shinnosuke wrote:Good to hear from you, JFF. Don't be a stranger.
InfleXion wrote:Risk is only as relevant as your attachment to what you've got to lose. Give up the love of money and there is no such thing as risk in these markets. If nothing else, it sure makes the buy and hold strategy easier to stick to.
barrytrot wrote:InfleXion wrote:Risk is only as relevant as your attachment to what you've got to lose. Give up the love of money and there is no such thing as risk in these markets. If nothing else, it sure makes the buy and hold strategy easier to stick to.
Well even if you just *like* money having less of it is less fun than having more of it.
beauanderos wrote:
Oops... what's this? A reversal? But... but... no one predicted that!
68Camaro wrote:what should impress you is the cycling
68Camaro wrote:what should impress you is the cycling
Engineer wrote:68Camaro wrote:what should impress you is the cycling
I refuse to be impressed by cycling shorts.
Engineer wrote:68Camaro wrote:what should impress you is the cycling
I refuse to be impressed by cycling shorts.
68Camaro wrote:.....More to come?
scyther wrote:68Camaro wrote:what should impress you is the cycling
I don't get it...
68Camaro wrote:scyther wrote:68Camaro wrote:what should impress you is the cycling
I don't get it...
Someone has been cycling the market off and on for a number of years. It was very pronounced in 2011 (and I made some paper money on it) - but during that period they were cycling in periods of 3+ days with amplitudes of $2-$5 or more. They've since succeeded in pushing the price back down from $49 > $19 in waves.
Now they are cycling in hours, with smaller amplitudes (in both absolute as well as percentage terms), and the behavior appears consistent with someone pumping the market down and then harvesting (and I would say they are knocking down the paper price then harvesting physical). I say that with no concrete physical proof whatsoever, but with the majors (JPM, GS, etc) exiting the commodities markets in some sense, combined with record outflow of physical from the exchanges, it is unusual behavior to say the least.
After a previous rise the price gets knocked back down sharply (say 3%), putts along with for a few hours where there is some semi-level give or take trading, then the available supply at that price after that action is sucked up and further buys cause the price to rise almost equally as sharply, in no more than hours, but often in minutes.
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