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
skinny
- 28 Mar 2013 16:50
- 11705 of 21973
As I said - I know nothing, so you got me a few days early :-)
Guess I should learn one of these new fangled languages at some point.
halifax
- 28 Mar 2013 17:55
- 11706 of 21973
really looking forward to voting UKIP at the forthcoming elections to give pseudo tory Cameron a kick up the Bull(y)ingdon!
Seymour Clearly
- 28 Mar 2013 18:04
- 11707 of 21973
When I was learning to trade Fx I used Hil's rules in post 11698 to go through the
Forex thread. Very handy when you're looking for stuff!
Toya
- 01 Apr 2013 12:58
- 11708 of 21973
US markets are open today as normal. ISM data and Construction Spending m/m due at 10:00 their time (is that 15:00 ours, with our time change?? - not sure!)
skinny
- 01 Apr 2013 13:10
- 11709 of 21973
Toya
- 01 Apr 2013 13:14
- 11710 of 21973
Thanks Skinny - should have checked there!
skinny
- 01 Apr 2013 13:22
- 11711 of 21973
Having said that - I notice the 1pm figures haven't been updated.
On edit - it looks like it may be 3pm
EST - BST
Toya
- 01 Apr 2013 14:22
- 11712 of 21973
It does seem confusing, since I thought we were now back to 5 hours ahead... However, the PMI figures for March are now out: 54.6 (which I think is more or less as expected)
Toya
- 01 Apr 2013 14:24
- 11713 of 21973
MarketWatch is still saying 'ISM figures dues at 10:00' - I make that 15:00 UK time
Toya
- 01 Apr 2013 15:04
- 11714 of 21973
ISM index falls to 51.3% in March - down from 54.2%
gibby
- 01 Apr 2013 20:54
- 11715 of 21973
31/03/2013 01:14
interesting....
Shareholders of the London Stock Exchange and LCH.Clearnet Group have approved LSE's acquisition of a 57.8% stake in the trans-Atlantic clearinghouse. The deal also has cleared all regulatory and antitrust obstacles, according to the LSE.
gibby
- 01 Apr 2013 20:56
- 11716 of 21973
31/03/2013 03:44
SIX Group would consider bidding for Euronext, CEO says
If Euronext were for sale, SIX Group would be interested, said Urs Rueegsegger, CEO of the Swiss stock exchange operator. "Should [IntercontinentalExchange] put Euronext up for sale, we would certainly take a look," Rueegsegger said. He noted interest in Euronext's equity and derivatives business, financial-information services, and clearing and settlement operations. SIX Group also reported a nearly 47% increase in profit in 2012.
:-)))))))))))))))!
skinny
- 02 Apr 2013 08:19
- 11717 of 21973
Spanish Unemployment Change -5.0K 30.2K 59.4K
Spanish Manufacturing PMI 44.2 46.2 46.8
skinny
- 02 Apr 2013 08:45
- 11718 of 21973
Italian Manufacturing PMI 44.5 45.4 45.8
ahoj
- 02 Apr 2013 08:57
- 11719 of 21973
I think the PMIs are very good given the crisis in Cyprus and the media coverage. The statistics are sentiment driven.
skinny
- 02 Apr 2013 09:00
- 11720 of 21973
EUR Final Manufacturing PMI 46.8 46.6 46.6
EUR Italian Monthly Unemployment Rate 11.6% 11.8% 11.7%
skinny
- 02 Apr 2013 09:30
- 11721 of 21973
GBP Manufacturing PMI 48.3 48.9 47.9
GBP Net Lending to Individuals m/m 1.5B 0.9B 0.8B
GBP M4 Money Supply m/m -0.5% 1.1% 0.9%
GBP Mortgage Approvals 52K 54K 54K
Shortie
- 02 Apr 2013 09:44
- 11722 of 21973
Activity in euro-zone factories shrank in March at its fastest rate in three months and new orders also declined at a faster pace, suggesting the industry will continue to struggle in months ahead. The figures add weight to evidence the region's economy shrank in the first three months of the year, lengthening a downturn that has already lasted 15 months and casting doubt on euro-zone leaders' hopes that a recovery will begin soon. The euro-zone purchasing managers' index for the manufacturing sector fell to 46.8 in March, its lowest level since December, from 47.9 in February, data provider Markit said Tuesday. A reading below 50 means activity was shrinking month-to-month. Markit had previously estimated a slightly more negative figure for March of 46.6. "The euro-zone manufacturing sector looks likely to have acted as a drag on the economy in the first quarter, with an acceleration in the rate of decline in March raising the risk that the downturn may also intensify in the second quarter," said Chris Williamson, chief economist at Markit. The worsening state of euro-zone factory activity at the end of the first quarter is bad news for the bloc's leaders, who are banking on an upturn in the economy later this year to help ease their fiscal crisis and prevent other countries from needing bailouts, following aid and loans for Greece, Portugal, Ireland, Spain and Cyprus. All eight euro-zone countries that Markit provides detailed figures for showed activity contracting in March, as factories in both Germany and Ireland lost momentum, having grown in previous months. Falls in output accelerated in Austria, the Netherlands, Italy, Spain, France and Greece. A gauge of new orders taken by companies across the bloc--which helps indicate how activity will progress in coming months--fell at its sharpest rate since December.
skinny
- 02 Apr 2013 10:00
- 11723 of 21973
EUR Unemployment Rate 12.0% 12.0% 11.9%
Shortie
- 02 Apr 2013 10:10
- 11724 of 21973
The number of people out of work in the euro zone climbed to a record in February, as the region's fiscal and debt crisis wore on and businesses continued to retrench. Eurostat, the European Union's official statistics agency, said Tuesday that 19.071 million people were unemployed in the euro zone in February, the highest since its records for the 17 nations that now make up the currency bloc began in 1995. Some 33,000 more people were out of work in February, leaving the jobless rate unchanged at 12.0% of the workforce. January's rate was revised higher, also to 12.0%, the highest figure in Eurostat's database. Unemployment in January jumped by 222,000, according to the revised figures, marking the sharpest rise in joblessness in 10 months. The figures showed continued divergence between the stronger and weaker countries in the currency bloc. Unemployment was lowest in Austria, at 4.8%, and Germany, at 5.4%. Both rates were unchanged from the prior month. In Cyprus, the latest victim of the euro zone's debt crisis, the jobless rate jumped to 14.0% in February from 13.7% in January. In Spain it rose to 26.3% from 26.2%. Greek unemployment in December--the most recent month that data are available for--fell to 26.4% from 26.6% the prior month.