- Joined
- 27 February 2008
- Posts
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- 10
I'll be taking most of my free carried profits, maybe tomorrow... just in case I'm wrong and the bears are right and a major C is underway.
If I'm right I'll buy back at lower prices.
And if your wrong ?
No trailing stops?
I may be looking at a bearish scenario shortly but im also a realist in the fact i could be wrong and not selling my in profit longs until they dictate to me to bail out via my trailing stops ( which may or may not be right , but they are MY levels of concern if hit).......
No hedging of positions? just a straight out sell it all ?
Intresting stuff Nulla ......... poor ole Norway sitting all safe annd sound on its lonesome
Thanks for the links Satanoperca. I have loaded them up here so anyone else interested can get some perspective of how other traders are reviewing the live data/information that influences trading/entry/exit points.
Is that webiress nulla? What broker too if u dont mind me askin?
Cheers
With thanks to Colin Twiggs of Incredible charts, the following chart puts the building "sovereign debt" situation in perspective. At the moment global markets are literaly stumbling from one crisis to another while trying to convince themselves everything is getting better. As Mr Twiggs states "You can't borrow your way out of a financial crisis".
The chart below compares projected 2010 deficits to net public debt, both expressed as a percentage of GDP. Nations below the diagonal line risk falling into financial distress. The diagonal represents two risk factors as a single measure: (1) the larger your public debt, the more precarious your position, and (2) the greater your current deficit (below zero) the faster your financial position will deteriorate. The US, for example, with net debt below 60 percent is in the same risk category as Italy, because it is running larger deficits. Greece and Japan are obviously in the worst position, but the UK and Ireland*, with deficits greater than 10 percent, risk joining them within the next five years. If you invest in bonds, as PIMCO does, countries above the diagonal line would offer the least risk of default or inflation.
The further a country is below the diagonal, the closer it is to "junk bond" status.
Interesting post Nulla Nulla. Thx.
But what about private debt? Japan for example, is in a much better situation than most other nations.
essentially borrowed the debt from themselves
essentially borrowed the debt from themselves
Will be interesting to see what the David Jones does tonite ...
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