Not sure if this question has previously been asked? I'm feeling my way around and still too much to learn.
From my observations the best time of the day to acquire shares is between 10am and 3pm where it appears less price movement. But I wonder if there is a certain time of the year which is better to purchase shares? Or does it not matter?
... 1. How do I pick certain parts instead of the whole post? ...
... 3. ... what is the best way to see if my post has been replied to? ...
If you mean when you reply with quote,
then you can highlight the unwanted bits and delete them.
Suscribe to the thread.
Your subscription list will update with each new post.
Hi,
Is there a website i can get 52 week rolling lows from?
30 day free trial -- http://www.amibroker.com/download.html
I guess i could create a filter alternatively, but an easy accessible one would be nice
Code:Low250 = L <= Ref(LLV(L, 250), -1); Filter = Low250; AddColumn(IIf(Low250, L, 0), "52 Week Low", 1.2, colorBlue);
Easy.
XAO from 4th. to today.
Ticker Date 52 Week Low
ADO 7/03/2016 0.06
ADO 8/03/2016 0.06
CAJ 7/03/2016 0.13
CLX 4/03/2016 0.89
CLX 7/03/2016 0.86
DVN 7/03/2016 0.42
DVN 8/03/2016 0.42
HIL 8/03/2016 0.20
KPL 3/03/2016 0.10
KPL 4/03/2016 0.10
PAC 7/03/2016 4.99
PAC 8/03/2016 4.88
SAI 7/03/2016 3.53
SLM 4/03/2016 0.56
SLM 7/03/2016 0.55
Thanks, will try that out if there's no easier option!! Not an amibroker user, yet
I realise that for the most part such things would require subscription, os there any round about ways to accessing such information?
Definitely agree, particularly in regards to financials, however I like the comprehensive summaries that they provide.Well there is really 2 separate types of info in
I think you can learn as much about understanding and analysing a business from following the share specific threads here on ASF, there are some very knowledgable and skilled people that share their analysis and research here and I have always found that if you ask questions to further your understanding, they are more than happy to help.
Thought I'd share some timely trading/investing advice applicable to both newbie's as well as us a little more experienced one's alike - as we never stop learning during our trading journey.... Enjoy and Good Luck!
TRADER PSYCHOLOGY
1. Be flexible and go with the flow of the markets price action, stubbornness, egos, and emotions are the worst indicators for entries and exits.
2. Understand that the trader only chooses their entries, exits, position size, and risk and the market chooses whether they are profitable or not.
3. You must have a trading plan before you start to trade, that has to be your anchor in decision making.
4. You have to let go of wanting to always be right about your trade and exchange it for wanting to make money. The first step of making money is to cut a 'losing trade' short the moment it is confirmed that you are wrong.
5. Never trade position sizes so big that your emotions take over from your trading plan.
6. "If it feels good, don't do it." – Richard Weissman
7. Trade your biggest position sizes during winning streaks and your smallest position sizes during losing streaks. Not too big and trade your smallest when in a losing streak.
8. Do not worry about losing money that can be made back worry about losing your trading discipline.
9. A losing trade costs you money but letting a big losing trade get too far out of hand can cause you to lose your nerve. Cut losses for the sake o your nerves as much as for the sake of capital preservation.
10. A trader can only go on to success after they have faith in themselves as a trader, their trading system as a winner, and know that they will stay disciplined in their trading journey.
--Bring your risk of ruin down to almost zero.
RISK MANAGEMENT
1. Never enter a trade before you know where you will exit if proven wrong.
2. First find the right stop loss level that will show you that you’re wrong about a trade then set your positions size based on that price level.
3. Focus like a laser on how much capital can be lost on any trade first before you enter not on how much profit you could make.
4. Structure your trades through position sizing and stop losses so you never lose more than 1% of your trading capital on one losing trade.
5. Never expose your trading account to more than 5% total risk at any one time.
6. Understand the nature of volatility and adjust your position size for the increased risk with volatility spikes.
7. Never, ever, ever, add to a losing trade. Eventually that will destroy your trading account when you eventually fight the wrong trend.
8. All your trades should end in one of four ways: a small win, a big win, a small loss, or break even, but never a big loss. If you can get rid of big losses you have a great chance of eventually trading success.
9. Be incredibly stubborn in your risk management rules don’t give up an inch. Defense wins championships in sports and profits in trading.
10. Most of the time trailing stops are more profitable than profit targets. We need the big wins to pay for the losing trades. Trends tend to go farther than anyone anticipates.
--Develop a winning trading system that fits your personality.
YOUR ROBUST METHOD
1. “Trade What's Happening...Not What You Think Is Gonna Happen.” – Doug Gregory
2. Go long strength; sell weakness short in your time frame.
3. Find your edge over other traders.
4. Your trading system must be built on quantifiable facts not opinions.
5. Trade the chart not the news.
6. A robust trading system must either be designed to have a large winning percentage of trades or big wins and small losses.
7. Only take trades that have a skewed risk reward in your favor.
8. The answer to the question, “What’s the trend?” is the question, “What’s your timeframe?” – Richard Weissman. Trade primarily in the direction that a market is trending in on your time frame until the end when it bends.
9. Only take real entries that have an edge, avoid being caught up in the meaningless noise.
10. Place your stop losses outside the range of noise so you are only stopped out when you are likely wrong.
www.traderplanet.com/articles/view/165953-30-great-trading-rules/
======
ASSAD'S RULES OF TRADING
Trading rule No 1. Never chase. Forget about the Dollar loss for a moment as the real damage comes from the distraction it creates.
Trading rule No 2. Wait for the break. Most traders buy inside the range, get impatient and as a result they sell on first sign of strength which ends up being the breakout.
Trading rule No 3. Don't ride the ticks and Dollar profits. It creates emotional turmoil and is draining. Prevention is best cure. Takes the fun out of the game.
Trading rule No 4. Price action trumps everything. Management lie or mislead but price action (money flow) never lies.
Trading rule No 5. Sell the news or a least sell partials. Markets discount everything and over the long run you will be better off.
Trading rule No 6. Always stay in control. Do NOT put yourself in news related coin toss trades, where the risk cannot be managed.
Trading rule No 7. Mind your own business, avoid conflict. If you take offence because someone has disagreed with your trade, then you are such a precious little petal.
Trading rule No 8. Do NOT set targets as all this creates is a premature EXIT. Run a trailer and let that take you out.
Trading rule No 9. Minimise whipsaw at all costs. It's a trader killer. The root cause of trading failure more often than not, starts with whipsaw.
Trading rule No 10. Do NOT buy stretched breakouts. More often than not they recoil back into the range to flush traders out.
Trading rule No 11. Start with long term charts and look to catch major breaks/moves. These tend to follow through and it makes it easier to run with winners.
Trading rule No 12. DO NOT trades Forex short-term. It is a mugs game, news driven by central banks. It is like betting on the greyhounds.
Trading rule No 13. Turn trading rules into habit. There is no point in having trading rules if you dont apply them!
Trading rule No 14. And the most important; only tell your wife about your losers.
Trading rule No 15. Hit those stops, no questions asked. Hitting your stop and watching a stock rally hurts but not htting your stop and watching the stock fall hurts a hell of alot more.
www.asenna.com.au/asenna/node/34842
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Cheers tela
Trade your biggest position sizes during winning streaks and your smallest position sizes during losing streaks. Not too big and trade your smallest when in a losing streak.
Never expose your trading account to more than 5% total risk at any one time.
Structure your trades through position sizing and stop losses so you never lose more than 1% of your trading capital on one losing trade.
DO NOT trades Forex short-term. It is a mugs game, news driven by central banks. It is like betting on the greyhounds.
Sell the news or a least sell partials. Markets discount everything and over the long run you will be better off.
--Bring your risk of ruin down to almost zero.
And the most important; only tell your wife about your losers.
Only take real entries that have an edge, avoid being caught up in the meaningless noise.
Question - if value investing, when calculating return on equity, do we use stockholder equity excluding goodwill/tangibles??
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