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- thesnacker replied Feb 20, 2011
No one is going to make you a trader overnight. But, if you want to know what is needed to have a chance, this site url should give you a rough idea of the qualifications you need to just get your foot in the door.
- thesnacker replied Oct 30, 2010
Thats interesting, was it just forex? or futures, etc.? Dealing desk, straight through, or hedging? I was calculating from the point of view of a trade of $1000 makes 20-40 cents on the bid ask. How many trades/clients would need to be made/enrolled ...
- thesnacker replied Sep 15, 2010
A comfortable chair with back support
- thesnacker replied Sep 9, 2010
1) I have noticed that mr smith signed up in 2005 yet up to this post, 75 of his 267 posts (28%) were made in this thread which is only a few days old. I wonder why you would be defending J16 so much especially after so many years? 2) I skimmed the ...
- thesnacker replied Sep 9, 2010
One of the ways they manage to keep suckers investing in mutual funds is the record posted by the fund manager. But, what no one mentions is that when a fund fails it is usually merged into another fund, that way only the winners are marketed to ...
- thesnacker replied Sep 8, 2010
Once again the wrong question is being asked, the real question should be: Is there a statistical edge from the pinbar? If someone is profitable trading do you think they will spill the beans here?
- thesnacker replied Sep 8, 2010
The bottom line is jim doesn't teach anything different than whats out there from guys like alexander elder, pring, steve nison, raschke, or any of the other trading gurus who also market pins, buob, beob, fibs, confluence and such, the only ...
- thesnacker replied May 18, 2010
If a tax passes, less people will trade, spreads will increase and liquidity will be lower. The rich will get richer and the poor poorer.
- thesnacker replied May 18, 2010
Your assuming that there are opportunities in the market everyday.
- thesnacker replied Feb 11, 2010
These were fundamental situations, in both the stock and housing bubbles there was liquidity and low interest rates which inflate the value of the assets, then when rates rise there is a crunch and values deflate. Looks fundamental to me.
- thesnacker replied Nov 26, 2009
I'm pretty sure if someone tried that, they are now living in a card board box.
- thesnacker replied Nov 26, 2009
how the snb reacts is of little importance, the real question is how are you going to react?
- thesnacker replied Oct 10, 2009
WSJ article last week on the front page, some dude took $50,000 and turned it to 7 figures in forex, over a few years, I don't remember the exact amount of time. But in the same article there was like 2-3 people that completely blew their accounts ...
- thesnacker replied Oct 9, 2009
Is anyone watching CNBC 12:18 PM EST. They are making jokes and discrediting TA for crackpots. LOLOL. They tried talking about certainty, what certainty do they bring? Anyone recording the show, or has access to the clip. Would be nice to share. PS. ...
- thesnacker replied Oct 5, 2009
image A breakout perhaps?
- thesnacker replied Oct 5, 2009
image Nice pin was forming then all of a sudden right before the close price jumps 8 pips, still got in, just a bit late.
- thesnacker replied Oct 4, 2009
Here you go, first result on google url LOLOLOL
- thesnacker replied Oct 3, 2009
Discussing these things in a forum is interesting and amusing, until facts and statistics are provided, at that point all hell breaks loose. I am too busy and also not in the mood to type to discuss here. But, I will suggest this forum, and in ...
- thesnacker replied Oct 3, 2009
I to a degree think that fundamentals are represented in the market. The fed is printing money, the money is going into assets, such as stocks, gold, etc. Causing more demand, and higher prices and DOW values. If you are in cash, inflation will get ...
- thesnacker replied Oct 2, 2009
Great drill to learn trade management and not being loyal to your trades. Your in a downtrend and you keep getting buy signals, do you stay with them, or exit as soon as possible? Great way to learn trade management.