Mr_Orange
Senior Member
- Joined
- Jun 17, 2013
- Posts
- 5,632
Intra-day traders using hourly or smaller time frame charts.Agreed. Is there an easy way to view trading volumes? I’m wondering who in their right mind is playing this game at the moment.
Intra-day traders using hourly or smaller time frame charts.Agreed. Is there an easy way to view trading volumes? I’m wondering who in their right mind is playing this game at the moment.
Be patient.Damm, missed my buying opportunity. I was nearly going to pull the trigger yesterday afternoon too.....
Or sell everything you bought yesterday for a 5 to 10% gain over 24 hours and then wait until it dips again. This is what I have just done. Never been an easier time to make money. Let the rollercoaster continue.Be patient.
Funny that TSLA was up almost 23% today…..
Insider trading?Well it had dropped an awful lot. perhaps Elon was buying it!!!
Yep - and the Chinese haven't reacted yet to the U.S. raising the tariff on China from 104% to 125%My brain aches…..
and not forgetting 25% on Canada and Mexico (I think that is today's tariff - its getting damn hard to keep up!)And not forgetting that the US government is still leving an additional 10% tariff on every country, including those like Australia who have a free trade agreement with the US.
This still has a long way to play out.
Excuse my daft questions but my stock market exposure is only relatively new.
Question - are the futures markets "real " so to speak. Noting that the USA futures are currently well in the red but does that mean anything ? Does Australia have equivalent?
Not a daft question at all. Australia (the ASX) does have a futures market as well. Futures are a pretty good indicator of how traders think the market will open - right now about 5 hours before the market opens. Unfortunately things are so screwed up right at the moment that the market could change wildly on the smallest thing. It wouldn't be hard for something tiny to be misinterpreted as something big because the market is being forced to be so reactionary at the moment.Excuse my daft questions but my stock market exposure is only relatively new.
Question - are the futures markets "real " so to speak. Noting that the USA futures are currently well in the red but does that mean anything ? Does Australia have equivalent?
So take futures with a grain of salt so to speak ?And I'd add that the volume in futures is generally a lot lower than in the real market, anything can happen on open.
Yes very true. At the moment just about anything is possible - Iran could decide that now is a good time to do an underground nuclear test.And I'd add that the volume in futures is generally a lot lower than in the real market, anything can happen on open.
Take them as a little bit of a guide rather than a path to follow.So take futures with a grain of salt so to speak ?
Futures involve either gaining or losing real money… and it’s usually leveraged as the premium to play is significantly lower than the underlying exposure.Excuse my daft questions but my stock market exposure is only relatively new.
Question - are the futures markets "real " so to speak. Noting that the USA futures are currently well in the red but does that mean anything ? Does Australia have equivalent?
Indeed.Futures involve either gaining or losing real money… and it’s usually leveraged as the premium to play is significantly lower than the underlying exposure.
Doesn’t get any more real.
A 10% drop when owning shares is a bad day but you have 90% of your capital. A 10% movement in the wrong direction while holding index futures will wipe out your investment and result in margin calls - you would start losing more than you initially invested very quickly and have to top up your account with more cash that immediately gets held in escrow to pay your counterparty.
It is real - but it’s also a separate market.
So the Fed has been decreasing it's exposure to MBS. so if China which had already sold 20% of it's holdings by December surely the Fed buys them. And as it probably would have very few others buying buy them back then at a loss to China.Interesting article about how China could quietly cause some pain in the U.S. without needing to announce anything - https://www.cnbc.com/2025/04/09/how-china-could-crush-the-us-housing-market.html - China might see it as a way to get payback for the recent peasant remark.
?So the Fed has been decreasing it's exposure to MBS. so if China which had already sold 20% of it's holdings by December surely the Fed buys them. And as it probably would have very few others buying buy them back then at a loss to China.
Probably just CNBC and it 's agenda.