move by trading individual issues. Everyday there are trending stocks, whereas many days the indices are simply vacillating within a range.

 

2) Let's not worry about what does or does not belong in the thread. As long as you are not asking about where to locate indicators, we should be ok.

 

Best Wishes,

 

Thales

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


  • Topics

  • Posts

    • 1. A person who disguises insults as jokes.   2. A person who will never take accountability but has no problem always blaming you.   3. A person who says they want the best for you, but then works against you.   4. A person's whose words and actions don't match.   5. You can't trust a person who puts seeds of doubt in you, disguised as something else, like concern for you.   6. You can't trust a person who always tries to sabotage you, or make things harder for you. But always has an excuse for everything. Source: https://mentalhealthpsychology2.quora.com/6-TYPES-OF-PEOPLE-YOU-SHOULD-NOT-TRUST   
    • Date: 15th May 2024. Market News – Treasuries rallied, NASDAQ at new high, DXY lower after PPI pop.   Trading Leveraged Products is risky Economic Indicators & Central Banks: *JGB yields slipped, as markets paused amid a recent bond sell-off, awaiting a crucial US inflation report expected to influence the Fed’s short-term interest rate decisions. Remember, that typically yields move inversely to bond prices. *US: Stronger than expected prints on PPI did not have the textbook effects on the markets. Interestingly, Treasuries and Wall Street rallied, while the US Dollar slipped. The guts of the report were not as worrisome as the headlines suggested, and the CPI is viewed as more important. *Global equities are set for a fresh record after a big tech-led rally in US gauges. Financial Markets Performance: *The USDIndex slumped to 104.7, EURUSD rose to 1.0830 and USDJPY drifted at the EU open below 156. *Gold rose almost 1% to $2358.12 per ounce, while USOIL advanced to $78.18 after shrank US stockpiles, and as traders looked ahead to a report from the International Energy Agency that’ll shed light on market balances into the second half. *Copper spiked to a fresh record high at $5.12 a pound after a squeeze partly due to traders playing the arbitrage between futures on Comex and the Shanghai Futures Exchange.   Market Trends: *Big tech climbed, however, boosting the NASDAQ 0.75% to a new all-time high of 16,511. The S&P500 rose 0.48% to 5246. The Dow advanced 0.3%. *Sony shares jumped by 12% after strong earnings, a stock split and a share buyback of ¥250bn ($1.6bn). *Tesla gained 3.3%. Tencent Holdings surged after the company’s revenue beat estimates , while Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.’s slid on a profit plunge, highlighting the growing divergence between China’s twin Internet powerhouses. Always trade with strict risk management. Your capital is the single most important aspect of your trading business. Please note that times displayed based on local time zone and are from time of writing this report. Click HERE to access the full HFM Economic calendar. Want to learn to trade and analyse the markets? Join our webinars and get analysis and trading ideas combined with better understanding on how markets work. Click HERE to register for FREE! Click HERE to READ more Market news. Andria Pichidi Market Analyst HFMarkets Disclaimer: This material is provided as a general marketing communication for information purposes only and does not constitute an independent investment research. Nothing in this communication contains, or should be considered as containing, an investment advice or an investment recommendation or a solicitation for the purpose of buying or selling of any financial instrument. All information provided is gathered from reputable sources and any information containing an indication of past performance is not a guarantee or reliable indicator of future performance. Users acknowledge that any investment in FX and CFDs products is characterized by a certain degree of uncertainty and that any investment of this nature involves a high level of risk for which the users are solely responsible and liable. We assume no liability for any loss arising from any investment made based on the information provided in this communication. This communication must not be reproduced or further distributed without our prior written permission.
    • Recessions are weird.   The more you think about them, the weirder they become.   Yes, the economy is cyclical. Downturns aren’t just inevitable, they’re healthy.   BUT   Economic cycles, including recessions, are not just determined by clean and predictable financial indicators but also by psychological and sociological factors.   Collective mood, media reporting, and public sentiment play a substantial role in shaping economic realities.   And they can be manipulated.   A.] The Fear Factory   Every time the media starts shouting "recession," what happens?   Panic. Fear.   It's like Halloween but for adults.   And this fear isn't just innocent fun – it moves markets, influences decisions, and causes real harm.   Give me an example of when the media saw a chance to scare the crap out of you and didn’t take it?   I’ll wait.   B.] Recessions are Relative   Consider this – what's called a recession in one country is a day in paradise in another.   Economic conditions are relative.   If the standards are so skewed, can we really trust this whole concept?   C.] The Recession Whisperers   Imagine a secretive group, not in some government bunker, but in a quiet office in Cambridge, Massachusetts. That's the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), the recession referee.   But here's the twist: By the time the NBER declares a recession, it's like announcing rain when you're already soaked.   Their method involves a retroactive look, meaning they wait for six months of data, plus a one-month lag.   So, when they finally declare a recession, it's old news, a story you've been living in, not just reading about. In the world of economic predictions, the official-unofficial referees are not the early birds; they're the historians.   Also…   D.]The GDP Puppet Show   GDP.   It’s supposed to be a “health check” for the economy.   BUT   It's like going to a doctor who only measures your height and ignores your blood pressure, cholesterol, and heart rate.   It counts every dollar spent, regardless of what it's spent on.   That means disasters, wars, and environmental destruction all pump up the GDP. If a hurricane hits and we spend billions on reconstruction, guess what? GDP goes up.   Celebrating a GDP increase is like throwing a party because your house burned down and you had to rebuild it.   It’s also the main indicator the NBER uses to measure a recession.   The real problem with this is…   GDP is a broad measure and can be influenced by short-term fluctuations that don't necessarily reflect long-term economic trends.   It’s a useful indicator, but far from comprehensive.   E.] The Self-Fulfilling Prophecy   Here's the kicker – by declaring a recession, we make them more likely.   It's a classic self-fulfilling prophecy.   Businesses pull back on investment, consumers close their wallets, and just like that, the economy slows down.   But what if we didn't buy into the narrative? I have no idea.   F.] Rage Against Determinism   Economies aren’t deterministic. They’re dynamic.   Economies don’t follow a predetermined path.   Human agency and perception play a significant role in shaping economic realities.   Predictions are usually wrong for this reason.   Also, there’s this…   G.] The Hidden Agenda   Tin foil hat time.   Think about who benefits from recession talk.   The media gets a juicy story.   Politicians get a scapegoat.   Certain investors get to buy low.   It’s a game, and the average person isn't the one winning. You’re always being sold a narrative that serves others, not you.   And Yet, a Recession is HERE   Of course, recessions exist. Because prolonged downturns exist.   But all of this calls into question what we think we know about the word “recession” and how we talk about it.   It’s not as clear a concept as we think.   Nevertheless, it’s probably here already.” – Chris Campbell (AltucherConfidential)  
    • QCOM Qualcomm stock great breakout follow through, https://stockconsultant.com/?QCOM
    • JPM JPMorgan Chase stock breakout, https://stockconsultant.com/?JPM
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.