ixus wrote: » Weather has been brutal and it can be a mood variable. Daylight Savings is also a mood variable. While the clock hasn't changed, it's pretty bright by 6am. The light wakes me up. Maybe people are getting an hour less sleep.A specific sector i.e. construction or IT. Noticing a tightening of belts by management or difficulty getting paid?
Originally Posted by For ever odd View Post Kuroda is hinting at further rate cuts. Keep an eye on gold for clues, in particular 1232, a great level. Both should move in tandam, maybe hedge one off the other if in doubt. Yen 112.48 is my sticky point for the time being.
For ever odd wrote: » Bought the S&P @ 2366.5 will hold till Monday. 1% stop loss. Switched off the news, this is purely a technical entry on the Paddy's days trade. Maybe too early, but model says its a good entry.
For ever odd wrote: » https://amplitude.com/blog/2016/04/13/data-driven-creativity/#more-2006 Found this interesting piece on data analysis (ok I know it's strictly not trade related), and how Netflix used data to its advantage to make a top show without even seeing the Script.
For ever odd wrote: » Possible inverse H&S on the hourly usd /jpy. Suggests. 112.00 if it breaks.
dasdog wrote: » Looked a long way off on Monday morning but sentiment has clearly changed. 111.6 was the line I was watching for this evening.
For ever odd wrote: » That idea died in the early hours of Monday morning when it broke out of the range. Cable has been floating between 124 and 125 since Wednesday. If 124 breaks it would open the door to 122. Simple set up with a nice risk/reward ratio. I'll give it till Wednesday close.
dasdog wrote: » Well that breakout didn't last very long. I'm moving stops slightly above break even when a gap opens so no harm done, just a bad reading. Staying well away from all things GBP but maybe give it an extra day as Xi Jinping and Donald meet on Thursday.
brady23 wrote: » I know from reading that the housing market doesn't have much of a correlation to the stock market so in the event of a dip in the housing market, what stocks, commodities etc would historically tend to have done well?
For ever odd wrote: » Cable has been floating between 124 and 125 since Wednesday. If 124 breaks it would open the door to 122. Simple set up with a nice risk/reward ratio. I'll give it till Wednesday close.
brady23 wrote: » Well I would be interested from a global standpoint, are there some areas of value to invest in when house prices drop and in turn the stock market suffers. I am curious about New Zealand where I'm currently living. Their primary exports are dairy, meat, wool. I'm wondering would some investments in futures be worth while. People I live with are in the housing department at the council/planning level and I have quite a few friends in construction. The current house prices are not sustainable imo. Similar population and average income to Dublin but people driving around in Ferraris and Lamborghinis which I assume is as a result of favourable finance and lots of positive equity. Lots of Asian investors driving up house prices plus Fletcher Buildings which is the 3rd biggest company on NZX lost over 10% off its stock price a week or so ago. NZ was relatively unaffected by the financial crisis but given potential issues with the transatlantic trade agreement too I would be curious if they're headed for a mini bubble especially in Auckland where average house price is 1m NZD so 670k euros. Just some thoughts of people with more experience would be interesting