cynic
- 20 Oct 2007 12:12
rather than pick out individual stocks to trade, it can often be worthwhile to trade the indices themselves, especially in times of high volatility.
for those so inclined, i attach below charts for FTSE and FTSE 250, though one might equally be tempted to trade Dow or S&P, which is significantly broader in its coverage, or even NASDAQ
for ease of reading, i have attached 1 year and 3 month charts in each instance
cynic
- 05 Mar 2013 16:48
- 11177 of 21973
i would hold my hand up, but no longer can :-) ....... however, i reversed that position and have made up a sizeable chunk (stump?) of that loss
skinny
- 05 Mar 2013 16:55
- 11178 of 21973
I went short @6,398 this morning and closed +10. Short again @6,414 - still holding and have a limit in @6,444.
So I will be paying the ex dividend payment in the morning!!
skinny
- 06 Mar 2013 07:45
- 11179 of 21973
FTSE dfb just spiked up to 6,451 - limit removed last night for now.
Merve the Swerve speaks this morning.
hilary
- 06 Mar 2013 07:47
- 11180 of 21973
Venezuela enjoys the world's largest oil reserves.
skinny
- 06 Mar 2013 07:52
- 11181 of 21973
skinny
- 06 Mar 2013 08:01
- 11182 of 21973
GBP Halifax HPI m/m 0.5% consensus 0.4% previous -0.2%
hilary
- 06 Mar 2013 08:37
- 11183 of 21973
Skinners,
All I'm saying is that Venezuela have got a drop or two of oil. I doubt Chavez's death will affect equity and currency markets, but the commentary I read each morning is definitely suggesting that traders should keep half an eye on the oil markets for the time being.
hilary
- 06 Mar 2013 08:39
- 11184 of 21973
Following the breaking news of Venezuela's president Hugo Chavez death, which has no direct impact on the currency market, traders should, nevertheless, keep an eye on the Oil market, as it may produce some volatility. Venezuelan Vice President Mr. Maduro is expected to win the elections and become Chavez's successor. There was some incendiary comments from Maduro after the announcement of Chavez's death, which Reuters reports: ”We have no doubt that commander Chavez was attacked with this illness,” Maduro said, repeating a charge first made by Chavez himself that the cancer was an attack by “imperialist” foes in the United States in league with domestic enemies.
"This report should be bullish for oil" says Eamonn Sheridan, editor at Forexlive. At the time of writing, US Oil futures are quoted at 90.83 after sharp fall off a double top from early February in the 98.00 vicinity. Venezuela enjoys the world's largest oil reserves and the oil-related bonds being traded are of enormous size, suggesting that the oil community may go through a phase of hyper-sensitivity on any indications of political unrest in the country. As Valeria Bednarik, chief analyst at FXstreet.com notes: "Although the news has little to do right now with the forex market, Venezuela is an oil producer, and therefore, we may see some wild action in oil and that could affect forex market." She tips to keep an eye on this and its correlation with oil, "particularly at the European and the US opening" she said.
skinny
- 06 Mar 2013 08:44
- 11185 of 21973
Thanks Hils - unfortunately my biggest oiler is BP.
ahoj
- 06 Mar 2013 09:16
- 11186 of 21973
hilary, But Oil is still falling. From 93-94 fallen to 90-91 now.
hilary
- 06 Mar 2013 09:35
- 11187 of 21973
Is that my fault? I only said it might be worth watching as it might be more volatile than usual. I'm not allowed to advise you whether to buy or sell.
HARRYCAT
- 06 Mar 2013 09:46
- 11188 of 21973
ahoj, you were lucky not to get that in red ink.!!! ;o)
Chris Carson
- 06 Mar 2013 10:02
- 11189 of 21973
:O) Hey Hils still loving the Fat Spanish Waiter? :O)
Chris Carson
- 06 Mar 2013 10:08
- 11191 of 21973
skinners - I miss her wit:O)
skinny
- 06 Mar 2013 10:12
- 11192 of 21973
EUR Revised GDP q/q -0.6% consensus -0.6% previous -0.6%
Plateman
- 06 Mar 2013 10:17
- 11193 of 21973
Hils, could the oil price volatility be a knee-jerk reaction, I understand these are quite common at the moment. :>)
skinny
- 06 Mar 2013 11:03
- 11194 of 21973
Good ol Merve.
Bank governor Sir Mervyn King suggests splitting up RBS
Bank of England Governor Sir Mervyn King has said there is a case for splitting up Royal Bank of Scotland.
He told the Banking Standards Commission that there was a "good bank, bad bank" within bailed-out RBS.
The healthy arm, separated from the problem assets in the rest of the bank, would be capable of attracting funding to lend to the UK economy.
He said the arguments for restructuring RBS "sooner rather than later are powerful ones".
halifax
- 06 Mar 2013 11:18
- 11195 of 21973
why not separate RBS and NATWEST give RBS to the scots as a "going away present"?
Toya
- 06 Mar 2013 11:25
- 11196 of 21973
Interesting article on MarketWatch.com re price of oil and Chavez:
Why oil prices dipped on Chavez's death