trading

trading

Thursday, 2 November 2017

useful views

#1: Concentrate on the process, not the results.

#2: Make decisions and money from your skills.

#3: It's never outside of you - it's always you.

#4: Every disappointment holds a sead of an equivalent benefit, a positive message.

#5: Never cease to try to be the best you can be, continue learning and growing.

#6: Long term trading success is like farming, there are no short cuts.

#7: Develop and believe that trading crates and add real value to you and your family, your friends, community and the whole of humanity.

#8: Develop a love and respect for free markets, individual liberty, initiative and trading as a part of a remarkable whole.

#9: It's never too late because it's never anything other than Now!

CME Group, the world's largest derivatives exchange operator, said it would launch a futures contract for bitcoin later this year.


Tuesday, 10 October 2017

The Bull Market In Everything?

                                             The Trend Is Still Up. Enjoy The Ride.

'most investors find it difficult to remain patient and circumspect as the gravy train to apparent riches pulls out from the station. The loneliness of watching the caboose get smaller as it fades into the distance is more than most can handle'

Tuesday, 3 October 2017

market contemplations


"The next crisis is also likely to result in social tensions similar to those witnessed 50 years ago in 1968. In 1968, TV and investigative journalism provided a generation of baby boomers access to unfiltered information on social developments such as Vietnam and other proxy wars, Civil rights movements, income inequality, etc. Similar to 1968, the internet today (social media, leaked documents, etc.) provides millennials with unrestricted access to information on a surprisingly similar range of issues. In addition to information, the internet provides a platform for various social groups to become more self-aware, united and organized. Groups span various social dimensions based on differences in income/wealth, race, generation, political party affiliations, and independent stripes ranging from alt-left to alt-right movements. In fact, many recent developments such as the US presidential election, Brexit, independence movements in Europe, etc., already illustrate social tensions that are likely to be amplified in the next financial crisis. How did markets evolve in the aftermath of 1968? Monetary systems were completely revamped (Bretton Woods), inflation rapidly increased, and equities produced zero returns for a decade. The decade ended with a famously wrong Businessweek article ‘the death of equities’ in 1979."