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Raleigh Lee

Don't Be Fooled By Randomness

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Again, wrong answer. Please try harder.

 

You're thinking is off. It seems stuck in fact.

 

Here's a clue:

 

One way is based on perceived supply and demand,

 

The other isnt.

 

Another clue:

 

May be there are other ways to make money than the only one you can think of? Surprising that after all these years of analysis of the markets, you are only aware of one way of making money. Wasted years perhaps?

 

 

I will hold my tongue/fingers until the weekend....

 

Please try and think a little harder. I have every confidence in you

 

:)

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TA, however, isn't about patterns and indicators or even charts. TA is about price movement. All the rest of that stuff came later.

 

I guess it depends on what you are referring to here.......if buy TA you are referring to Tape reading then yes I agree that was , and still is , the best TA out there.....

 

Tape reading is the ONLY thing IMO that can most accurately predict what is about to happen.

 

MACD , Stochastics , RSI and all that other stuff are not TA , that is math calculating the past.......thats it.

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I guess it depends on what you are referring to here.......if buy TA you are referring to Tape reading then yes I agree that was , and still is , the best TA out there.....

 

Yes, though before the "tape", there were reports and logs, such as were used by Homma. The progress of price can be tracked in a number of ways other than by charts and the tape.

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Without definitions arguments are useless.

 

To me, and I believe most, TA is the study of trading instruments price behavior through the use of price and/or volume and/or time, with many sub-disciplines: tape reading, chart analysis, cycles ..................... FA analysis is done through the use of market economic conditions as they apply to markets, companies, persons and such, again with it's many sub-disciplines characterized by individual field of specialization.

 

If we accept the general definition used by most, fine ........... if not, fine. Argue a specific point for validity, without wandering all over the place.

 

To my understanding, random is anything that exists without a cause, there is no causal factor that made it be. Thus, any effect that is a product of a cause is not random, but it could easily be beyond the ability of anyone to predict it with 100 % certainty, as is the case with price behavior.

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Without definitions arguments are useless.

 

To me, and I believe most, TA is the study of trading instruments price behavior through the use of price and/or volume and/or time, with many sub-disciplines: tape reading, chart analysis, cycles ..................... FA analysis is done through the use of market economic conditions as they apply to markets, companies, persons and such, again with it's many sub-disciplines characterized by individual field of specialization.

 

If we accept the general definition used by most, fine ........... if not, fine. Argue a specific point for validity, without wandering all over the place.

 

To my understanding, random is anything that exists without a cause, there is no causal factor that made it be. Thus, any effect that is a product of a cause is not random, but it could easily be beyond the ability of anyone to predict it with 100 % certainty, as is the case with price behavior.

 

Peterthemonkey put out a good point - you need to define it.

 

If anyone here have studied information theory - see: http://www.framingham.edu/~dkeil/dscs-chaos.pdf

 

Go to slide 18 - note that the famous ratio of Pi ... is by definition not random. Why? Because it can be generated by a short algorithm (of mathematics).

 

In other words, Burton Malkiel famous coin tossing experiment and mathematically adding or subtracting a constant is also using an algorithm (of addition/subtraction) and thus by definition not random mathematically?

 

Malkiel may have underestimated that in Information Theory (Google Claude E. Shannon if anyone cares), there are a mountain of knowledge and foundation concerning coding, telecommunication bandwidth, channel capacity, etc. that builds on the idea of randomness ...

 

Yeah, just leave it to the economist and their real understanding on mathematical principles? :doh: :confused: :missy: :doh:

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So statistical and quantative analysis is TA is it?

 

e.g. Im a stat/quant fund. (and you think thats TA lol)

 

my number crunching suggests i should go long xyz, short abc. I do so. when i close the trade, based on more number crunching, xyz is the same price, so I scratch. abc is also the same price, so that too is scratched.

 

YET i still make money on the trade.

 

How come?

 

Come on Phoenix. You know everything about everything. Tell me how I made money using a branch of TA where there was no price movement?

 

 

This I got to see!....

 

Ringside seats folks......

 

How to polish a turd coming up.......

 

Times up Phoenix. Looks like you FAILED.

 

Surprising since TA is THE ONLY way to analyse the market, and TA is all encompassing unless it's FA (according to you).

 

Anyway, 3 ways I could have made money despite scratching the long and short trade:

 

1. The obvious one. Dividends. The short position would have been a hedge of course.

 

2. Also quite obvious - options, where the stock is the hedge, ie short calls on the long, short puts on the short stock. I'd pick up time premium. Time decay is neither FA, TA, or any A. It's a F. F is for FACT that options have this characteristic.

 

3. Stock lending. ok a bit of a trick one this, but still valid. I could have loaned out my long position to another hedgefund who wished to short the stock. I would have charged them for that of course. The short was a diversion. But as the expert guru on TA, Im sure you are used to diversions, and things going up when the chart says down etc.

 

There are more....

 

I hope you see now that not everything is TA. Hopefully now you see that the world is not black or white (TA/FA) but there are many, many different themes, colors around us.

 

Perhaps a little humility and objectivity wouldnt go a miss in future?

 

Lets see how you weasel your way of this.....

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Some studies have shown that a high percentage of chart patterns may be simply random lines on a piece of paper. Burton Malkiel in A Random Walk Down Wall Street cited an experiment his students participated in, constructing a hypothetical stock chart. Each day they flipped a coin, plotting heads as a 1/2-point gain and tails as a 1/2-point decline. The resulting chart from these random coin flips displayed all the classical patterns such as head and shoulder formations, flags, pennants, triangles, etc. There were even indications of cycles.

 

There is a great site where you can test out technical analysis by comparing it to randomness -nonrandomwalk. You have to love the name. At the site, you practice trading blindly (you don't know what stock you are trading or what year you are trading it) on historical data and then compare how you did to a set of traders randomly trading the same stock. The results are often humbling.

 

With regard to Malkiel, his experiment has a fundamental problem. Just because coin-flipping can produce classical patterns, that doesn't mean that the patterns in the market are random. One would have to look at the frequency with which patterns appear in coin flipping versus actual data. To my knowledge he did not do that. People who have (Andrew Lo) have found that chart patterns occur with demonstrably more frequency than would be expected if markets were just coin-flipping.

 

Consider another example from a standard probability class. Imagine a thousand apes randomly typing on a thousand type-writers for an infinite amount of time. What is the probability that they will eventually, in combination, type the complete works of Shakespere? The probability is one. It is an interesting mathematical proof. Does this mean that the works of Shakespere were random?

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Obviously there is a lot of semantics going on.

 

Technical analysis is the analysis of the technicals. What are the technicals? They seem to be price, volume etc. Taken as that, chart analysis is TA, so too ismarket profile.

 

Generally those who want to divide and exclude certain parts, say market profile, are doing so to further their own agenda, to make themselves stand out. For example, if Steidlmayer wants to promote his method, he may wish to state that his method is different from all other methods, or most common methods, i.e. TA. Is it a form of analysis on the technicals? It is to me. If the technicals involve price, then how could one argue it's not. But it's not worth getting upset about just because you take the word to mean something. There's a good reason why Steidlmayer would want to say it's not TA, the Dude. Simply believing him without understanding his motive doesn't make for a good argument.

 

I'd also disagree with DBPhoenix about the word random. In some sense isn't almost everything deterministic? The coin toss for example is deterministic, it depends on laws and forces. However, we model it as random because we cannot know pecisely enough the information that we would need to know to decide the outcome with certainty. Therefore this applies to trading too. It's irrelevant whether there are causes, of course there are. But scientifically, mathematically it is random still because you cannot with certainty tell me exactly what will happen.

 

Therefore DBPhoenix, although I agree with you on TA, I'd have to say that you're wrong on the statement

"The outcome of any given trade is unknowable. That doesn't make it random. "

 

It exactly DOES make it random.

Edited by Seeker

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TA needs to be objective. Period. Otherwise its unverifiable.

 

Here's the mindbender for me: It is said price is somewhat random {Andrew Lo, A Non-Random Walk Down Wall Street}. It is said many technicians can't tell a real price chart from a randomly generated one. The bender: check out the Wikipedia page for Ito Calculus.

 

There is a graph on an Ito Integral of Brownian (random) motion. Tell me that's not a Bullish Butterfly pattern in the middle (the low) of the chart at T 1.5. I find these Butterflies (also called M7s) in other time series that could be easily thought of (if inaccurately) as random ... such as total solar irradiance, crime rates, barometric pressure, % of men with beards, etc..

 

The weird thing is that M7 patterns do NOT have a random outcome.. they precede reversals in the time series 60%+ of the time (from what i have measured, far from the population).. even in 'random' data!

 

Someone please explain that to me

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Depends on how one defines TA. If it is defined by the use of indicators (post-1950), one will achieve a certain set of results. If it is defined via patterns (post-1930), one will likely achieve another. If it is defined as it was originally as the analysis of the imbalances between buying pressure and selling pressure (post-1750), then it should come as no surprise that the "butterfly pattern" precedes reversals since the "pattern" is essentially a double bottom or double top. These in and of themselves will often precede reversals. If they also occur at support or resistance, the instance will be even higher.

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It's all utter bull excrement. It does not matter one jot.

 

One does not make money from technical ANALYSIS, you make money TRADING. Those are 2 verbs with very different meanings.

 

I can guarantee you this:

 

If you spend your years becoming an expert in analysis, you may be a very knowledgeable analyst, but still totally unable to make any money because you spent all your time studying market history, not understanding how to act NOW. ie trading.

 

90% fail because they dedicate 80-90% of their time to TA and not trading skills.

 

Butterflies, tripple tops, box, magic lines, pennants, flags, blah blah blah. What a joke!

 

Please folk - looking at shapes on a chart is basically like reading tea leaves. It also carries as much intellectual weight in true trading circles. If I notice patterns of tea leaves or moon cycles and correlate them to market moves, is it coincidence (no matter how loosely defined they are), or is it proven fact I can call a statistical edge?

 

PLLLEEEEEEAAAAASSSSSSSEEEE!!!!

 

Get a grip folks.

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....the whole point is - a butterfly is testable. No its not TRADING. Its a price behavior. This thread is about randomness in price.

 

Trading is a whole other activity than analysis - totally. You can make money trading with zero statistically verified analysis. Its uncommon, guys have done it.

 

At any rate, the whole point of studying TA is to find the edge to act on. As far as trading circles go, i've spoken with several people who trade successfully for a living and they do take chart patterns seriously. Its not tea leaves man. Andrew Lo - MIT - .... studied Double Top/Bottom and others... Best grip you can have is a repeating price behavior..

 

Bull excrement is a harsh vote.. In the light of modern research, i'd say its an uninformed vote. TA can work - TA alone won't make you money, yeah that's right.

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... a double bottom or double top. These in and of themselves will often precede reversals. If they also occur at support or resistance, the instance will be even higher.

 

i know, but its weird to find the same patterns in 'random data' ... this has zero to do with making money. Check. Its just thinking material. If you could show that patterns with say 72% probability leading indication are in random data, what does THAT say about randomness... for instance? Nothing is ever totally random

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i know, but its weird to find the same patterns in 'random data' ... this has zero to do with making money. Check. Its just thinking material. If you could show that patterns with say 72% probability leading indication are in random data, what does THAT say about randomness... for instance? Nothing is ever totally random

 

I don't find it strange to find patterns in random data. You don't think those people who see Jesus in their morning toast are onto something, do you?

 

But take care not to confuse "random" with "unknowable". Nor can one ignore probability. The outcome of a particular trade may be unknowable, but that doesn't mean that it's random if one's testing has determined that the probable outcome is X. That is, after all, the basis of the edge.

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You don't think those people who see Jesus in their morning toast are onto something, do you?

 

 

 

I did until you said something...

 

it seems like a random model is applied a disproportionate amount of the time as a crutch.. an approximation.. in quant finance. My posts in this thread are completely on an academic level - curious how folks around here think. Its not so much that patterns are present in random data, more that certain patterns in random data could hold an element of nonrandomness that strikes me... its not surprising to me anymore, either... a thread on randomness, had to offer my :2c:

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This isn't particularly difficult to understand...markets cycle from random to non-random continuously, AND patterns both random and non-random replicate all the time, what matters is the significance of the pattern in terms of time (timing) not that it exists.....

 

"Mathematics of Technical Analysis"....Cliff Sherry

 

Its been a while but this was one of the texts that seemed to get it right

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Someone please explain that to me

 

Hello,

 

It's fairly simple really: perfectly random behaviour is highly predictable. The probability of a long sequence of similar events is very small. You can bet against the continuation of such sequences as they unfold.

 

Please do note that I am saying the explanation to your question about randomness is simple, and NOT that trading is simple!

 

Regards,

 

BlueHorseshoe

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No diagnosis,no prognosis,no prognosis,no profit.

 

Indeed.

 

However you must make sure youre diagnosing the correct information, not something that looks visually easy to grasp, easy to understand, but in fact offers zero edge.

 

Trading is about numbers. It's not about visual patterns. Thats what art class is for.

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....the whole point is - a butterfly is testable. No its not TRADING. Its a price behavior. This thread is about randomness in price.

 

1. Trading is a whole other activity than analysis - totally. You can make money trading with zero statistically verified analysis. Its uncommon, guys have done it.

 

2. At any rate, the whole point of studying TA is to find the edge to act on. As far as trading circles go, i've spoken with several people who trade successfully for a living and they do take chart patterns seriously. Its not tea leaves man. Andrew Lo - MIT - .... studied Double Top/Bottom and others... Best grip you can have is a repeating price behavior..

 

Bull excrement is a harsh vote.. In the light of modern research, i'd say its an uninformed vote. TA can work - TA alone won't make you money, yeah that's right.

 

1. Thats called luck

 

2. TA offers no edge. How can you get an edge from something that cant be defined in exact enough ways to measure?

 

This one keeps coming up, yet none of the TA fans are ever able to provide the evidence of statistical proof that TA offers an edge. There is not one study that has proven this.

 

If TA did offer an edge, trading would be easy due to the ease of learning TA.

 

If all you needed was to spot double tops/bottoms, flags etc, with the 'correct' associated volume pattern, all you folks would be rich.

 

However, given the amount of posts and time some here spend, my money is that they are not rich, otherwise they'd be out spending cash on fun stuff!

 

Anyways...back to the topic.... randomness is simply a word we use for something we dont understand. I took that from Taleb.

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This thread (particularly the last few posts) reminds me of a recent commercial...the scenario is that an adult sits at a small (very small) table, with his knees up around his neck to emphasis the difference between him and the children sitting all round him...and he asks them a question...("what would you do with a million dollars?") and as one might expect they answer with typical unrealistic comments like...."I'd buy an island made out of candy" and "yeah and the sand would be made of sugar"....etc

 

With apologies to Taleb and those present who like to see their comments in print, but haven't seen fit to actually look up the definition...here is the citation;

 

RANDOM.ORG - Introduction to Randomness and Random Numbers

 

I am pretty sure Taleb knows this, not so sure about the rest of you...

 

and for the record (again) markets cycle from random to non-random, and for me at least what matters isn't whether price patterns are one or the other but the timing. Why because if you can determine the difference between random and non-random AND you know where the critical times are during the trading day, its possible to obtain an edge from that knowledge...(referring back to Sherry's book).

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    • Date: 17th April 2024. Market News – Appetite for risk-taking remains weak. Economic Indicators & Central Banks:   Stocks, Treasury yields and US Dollar stay firmed. Fed Chair Powell added to the recent sell off. His slightly more hawkish tone further priced out chances for any imminent action and the timing of a cut was pushed out further. He suggested if higher inflation does persist, the Fed will hold rates steady “for as long as needed.” Implied Fed Fund: There remains no real chance for a move on May 1 and at their intraday highs the June implied funds rate future showed only 5 bps, while July reflected only 10 bps. And a full 25 bps was not priced in until November, with 38 bps in cuts seen for 2024. US & EU Economies Diverging: Lagarde says ECB is moving toward rate cuts – if there are no major shocks. UK March CPI inflation falls less than expected. Output price inflation has started to nudge higher, despite another decline in input prices. Together with yesterday’s higher than expected wage numbers, the data will add to the arguments of the hawks at the BoE, which remain very reluctant to contemplate rate cuts. Canada CPI rose 0.6% in March, double the 0.3% February increase BUT core eased. The doors are still open for a possible cut at the next BoC meeting on June 5. IMF revised up its global growth forecast for 2024 with inflation easing, in its new World Economic Outlook. This is consistent with a global soft landing, according to the report. Financial Markets Performance:   USDJPY also inched up to 154.67 on expectations the BoJ will remain accommodative and as the market challenges a perceived 155 red line for MoF intervention. USOIL prices slipped -0.15% to $84.20 per barrel. Gold rose 0.24% to $2389.11 per ounce, a new record closing high as geopolitical risks overshadowed the impacts of rising rates and the stronger dollar. Market Trends:   Wall Street waffled either side of unchanged on the day amid dimming rate cut potential, rising yields, and earnings. The major indexes closed mixed with the Dow up 0.17%, while the S&P500 and NASDAQ lost -0.21% and -0.12%, respectively. Asian stock markets mostly corrected again, with Japanese bourses underperforming and the Nikkei down -1.3%. Mainland China bourses were a notable exception and the CSI 300 rallied 1.4%, but the MSCI Asia Pacific index came close to erasing the gains for this year. 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.vvvvvvv
    • Date: 16th April 2024. Market News – Stocks and currencies sell off; USD up. Economic Indicators & Central Banks:   Stocks and currencies sell off, while the US Dollar picks up haven flows. Treasuries yields spiked again to fresh 2024 peaks before paring losses into the close, post, the stronger than expected retail sales eliciting a broad sell off in the markets. Rates surged as the data pushed rate cut bets further into the future with July now less than a 50-50 chance. Wall Street finished with steep declines led by tech. Stocks opened in the green on a relief trade after Israel repulsed the well advertised attack from Iran on Sunday. But equities turned sharply lower and extended last week’s declines amid the rise in yields. Investor concerns were intensified as Israel threatened retaliation. There’s growing anxiety over earnings even after a big beat from Goldman Sachs. UK labor market data was mixed, as the ILO unemployment rate unexpectedly lifted, while wage growth came in higher than anticipated – The data suggests that the labor market is catching up with the recession. Mixed messages then for the BoE. China grew by 5.3% in Q1 however the numbers are causing a lot of doubts over sustainability of this growth. The bounce came in the first 2 months of the year. In March, growth in retail sales slumped and industrial output decelerated below forecasts, suggesting challenges on the horizon. Today: Germany ZEW, US housing starts & industrial production, Fed Vice Chair Philip Jefferson speech, BOE Bailey speech & IMF outlook. Earnings releases: Morgan Stanley and Bank of America. Financial Markets Performance:   The US Dollar rallied to 106.19 after testing 106.25, gaining against JPY and rising to 154.23, despite intervention risk. Yen traders started to see the 160 mark as the next Resistance level. Gold surged 1.76% to $2386 per ounce amid geopolitical risks and Chinese buying, even as the USD firmed and yields climbed. USOIL is flat at $85 per barrel. Market Trends:   Breaks of key technical levels exacerbated the sell off. Tech was the big loser with the NASDAQ plunging -1.79% to 15,885 while the S&P500 dropped -1.20% to 5061, with the Dow sliding -0.65% to 37,735. The S&P had the biggest 2-day sell off since March 2023. Nikkei and ASX lost -1.9% and -1.8% respectively, and the Hang Seng is down -2.1%. European bourses are down more than -1% and US futures are also in the red. CTA selling tsunami: “Just a few points lower CTAs will for the first time this year start selling in size, to add insult to injury, we are breaking major trend-lines in equities and the gamma stabilizer is totally gone.” Short term CTA threshold levels are kicking in big time according to GS. Medium term is 4873 (most important) while the long term level is at 4605. 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.
    • Date: 15th April 2024. Market News – Negative Reversion; Safe Havens Rally. Trading Leveraged Products is risky Economic Indicators & Central Banks:   Markets weigh risk of retaliation cycle in Middle East. Initially the retaliatory strike from Iran on Israel fostered a haven bid, into bonds, gold and other haven assets, as it threatens a wider regional conflict. However, this morning, Oil and Asian equity markets were muted as traders shrugged off fears of a war escalation in the Middle East. Iran said “the matter can be deemed concluded”, and President Joe Biden has called on Israel to exercise restraint following Iran’s drone and missile strike, as part of Washington’s efforts to ease tensions in the Middle East and minimize the likelihood of a widespread regional conflict. New US and UK sanctions banned deliveries of Russian supplies, i.e. key industrial metals, produced after midnight on Friday. Aluminum jumped 9.4%, nickel rose 8.8%, suggesting brokers are bracing for major supply chain disruption. Financial Markets Performance:   The USDIndex fell back from highs over 106 to currently 105.70. The Yen dip against USD to 153.85. USOIL settled lower at 84.50 per barrel and Gold is trading below session highs at currently $2357.92 per ounce. Copper, more liquid and driven by the global economy over recent weeks, was more subdued this morning. Currently at $4.3180. Market Trends:   Asian stock markets traded mixed, but European and US futures are slightly higher after a tough session on Friday and yields have picked up. Mainland China bourses outperformed overnight, after Beijing offered renewed regulatory support. The PBOC meanwhile left the 1-year MLF rate unchanged, while once again draining funds from the system. Nikkei slipped 1% to 39,114.19. On Friday, NASDAQ slumped -1.62% to 16,175, unwinding most of Thursday’s 1.68% jump to a new all-time high at 16,442. The S&P500 fell -1.46% and the Dow dropped 1.24%. Declines were broadbased with all 11 sectors of the S&P finishing in the red. JPMorgan Chase sank 6.5% despite reporting stronger profit in Q1. The nation’s largest bank gave a forecast for a key source of income this year that fell below Wall Street’s estimate, calling for only modest growth. Apple shipments drop by 10% in Q1. 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.
    • The morning of my last post I happened to glance over to the side and saw “...angst over the FOMC’s rate trajectory triggered a flight to safety, hence boosting the haven demand. “   http://www.traderslaboratory.com/forums/topic/21621-hfmarkets-hfmcom-market-analysis-services/page/17/?tab=comments#comment-228522   I reacted, but didn’t take time to  respond then... will now --- HFBlogNews, I don’t know if you are simply aggregating the chosen narratives for the day or if it’s your own reporting... either way - “flight to safety”????  haven ?????  Re: “safety  - ”Those ‘solid rocks’ are getting so fragile a hit from a dandelion blowball might shatter them... like now nobody wants to buy longer term new issues at these rates...yet the financial media still follows the scripts... The imagery they pound day in and day out makes it look like the Fed knows what they’re doing to help ‘us’... They do know what they’re doing - but it certainly is not to help ‘us’... and it is not to ‘control’ inflation... And at some point in the not too distant future, the interest due will eat a huge portion of the ‘revenue’ Re: “haven” The defaults are coming ...  The US will not be the first to default... but it will certainly not be the very last to default !! ...Enough casual anti-white racism for the day  ... just sayin’
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