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
Chris Carson
- 12 Mar 2013 10:01
- 11305 of 21973
I'm not trading this, seriously thinking of catching a bus or hailing a Taxi some serious opinions needed here :O)
Stan
- 12 Mar 2013 10:15
- 11306 of 21973
Dow up, Footsie up, Gold up, What's the Dollar doing?
bhunt1910
- 12 Mar 2013 11:25
- 11307 of 21973
Wow - my gold has just gone from £5k loss to £2k profit - moved the sl up to guarantee some profit - but my FTSE short still underwater - but looking more promising
skinny
- 12 Mar 2013 11:29
- 11308 of 21973
I'm still short from yesterday pm, I also got filled last night @6,511, which I closed this morning @6,498.
Plenty of my long(er) term holdings at highs (hardly surprising) and I've put a few limit orders in to sell 50% of these.
Stan
- 12 Mar 2013 11:31
- 11309 of 21973
Silver money going into Gold perhaps?
skinny
- 12 Mar 2013 11:47
- 11310 of 21973
Shortie
- 12 Mar 2013 11:57
- 11311 of 21973
Silver looking good also I think
Shortie
- 12 Mar 2013 11:59
- 11312 of 21973
skinny
- 12 Mar 2013 12:07
- 11313 of 21973
Pound falls on weak manufacturing data
The pound has fallen against the dollar and the euro after official figures showed UK manufacturing output fell by 1.5% in January from the month before.
The drop came after a 0.9% rise in output in December, and has added to fears of a third recession since 2008.
The pound hit a new two-and-a-half-year low of $1.4832 against the US dollar. The euro also rose to a two week high versus the pound of 87.77 pence.
Shortie
- 12 Mar 2013 12:08
- 11314 of 21973
Construction and Building worth keeping an eye, especially if the government decide to invest in the sector to spur growth.....
bhunt1910
- 12 Mar 2013 12:13
- 11315 of 21973
Gold rising nicely now on that news
All I need now is for FTSE to drop some
Shortie
- 12 Mar 2013 12:44
- 11316 of 21973
A cheap pound will only rally the FTSE as equities become cheaper to foreign investors...
Shortie
- 12 Mar 2013 14:10
- 11317 of 21973
Not that anyones interested but 15 minute FTSE chart below, maybe worth printing and hanging on your dart board or worthy of a match!!
skinny
- 12 Mar 2013 14:12
- 11318 of 21973
I've got one last limit in - after that, I'm a watcher.
Shortie
- 12 Mar 2013 14:19
- 11319 of 21973
Heard that one before skinny, mind you though can't talk, I've been going against the grain which I know is wrong... Just no discipline at the moment... Oh well, work will be cut out next month making losses back..
skinny
- 12 Mar 2013 15:01
- 11320 of 21973
There's your chart Shortie!
GBP NIESR GDP Estimate -0.1% previous 0.0%
bhunt1910
- 12 Mar 2013 15:13
- 11321 of 21973
Out of Gold at 1594 - still think it has more to go - but want to hold onto my profit,
Now for the FTSE !!!!
Shortie
- 12 Mar 2013 16:49
- 11322 of 21973
HEARD ON THE STREET: UK Faces Growing Vulnerability
By Richard Barley The U.K. economy seems to be stuck in stasis. Despite a vast budget deficit, a 25% depreciation in sterling, negative real interest rates and GBP375 billion of quantitative easing, the economy is neither growing nor rebalancing toward exports. Tuesday's bleak industrial production and trade data just confirmed the gloom. The market is beginning to realize that the U.K.'s problems run deeper than previously appreciated -- and there are no quick or easy solutions. The latest set of figures have revived talk of a triple-dip recession. U.K. industrial production fell 1.2% on the month in January, far worse than the 0.1% rise economists had pencilled in. That leaves the index of industrial production at a level last seen in May 1992, Capital Economics notes. Manufacturing was down 1.5% on the month, despite survey data that had suggested resilience, a worrying development. Since then, Markit's manufacturing purchasing managers index for February has suggested a renewed fall in orders both at home and abroad. Meanwhile, the trade data hinted at a headache for the Bank of England in its calls for weaker sterling. While the headline trade deficit narrowed to GBP2.4 billion, this was flattered by a big swing in the deficit in oil; underlying exports of goods excluding oil and erratic items fell 5.4% on the month, RBS notes. But at the same time, import prices rose by 1.4% on the month, a move that the Office for National Statistics said might be attributable to the decline in sterling. The inflationary consequences of lower sterling may well be felt quicker than any rebalancing in the economy. The problem is that inflation has broadly been running higher than wage growth since 2008, the ONS notes: real wages are being steadily squeezed. That reduces spending power, both draining demand from the economy and preventing households from paying down debt -- which then further weakens confidence and inhibits demand. But it is difficult to see how policymakers can address this problem. More government spending or unfunded tax cuts would raise concern about public finances; efforts to boost credit availability look like pushing on a string given existing debt burdens. The market is betting on more bond purchases by the BOE, meaning sterling is likely to fall and government bonds to rally. Tuesday, the pound hit $1.4832, its lowest against the dollar since June 2010, while 10-year gilt yields fell to 1.95%. But the risk is that further rounds of QE may prove counterproductive, by distorting the government bond market, importing inflation and raising red flags for foreign investors. The longer the U.K. stagnates, the more it looks vulnerable to a crisis of confidence.
cynic
- 12 Mar 2013 17:15
- 11323 of 21973
shortie you plagiarising skunk you (11314) ..... what did i write in post 11286? :-)
meanwhile i have taken all my money off the table for longs on dow and HG+HC Index ...... i'm not brave enough to short the dow, but it is looking singularly disinclined to go further north
bhunt1910
- 12 Mar 2013 17:19
- 11324 of 21973
My Ftse short - now in profit - just