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gregn

Buyer for Every Seller?

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absolutely.

Hence, it goes from being theoretical to being an actual recorded trade.

 

tracking this might be of value for all those folks who track the sub second bids and offers but thats a different ball game in my book.

I always used to laugh at the folks who would say, but the buyers were there just a second ago, what happened to them! Do they stop being buyers? were they propping the market? did they get filled?

 

It also raises an interesting question 'do markets rise because of buyers wading in or sellers pulling out'? Of course it's a bit of both but actually I think it is often predominantly the latter.

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agree blowfish.

I have always said to others I believe that markets can drift up or down based not on more buyers or sellers (or agressive ones) but on the lack of them.

Often I ask myself "do I need to be there"do I need to buy/sell.

if the answer is no - whats to say others are not doing the same thing.

 

Markets can certainly go up on the lack of real sellers.

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Again, thanks everyone for the collective information -- awesome people here.

 

Let me just make sure of one thing: a red entry in the T&S at say 1000 means that a seller executed a market order at the bid price, which in turn executed a buyer's buy limit order at the bid?

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Again, thanks everyone for the collective information -- awesome people here.

 

Let me just make sure of one thing: a red entry in the T&S at say 1000 means that a seller executed a market order at the bid price, which in turn executed a buyer's buy limit order at the bid?

 

No, I think you are a little confused.

 

The market price is made up of two figures:

 

1) The current ASK price

2) The current BIDprice

 

The Last price is the price a trade was executed.

 

A person who buys @ market will be filled at the current ASK.

 

A person who sells @ market will be filled at the current BID

 

Orders sitting in the market can either be LIMIT or STOP orders.

 

A Volume of 1 in T&S means that 1 buyer AND 1 seller have exchanged 1 contract. Do you see? There isn't enough information to determine whether the contract was a LIMIT order or STOP order that was filled.

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No, I think you are a little confused.

 

The market price is made up of two figures:

 

1) The current ASK price

2) The current BIDprice

 

The Last price is the price a trade was executed.

 

A person who buys @ market will be filled at the current ASK.

 

A person who sells @ market will be filled at the current BID

 

Orders sitting in the market can either be LIMIT or STOP orders.

 

A Volume of 1 in T&S means that 1 buyer AND 1 seller have exchanged 1 contract. Do you see? There isn't enough information to determine whether the contract was a LIMIT order or STOP order that was filled.

 

One of the facts that was shared here as that a RED order means that it occurred at the bid and a GREEN order means that the order occurred at the ask. Let's say the bid is currently at 1100.25 and the ask is 1100. If a GREEN T&S entry is seen for 1 unit at 1100.25 would that not mean that the seller would have to have used a limit order? A market order to sell would execute at the ask of 1100, correct? It is probable that the buyer used a market order, but the buyer may have put a limit order at the ask.

 

Basically my question is this: aren't all transactions a market order on one side and a limit order on the other?

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No.

 

I often fill another's limit order with my limit order. That prevents me getting an unexpected fill because of the market moving between my computers decision and the arrival of my order at the exchanges matching engine.

 

(via my software, tws, internet delays to hk, ib's server side software, delays to exchange computer, delay in exchange computer (cluster?)).

 

Exactly what your options are for orders and how they are treated depend on the exchanges software ... and they do differ quite a lot.

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Let's say the bid is currently at 1100.25 and the ask is 1100. If a GREEN T&S entry is seen for 1 unit at 1100.25 would that not mean that the seller would have to have used a limit order? A market order to sell would execute at the ask of 1100, correct?

 

Firstly, the example you have given is impossible! The current BID price is always below the current ASK price. No argument, no if's or but's, it's as good as the Law.

 

1) BID = The highest price a Buyer is willing to buy

2) ASK = The lowest price a Seller is willing to sell

 

If you think about that for a minute you will realise why there can never, ever be a situation where a seller is offering a stock below the highest bidder. It would be filled before it even got there. This is how the spread exists, it basically represents the difference in opinion between buyers and sellers.

 

One of the facts that was shared here as that a RED order means that it occurred at the bid and a GREEN order means that the order occurred at the ask.

 

 

The colours aren't really that important because they might be set by the trading application, who knows, you could even have the T&S in a single colour like the ticker tape was many years ago in the days of Jesse Livermore. Just remember, the BID is ALWAYS quoted below the ASK. When the market isn't very active you can watch and see how orders are filled and determine whether it was filled at the BID or the ASK.

 

A market order to sell would execute at the ask of 1100, correct? It is probable that the buyer used a market order, but the buyer may have put a limit order at the ask.

 

Basically my question is this: aren't all transactions a market order on one side and a limit order on the other?

 

There are two types of sitting orders I can think of, a STOP and LIMIT.

 

- Buy STOP's are placed above the current Market price.

- Sell STOP's are placed below the current Market price.

 

- Buy LIMIT's are placed below the current Market price.

- Sell LIMIT's are placed above the current Market price.

 

A trader can use a STOP to close a position but they can also use a STOP to open a position.

A trader can use a LIMIT to close a position but they can also use a LIMIT to open a position.

 

 

If the T&S printed

 

50 @ 1200.25 Bid.

 

This could mean 1 large seller who sold 50 at market to open a position to 50 individual small traders who had sell STOP's in the market to close their position. This is someone 'hitting' the BID.

 

It could also mean that 50 small traders sold at market to open their position to 1 large trader who had 50 buy LIMIT orders in the market to open their position. This is known as a "sitter".

 

 

There are a number of ways orders can be filled and whether they were being opened or closed and who was doing what that it really isn't worth bothering yourself about it. It's much more important to study the action of the market than it is trying to figure out whether they were STOP or LIMIT orders. It's good to understand the variables, but don't get too preoccupied about it.

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[/b][/u] The current BID price is always below the current ASK price. No argument, no if's or but's, it's as good as the Law.

 

 

Ohoh! Better be careful before you declare what's a law.

 

Might be helpful to google for "crossed market" - which is the condition described (bid>ask).

 

This happens all the time.

 

 

For reference one picture and a link to a (quite recent) thread where crossed market conditions are discussed:

Forums - Free money!!!

5aa7104d451f0_Crossedmarket.png.3d951657f42255c7e1c04bb0e9beddfb.png

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Ohoh! Better be careful before you declare what's a law.

 

Might be helpful to google for "crossed market" - which is the condition described (bid>ask).

 

This happens all the time.

 

 

For reference one picture and a link to a (quite recent) thread where crossed market conditions are discussed:

Forums - Free money!!!

 

All the time? I doubt that. I've been watching T&S on the ES almost everyday for the last 5 years solid and I can say that I've never seen it happen when the market is open. Google can say whatever it wants, I trust my own eyes. Besides, just go with 99.999% of the time, BID is quoted below ASK.

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No, I think you are a little confused.

 

The market price is made up of two figures:

 

1) The current ASK price

2) The current BIDprice

 

The Last price is the price a trade was executed.

 

A person who buys @ market will be filled at the current ASK.

 

A person who sells @ market will be filled at the current BID

 

Orders sitting in the market can either be LIMIT or STOP orders.

 

A Volume of 1 in T&S means that 1 buyer AND 1 seller have exchanged 1 contract. Do you see? There isn't enough information to determine whether the contract was a LIMIT order or STOP order that was filled.

 

This is all true except stop orders are converted to market orders when they are elected (there trigger price is traded at). Stop orders are invisible on the book (usually) though in some markets some participants can see them (like a NYSE specialist).

 

So, the bid you see are limit orders to buy at that price. There are also stop orders to sell at this price (they do not show on the book). When elected these will be immediately converted to market orders and so match against the current limit orders at that price. If there is not enough volume to satisfy them at that level (in the form of limit orders) they will be matched to the next level as they are now market orders. This is one of the reasons you see price spike on high volume at S/R levels or break outs it is also why you can get slippage on stop orders.

 

Short version - There is enough info to determine if a stop or limit order was filled as stop orders don't get filled directly, they get elected to market orders. :)

 

There are a couple of special cases but that's likely to detract from the bread and butter working of centralised electronic exchanges.

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This is all true except stop orders are converted to market orders when they are elected (there trigger price is traded at). Stop orders are invisible on the book (usually) though in some markets some participants can see them (like a NYSE specialist).

 

So, the bid you see are limit orders to buy at that price. There are also stop orders to sell at this price (they do not show on the book). When elected these will be immediately converted to market orders and so match against the current limit orders at that price. If there is not enough volume to satisfy them at that level (in the form of limit orders) they will be matched to the next level as they are now market orders. This is one of the reasons you see price spike on high volume at S/R levels or break outs it is also why you can get slippage on stop orders.

 

Short version - There is enough info to determine if a stop or limit order was filled as stop orders don't get filled directly, they get elected to market orders. :)

 

There are a couple of special cases but that's likely to detract from the bread and butter working of centralised electronic exchanges.

 

Blowfish,

 

The time and sales records the time, price and volume and I am led to believe that some data providers provide bid/ask information. It's true that STOP orders become market orders but that is academic. If someone wants to dissect and discuss the nuts and bolts of DOM and or the order book, that's fine.

 

However time & sales only records what has happened and it is impossible to determine from that record whether the orders were all limit orders or stop orders that became market orders or any other combination.

 

A typical T&S would look something like

 

date, time, volume, price and the colour for bid/ask

 

10/12/2010, 10:30:00, 10, 1231.50

 

Using GREEN to represent BID, all you can say from the above is that 10 orders were traded at the BID price of 1231.50 on 10th Dec at 10.30. They could have been 10 stops that were hit from 10 individuals or 1 stop from a larger trader or 10 limit orders from individual traders, or 10 limit orders from 1 larger trader. Were they orders to Open a position or close a position? All this is something that you have to judge yourself, the Time and sales doesn't give you this information and nobody else can either.

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You can determine that they where not stop orders as stop orders do not trade directly.:) It is not 'academic', that part is wrong I would not have bothered chiming in it but it is impossible to have a complete and proper understanding of how orders are matched without understanding how stops are held and matched with limit orders. Of course for simplicity you can ignore stops (as they simply become market orders when elected) but since you mentioned them I thought it important to understand properly how they work. It is the basis of all sorts of cool stuff too.

 

It is also important to realise (which is why I am re-iterating it) that limit orders below the market are to buy and stop orders below the market are to sell. Limits above the market are to sell and stops above the market are to buy.

 

The post I commented on clearly showed best bid and best ask no where limiting things to just T&S is moving the goal posts!:D Anyway that information is available through any credible platform.

 

If a trade is at the best bid it is a market order to sell. It could be one of the rare cases I mentioned but did not describe, a limit order to sell that 'crosses the market'. To all intents and purpose (including liquidity rebates, exchange fees, order matching etc.) that limit order is as a market order as the market is already at the limit or better.

 

Anyway hope estrader is getting something out of this.

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You can determine that they where not stop orders as stop orders do not trade directly.:) It is not 'academic', that part is wrong I would not have bothered chiming in it but it is impossible to have a complete and proper understanding of how orders are matched without understanding how stops are held and matched with limit orders. Of course for simplicity you can ignore stops (as they simply become market orders when elected) but since you mentioned them I thought it important to understand properly how they work. It is the basis of all sorts of cool stuff too.

 

It is also important to realise (which is why I am re-iterating it) that limit orders below the market are to buy and stop orders below the market are to sell. Limits above the market are to sell and stops above the market are to buy.

 

The post I commented on clearly showed best bid and best ask no where limiting things to just T&S is moving the goal posts!:D Anyway that information is available through any credible platform.

 

If a trade is at the best bid it is a market order to sell. It could be one of the rare cases I mentioned but did not describe, a limit order to sell that 'crosses the market'. To all intents and purpose (including liquidity rebates, exchange fees, order matching etc.) that limit order is as a market order as the market is already at the limit or better.

 

Anyway hope estrader is getting something out of this.

 

Academic in a sense that I doubt it is going to make anyone a more profitable trader or shed anymore light on the direction the market is going to move. The reason I mention time & sales is because the OP brought up the subject. With literally 1000's of orders executing often in less than 1 second, I doubt that (by whatever means) determining which were stops and which were limits would help a great deal in trading.

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What I find it mind boggling is that people trade without an even rudimentary understanding of order types, exchange rules and just a basic understanding of how the environment that they plan to operate in actually works. It is hardly surprising that so many fail. These things are absolutes they are unequivocal, they are the rules of the game there is no reason not to know this basic stuff (except perhaps laziness?). In just about any other endeavor you just would not expect success without knowing the rules of the game. You may think it academic I think it is fundamental and mandatory.

 

Whether it is useful in determining market direction is academic for the reason above however it certainly can be helpful in that regard. All of these new wave of studies based on 'market delta' that attempt to detect order flow, resting inventory, buying pressure etc. rely on measuring volume@bid vs. volume@ask. I too was skeptical if there was any real value in this as some of the core premises I felt where flawed (to do with how different participants behave under different conditions). Still, traders that I respect use this information profitably so I decided to investigate properly. There have been numerous studies been conducted (by academics granted :D) on the efficacy of this approach in detecting 'order flow' long story short it is (72% - 80%+ depending on the study). That gave me some confidence that conducting my own research would not be time wasted. It was not. Of course others mileage might vary.

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What I find it mind boggling is that people trade without an even rudimentary understanding of order types, exchange rules and just a basic understanding of how the environment that they plan to operate in actually works. It is hardly surprising that so many fail. These things are absolutes they are unequivocal, they are the rules of the game there is no reason not to know this basic stuff (except perhaps laziness?). In just about any other endeavor you just would not expect success without knowing the rules of the game. You may think it academic I think it is fundamental and mandatory.

 

Whether it is useful in determining market direction is academic for the reason above however it certainly can be helpful in that regard. All of these new wave of studies based on 'market delta' that attempt to detect order flow, resting inventory, buying pressure etc. rely on measuring volume@bid vs. volume@ask. I too was skeptical if there was any real value in this as some of the core premises I felt where flawed (to do with how different participants behave under different conditions). Still, traders that I respect use this information profitably so I decided to investigate properly. There have been numerous studies been conducted (by academics granted :D) on the efficacy of this approach in detecting 'order flow' long story short it is (72% - 80%+ depending on the study). That gave me some confidence that conducting my own research would not be time wasted. It was not. Of course others mileage might vary.

 

Blowfish, now you have me confused. I study tape reading, that is all I do. That is how I trade. That is all I have been studying for the last 5 years and I can tell you that tape reading IS much more of an art than an exact science. You have tried to tell me that from the Time and sales record it can be determined whether a trade was a stop or limit order. Not only do I think that’s not feasible, I also say that it is superfluous.

 

I have written my own proprietary trading applications and in order to do that I have to connect to my brokers API. When I wrote my first application I wanted all the information possible to determine all details of executed trades and you know what? It is impossible. When you consider the volume of data required and the bandwidth necessary to deliver it you will realise what I am saying and why.

 

For a start, the data provided by my broker is, to use their terms, “Throttled back”, meaning that I don’t get every trade executed on the exchange. I doubt that my broker is unique in this aspect. If you doubt me, call your broker and ask them if they limit bandwidth from the exchange.

 

Secondly, as far as I know the exchange does not provide information to my broker about whether a trade was filled @bid or @ask. The only information I get, along with date & timestamp, is LAST Price and LAST volume. In order to determine whether it was filled @bid or @ask it needs to be compared to the bid/ask quotes at the time it was filled to see which it was and this is prone to errors for a number of different reasons such as computer processor speed.

 

Lastly, perhaps you have super high bandwidth direct connections to the exchange and have access to much more information than I do, but, and I mean no disrespect, if you honestly believe that ‘knowing’ if an order was an executed STOP or Market Hit LIMIT is going to give you some sort of edge then I have to doubt your ability as a trader and whether you really understand the tricks, the games and the tactics large operators use to keep the public baffled. There isn’t one technical aspect of the market you can know and use that will give you an edge, there is much, much more to trading than that. Suffice to say that nothing but hours, days, months and years of screen time, study and practice is the only thing that will make or break you as a trader.

 

In my experience over the years of using trading forums it is only new traders that fuss over fine technical details like whether a trade in the time and sales window was a STOP or Market order or whether BID means selling or ASK means buying because they believe knowing this is going to make them rich. They want to be told that large orders @bid means selling so they can apply simple, rigid, mechanical rules to their trading. If it was that simple you wouldn’t have volumes of books dedicated to the art of tape reading.

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In my experience over the years of using trading forums it is only new traders that fuss over fine technical details like whether a trade in the time and sales window was a STOP or Market order or whether BID means selling or ASK means buying because they believe knowing this is going to make them rich. They want to be told that large orders @bid means selling so they can apply simple, rigid, mechanical rules to their trading. If it was that simple you wouldn’t have volumes of books dedicated to the art of tape reading.

 

The point of this thread was to gain understand on why the prices move, I wasn't fishing for a simple, mechanical trading methodology. I never really thought of the mechanics of the ebb and flow, but I started to think about the contradiction in two phrases: 'there are more buyers than sellers' and 'there is a buyer for every seller' . I now understand that the movements in price occur based on 'motivation' and the balance/imbalance of it.

 

Speaking of T&S, I have always found it helpful to pay attention to the speed of the transactions.

 

I sound like a broken record, but, again, I would like to thank everyone that contributed -- I really appreciate the information.

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You have tried to tell me that from the Time and sales record it can be determined whether a trade was a stop or limit order.

 

Actually I don't believe I said anything of the sort and I guess that is where the main problems lies. :) You are disagreeing with what you think I said. I simply described how orders are matched on nearly all centralised electronic exchanges and pointed out that stops are never traded against directly, they are converted to market orders. If you then treat limit orders that are submitted within there limit prices as market orders too (as the exchanges do) you only have two types of order to contend with, limit orders and market orders.

 

There are data feed providers that provide a full data feed, DTN's IQFeed is the one that is commonly recommended. You might want to search for Fulcrum Traders posts on the subject. As for infrastructure I see you are in the UK, are you out in the sticks? ADSL is more than up to he task in fact I have used Zenfire with good results (though some people have issues with odd bits of data missing) it is a 'full' service though it uses UDP so if your infrastructure is poor you can loose the odd chunk. My 'main' broker is IB but there data is not good enough for this work.

 

I'd be interested in any book recommendations you have on tape reading, one of the big problems is a distinct lack of them. I agree it is as much art as science but there really is not an awful lot written about it. There are classics like "Studies in Tape Reading" (Wyckoff under the nom de plume Rollo Tape) and "Tape Reading and Market Tactics" (Neil) . There are a couple of more recent modern ones Like Techniques of tape reading (Gaifer) and No BS trading (ebook). I have a few obscure titles too but nothing that really compares to those, any you would recommend?

 

You are using logical fallacies to argue your case and attributing things to me that I did not say and clearly did not mean. Of course traders should not fuss over T&S or if an order was a limit or a stop. What I said was that traders should know the rules of the game they are playing or they will fail, plain and simple. This includes but is not restricted to exactly how different order types work, where they are held (most important), under what circumstances they are elected etc. They need to know how the orders they are submitting are handled. There is a whole bunch of other stuff they should know too if they want to avoid being on the wrong side of a market that opens limit down 3 days in a row too.

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Actually I don't believe I said anything of the sort and I guess that is where the main problems lies. :) You are disagreeing with what you think I said. I simply described how orders are matched on nearly all centralised electronic exchanges and pointed out that stops are never traded against directly, they are converted to market orders. If you then treat limit orders that are submitted within there limit prices as market orders too (as the exchanges do) you only have two types of order to contend with, limit orders and market orders.

 

 

Ok, I never like to misrepresent another person's argument :) The point I was trying to make is that ultimately, what is recorded in the T&S is the only thing that matters but trying to figure out whether an order @bid was a stop turned market or direct market order isn't worth the effort. The effort should be spent in assessing the overall impact on the market, if any, and it should be judged within the context of the entire market action.

 

There are data feed providers that provide a full data feed, DTN's IQFeed is the one that is commonly recommended. You might want to search for Fulcrum Traders posts on the subject. As for infrastructure I see you are in the UK, are you out in the sticks? ADSL is more than up to he task in fact I have used Zenfire with good results (though some people have issues with odd bits of data missing) it is a 'full' service though it uses UDP so if your infrastructure is poor you can loose the odd chunk. My 'main' broker is IB but there data is not good enough for this work.

 

 

I am happy with my broker and to be honest, I don't need more than I already have. It has taken me years to figure this out.

 

 

I'd be interested in any book recommendations you have on tape reading, one of the big problems is a distinct lack of them. I agree it is as much art as science but there really is not an awful lot written about it. There are classics like "Studies in Tape Reading" (Wyckoff under the nom de plume Rollo Tape) and "Tape Reading and Market Tactics" (Neil) . There are a couple of more recent modern ones Like Techniques of tape reading (Gaifer) and No BS trading (ebook). I have a few obscure titles too but nothing that really compares to those, any you would recommend?

 

 

Read Jesse Livermore's "Reminiscences of a Stock Operator". I would argue that this book and the ones you have mentioned are all you will ever need. In fact, read "Reminiscences of a Stock Operator" again and again, you will learn something new every time. A work of genius.

 

This includes but is not restricted to exactly how different order types work, where they are held (most important), under what circumstances they are elected etc. They need to know how the orders they are submitting are handled. There is a whole bunch of other stuff they should know too if they want to avoid being on the wrong side of a market that opens limit down 3 days in a row too.

 

OK, practicalities of placing a trade is something every trader should know. I would argue that a trader should only use market orders to open a position and they should always have a protective stop.

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I would argue that a trader should only use market orders to open a position and they should always have a protective stop.

 

You'd get plenty of arguments on both points.

 

For example I only ever use limit orders to open a position and am sure that many are also more profitable in their own application of that principle. But it depends on the overall context and perhaps in the markets you trade.

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I am going to try to step through a hypothetical scenario:

 

The bid is 1000.25 and the ask is 1000. Let's say that there are a total of 10 contracts sitting in a limit sell order at 1000.25, another 10 contracts waiting to be sold with a limit order at 1005 and 10 more up at 1010. Several at market buy orders are sent and take out the 10 contracts sitting at 1000.25. Another handful of buy market orders are placed. This would move the 'price' up to 1005 instantly, correct? The market orders take out the 10 contracts at 1005 and they continue -- would the price again jump all the way up to 1010, given there are no sell orders between 1005 and 1010?

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You'd get plenty of arguments on both points.

 

For example I only ever use limit orders to open a position and am sure that many are also more profitable in their own application of that principle. But it depends on the overall context and perhaps in the markets you trade.

 

I am a Tape Reader and I am a 100% purist, I don't use a chart when trading, just time and sales and nothing else. I only trade one market and that is the E-mini S&P 500 (ES).

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I am a Tape Reader and I am a 100% purist, I don't use a chart when trading, just time and sales and nothing else. I only trade one market and that is the E-mini S&P 500 (ES).

 

Guys who traded that way in 20's and 30's did it that way because there was no alternative and not because it was the best way to do it. Also, most stocks on the NYSE had maybe a few hundred trades a day. so few that you could count them as they happened.

 

If you're actually making money, you'd probably make a heck of a lot more if you didn't limit yourself to only T&S.

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I'm not at all sure I agree MightyMouse.

 

The thing about trading is that each person who ultimately succeeds finds their niche in this ever flowing, ever gyrating thing we call the market. In fact a niche in one of the many different markets.

 

So there will be a niche for skills in that space. Just as their seems to be one for skill in my space. As long as we don't all try to occupy the same niche we can continue to disagree and, perhaps, thrive.

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If you're actually making money, you'd probably make a heck of a lot more if you didn't limit yourself to only T&S.

 

 

Absolutely perhaps probably :) How much time and effort have you devoted to tape reading? I'm asking because I'd like to know what qualifies you to make such a statement. 'Heck of a lot more' is quite an assertion.

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I'm not at all sure I agree MightyMouse.

 

The thing about trading is that each person who ultimately succeeds finds their niche in this ever flowing, ever gyrating thing we call the market. In fact a niche in one of the many different markets.

 

I think it goes beyond that Kiwi. When the going gets tough many people give up and try something else so they never find out if they would have succeeded. I was very close to that point many times over the last 5 years but I believed so much in what I was doing that I persevered. I also trade with a very tight stop (5 ticks) even though I was told that this was utterly impossible. Would I, could I have achieved more with other methods...who knows and who cares!:)

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    • Date: 22nd November 2024.   BTC flirts with $100K, Stocks higher, Eurozone PMI signals recession risk.   Asia & European Sessions:   Geopolitical risks are back in the spotlight on fears of escalation in the Ukraine-Russia after Russia reportedly used a new ICBM to retaliate against Ukraine’s use of US and UK made missiles to attack inside Russia. The markets continue to assess the election results as President-elect Trump fills in his cabinet choices, with the key Treasury Secretary spot still open. The Fed’s rate path continues to be debated with a -25 bp December cut seen as 50-50. Earnings season is coming to an end after mixed reports, though AI remains a major driver. Profit taking and rebalancing into year-end are adding to gyrations too. Wall Street rallied, led by the Dow’s 1.06% broadbased pop. The S&P500 advanced 0.53% and the NASDAQ inched up 0.03%. Asian stocks rose after  Nvidia’s rally. Nikkei added 1% to 38,415.32 after the Tokyo inflation data slowed to 2.3% in October from 2.5% in the prior month, reaching its lowest level since January. The rally was also supported by chip-related stocks tracked Nvidia. Overnight-indexed swaps indicate that it’s certain the Reserve Bank of New Zealand will cut its policy rate by 50 basis points on Nov. 27, with a 22% chance of a 75 basis points reduction. European stocks futures climbed even though German Q3 GDP growth revised down to 0.1% q/q from the 0.2% q/q reported initially. Cryptocurrency market has gained approximately $1 trillion since Trump’s victory in the Nov. 5 election. Recent announcement for the SEC boosted cryptos. Chair Gary Gensler will step down on January 20, the day Trump is set to be inaugurated. Gensler has pushed for more protections for crypto investors. MicroStrategy Inc.’s plans to accelerate purchases of the token, and the debut of options on US Bitcoin ETFs also support this rally. Trump’s transition team has begun discussions on the possibility of creating a new White House position focused on digital asset policy.     Financial Markets Performance: The US Dollar recovered overnight and closed at 107.00. Bitcoin currently at 99,300,  flirting with a run toward the 100,000 level. The EURUSD drifts below 1.05, the GBPUSD dips to June’s bottom at 1.2570, while USDJPY rebounded to 154.94. The AUDNZD spiked to 2-year highs amid speculation the RBNZ will cut the official cash rate by more than 50 bps next week. Oil surged 2.12% to $70.46. Gold spiked to 2,697 after escalation alerts between Russia and Ukraine. Heightened geopolitical tensions drove investors toward safe-haven assets. Gold has surged by 30% this year. Haven demand balanced out the pressure from a strong USD following mixed US labor data. Silver rose 0.9% to 31.38, while palladium increased by 0.9% to 1,040.85 per ounce. Platinum remained unchanged. 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 of how markets work. Click HERE to register for FREE!   Click HERE to READ more Market news. Andria Pichidi 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.
    • A few trending stocks at support BAM MNKD RBBN at https://stockconsultant.com/?MNKD
    • BMBL Bumble stock watch, pull back to 7.94 support area with high trade quality at https://stockconsultant.com/?BMBL
    • LUMN Lumen Technologies stock watch, pull back to 7.43 support area with bullish indicators at https://stockconsultant.com/?LUMN
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