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
- 12 Aug 2013 13:14
- 12756 of 21973
Thanks - I opened the short late Friday as the US fell and we carried on climbing.
Nothing obvious atm for this afternoon, so perhaps a good time to enjoy the sunshine!
Shortie
- 12 Aug 2013 13:24
- 12757 of 21973
I think you might be right, although I'm stuck at work so no rest for me.
Shortie
- 12 Aug 2013 17:23
- 12758 of 21973
46644 shorting AAPL
Shortie
- 12 Aug 2013 17:28
- 12759 of 21973
FTSE sold +2.5pts..
Shortie
- 12 Aug 2013 17:33
- 12760 of 21973
46526 AAPL closed +118... Just goes to show patience and timing are everything..
Shortie
- 13 Aug 2013 09:08
- 12761 of 21973
6608 gone short FTSE
skinny
- 13 Aug 2013 09:09
- 12762 of 21973
CPI figures shortly.
Shortie
- 13 Aug 2013 09:19
- 12763 of 21973
Credit Agricole Corporate & Investment Bank expects UK CPI inflation to ease only slightly in July to 2.8% year on year. "CPI inflation likely passed its peak and our forecasts point to gradual decline towards 2.4% by the end of 2013," it says.
Shortie
- 13 Aug 2013 09:31
- 12764 of 21973
Europe’s biggest banks will have to cut €661 bln of assets and generate €47 bln of fresh capital over the next five years to comply with forthcoming regulations aimed at reducing the likelihood of another taxpayer funded bailout. The figures form part of an analysis by the UK’s Royal Bank of Scotland – which singles out Deutsche Bank, Crédit Agricole and Barclays as the banks most in need of fresh capital – highlighting that five years on since the financial crisis, Europe’s banks are still “too big to fail”. Overall, the region’s banks need to shed €3.2 tln in assets by 2018 to comply with Basel III regulations on capital and leverage, according to RBS. The burden is greatest on smaller banks, which need to shed €2.6 tln from their balance sheets, raising fears that lending to the region’s small and medium size enterprises will be sharply reduced as a result – FT.
Vince Cable is looking at imposing a levy on businesses who fail to pay their suppliers promptly, after a Whitehall push to cajole companies into improving their behaviour voluntarily failed to make enough impact. The business secretary has ordered his officials to look at whether Britain should introduce a fine for late payments as he prepares for an autumn offensive on the issue. The threat of government intervention comes after months of pressure by Whitehall to get businesses to sign up to the government’s voluntary prompt payment code – FT.
cynic
- 13 Aug 2013 09:55
- 12765 of 21973
Vince Cable is looking at imposing a levy on businesses who fail to pay their suppliers promptly
and just how does he think that will work if you want to remain a supplier?
a number of the major players will impose THEIR terms of payment on any potential or actual supplier, and it is not unknown for that to be 120 days or more after the goods have been supplied and invoiced
halifax
- 13 Aug 2013 10:16
- 12766 of 21973
cynic as usual Vince was looking for a popular headline, why do we have a business secretary that lives in "cloud cuckoo" land?
Shortie
- 13 Aug 2013 10:19
- 12767 of 21973
I fully agree Cynic, I was rather surprised by the article, doesn't Vince Cable realise that under the Late Payment of Commercial Debts Act business owners can already charge interest for late payments. If he introduces a fine then how will this run with the current Act in place.....
http://www.promptpaymentcode.org.uk/ It all stems from this waste of a domain which should be covered already with a commercial agreement. It's times like this I'm glad I don't waste my cash on ICM subscription.
skinny
- 13 Aug 2013 10:31
- 12768 of 21973
Also - people in glass houses..........
Shortie
- 13 Aug 2013 14:59
- 12769 of 21973
6587 ftse closed +21 pts
skinny
- 13 Aug 2013 15:03
- 12770 of 21973
Well done Shortie - I was waiting for 6,624.
Tomorrow is ex divi day!
Shortie
- 13 Aug 2013 15:16
- 12771 of 21973
Sold too soon
skinny
- 13 Aug 2013 15:17
- 12772 of 21973
Have you got a buy point in mind?
Shortie
- 13 Aug 2013 15:43
- 12773 of 21973
Its in a 150 point range at the moment 6520 to 6670 trending down. The 1hr below sums up my ideas.
skinny
- 13 Aug 2013 15:47
- 12774 of 21973
I've got 6,521 as S2 which seems a reasonable entry - or not!
Shortie
- 13 Aug 2013 16:44
- 12775 of 21973
FTSE 6612.8 gone short. I think it'll drift in the range until next month when the FED could start to taper relief.
Other thoughts.
On the DAX theres the German election on the 22nd Sept, the risk being that she needs the Free Democrats as partner to and not the Social Democrats who could throw a spanner in the works over issues bailout packages. Greece being the agenda and a new bailout needs to be agreed by the end of the year.
GBP/JPY, Mr Kuroda is to fire up the printing press silos again.
The EU passed into law on 1st August an act outlining who’ll be on the hook in the event of a banking collapse. Mr Osborne says that “in future, taxpayers will not be called upon to bail banks out. It will be down to the creditors and the owners.” Who do you think bank creditors might be? Yup! You and me and if you think it stops at >€100K (£85K) deposits, think again! It is planned that smaller savers will suffer a “penalty tax.” If you’re a larger saver...start thinking Cyprus...and physical gold! Good old Europe! So why be a saver right now, super low interest rate and high risk of losing money, buy gold maybe but what if a nation sells its reserves to bailout itself driving the price down... Better get on and spend then, but where, cue Cynic as the housing market has been picking up recently... Another bubble in the making, well maybe.