bosley
- 20 Feb 2004 09:34
123456
- 19 Oct 2005 16:12
- 11919 of 27111
on a day like this wish we had pauls input
going nuts waiting on news
best of luck everyone
Greyhound
- 19 Oct 2005 16:36
- 11920 of 27111
The whole market is jittery anyway for a whole variety of reasons, not to mention 19.10.87 anniversary!
bhunt1910
- 19 Oct 2005 16:38
- 11921 of 27111
No need for the market to celebrate my birthday - I can do that all by myself thanks
Bema
- 19 Oct 2005 16:38
- 11922 of 27111
Where do you predict the next sell point to be Sham? Ashley james on ADVFN seems to think 22p early next week.
I'm not a chartist myself but am watching you guys with renewed interest.
Greyhound
- 19 Oct 2005 16:41
- 11923 of 27111
If it's heading northwards, I would say 18p and 21p
insiderinside
- 19 Oct 2005 16:46
- 11924 of 27111
sorry - i have to do this - after all the ramping of high oil prices -
OMG - oil price falling - oil everywhere - its the end of Starpol 2000 - who wants more expensive crap - when you can have good cheap oil based products - and with Bush supporting the oil industry and the use of lots of oil - the US will keep using more and more - oil and oil based products !
http://money.cnn.com/2005/10/19/markets/eia_oil/index.htm
Oil falls as crude stocks swell
Reports shows oil inventories grew by more than twice the expected amount; demand falls.
October 19, 2005: 10:54 AM EDT
NEW YORK (CNN/Money) - Oil prices fell Wednesday after a government report showed crude supplies rising far more than expected.
U.S. light crude for November delivery lost $1.05 to $62.15 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Oil prices were down 20 cents prior to the report.
The Energy Information Administration said the nation's crude supplies rose by 5.6 million barrels for the week ended Oct. 14, while distillates declined by 1.9 barrels. Analysts were looking for a 2 million build in crude stocks and a 1.7 million barrel drop in distillates, according to Reuters.
i feel better now - had to do that - thank you
Bema
- 19 Oct 2005 16:46
- 11925 of 27111
This is just by charting of course. Any news blows things out of the water. (maybe even out of Baza's waters!?!)
I think we're looking to the end of the ASDA trial now........
Regardless, i hold 50% more SEO than previous to this little hiccup so i'm happy! ;o)
Bema
- 19 Oct 2005 16:48
- 11926 of 27111
LOL, crude is in good supply.
It's the refining bottleneck that will get them next. Thanks anyway ii.
insiderinside
- 19 Oct 2005 16:48
- 11927 of 27111
the chart says down - the sell off is not finished - has it started in earnest yet - throw in no Walmart news as the rampers have promised - and late tomorrow and Friday could see the price well down - and I mean well down -
do not rule out the ramp factor about Walmart and this week - when it fails to happen - there could be a rush for the door before end of day Friday -
Bema
- 19 Oct 2005 16:53
- 11928 of 27111
LOL! You are not one of the selected chartists i am following ii.
Only the posters who have not historically fixed their charts have my attention at the moment, whether they bode fair or foul......
hewittalan6
- 19 Oct 2005 16:53
- 11929 of 27111
ii,
that doesn't address the environmental argument, though I accept that The USA doesn't give a damn about the environment, and nor does it address that oil is historically very high and, since you love charts so much, has been in a consistently upward trend for years.
Neither does it address the accepted fact that oil is a finite resource and will dry up, the only question being when.
If we accept these facts then we accept that the reason we all need oil so much is because our cars and homes guzzle it too rapidly. If we wish to keep our lifestyle longer then we must find alternatives to oil in the areas that do least damage to our lifestyle, and the simplest way is to stop using it to manufacture things that are thrown away a few days later.
Sermon over, but its nice to see ii posting without the usual hystrionics.
Alan
Bugz
- 19 Oct 2005 16:55
- 11930 of 27111
I disagree ii.
Although we might take one or two ticks off tomorrow, I dont think we'll see another bear raid again in the 12p region. The MM's have been called into line with the last RNS and I know at least three of the biggest MMs will support a mid teens price-for the mean time at any rate.
As many say, ramping on BBs has pretty much fa impact on the sp-I'm afraid you know that too ii. Indeed the Walmart announcement is needed to further boost the sp, but even without it, this time next year SEO will be selling units to other firms post the ASDA 1 year deal and will have at least 200 machines converted anyway.
However prehaps as a chartist your looking at the trend now and not further down the line, which is fair enough!!
Biscuit
- 19 Oct 2005 16:57
- 11931 of 27111
Remember SEO's major steps in Europe and North America will be "reported shortly" and that was in the RNS 2 weeks ago so not long to go now.
lindos
- 19 Oct 2005 16:57
- 11932 of 27111
Does any one have a view on the 2.8 million trade advfn have it down as a sell
thanks
lindos
Bugz
- 19 Oct 2005 17:00
- 11933 of 27111
Its down as a vw trade-dunno that code. Anyone with the answer?! :)
insiderinside
- 19 Oct 2005 17:02
- 11934 of 27111
lindos - did the price go down today ?
if yes - it was a sell and SE0 ended red
if no and SEO finished up and blue - it was a buy
did that answer your question ?
Biscuit
- 19 Oct 2005 17:03
- 11935 of 27111
Means the price shown is the average price of share in the transaction so obviously took place over a period of time.
hewittalan6
- 19 Oct 2005 17:04
- 11936 of 27111
No idea what vw means unless it means someone paid too much for a Passat!
ii, you should know better. The stock market is nowhere near being the perfect supply and demand model you are portraying. Even amateurs like me know that.
Alan
lindos
- 19 Oct 2005 17:04
- 11937 of 27111
Not the answer I was hopeing for but thanks
Lindos
Bema
- 19 Oct 2005 17:04
- 11938 of 27111
Volume weighted average i think???????????????
Definition:
VWAP. A measure of the price at which the majority of a given day's trading in a given security took place. Calculated by taking the weighted average of the prices of each trade. The method is used by institutional traders, who often break a given trade into multiple transactions.