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
- 11 Jul 2015 18:25
- 18171 of 21973
call GO what you like, for you are so totally purblind and obsessed with so-called class, which nonsense is of course perpetuated by neanderthals such as you ....
personally, i'ld be delighted if corbyn was voted in to lead the labour party, for it would consign it to the wilderness for a very very long time ..... which actually is not such a good thing
the best candidate would possibly have been Tristram Hunt, but of course fred and his pals would not be able to get his name past their lips
anyway, whatever label you wish to hang on GO, i think he's making a pretty good fist as chancellor, and i think history will show so
Claret Dragon
- 12 Jul 2015 10:55
- 18172 of 21973
Beginning to wonder if Tsipras a Margin Account to pay off debt !!!!
deltazero
- 12 Jul 2015 11:15
- 18173 of 21973
probably :-)
A summit of all European Union members planned for Sunday has been cancelled as "very difficult" talks over a third bailout deal for Greece continue.
YUM!
cynic
- 12 Jul 2015 15:03
- 18174 of 21973
sunday ig indices pretty spooked
ftse currently -44 and dow -80 but very silly spreads indeed
aldwickk
- 12 Jul 2015 19:31
- 18175 of 21973
deltazero
- 12 Jul 2015 21:11
- 18176 of 21973
LOL
The BBC's Economics Editor Robert Peston has been examining the "killer" lines in the Eurogroup rescue offer.
Firstly he says Greece needs additional finance of €82-86bn - which would boost debt to well over 200% GDP.
A "bonkers" prospect, he exclaims.
Secondly, Greek banks need additional capital of up to €25bn to absorb losses from the implosion of the economy - caused by forced bank closures.
And thirdly, if a deal is not reached, Greece would be offered "swift negotiations on time out of euro, with possible debt restructuring".
deltazero
- 12 Jul 2015 21:31
- 18177 of 21973
cynic
- 13 Jul 2015 08:27
- 18178 of 21973
short is not the positon to be in, so i hope you're not
Claret Dragon
- 13 Jul 2015 08:32
- 18179 of 21973
Long at 6646 and now out and all square.
Short squeeze!!!
deltazero
- 13 Jul 2015 08:39
- 18180 of 21973
not me - could be a real yoyo day :-)
cynic
- 13 Jul 2015 08:52
- 18181 of 21973
if current market levels hold, then DOW could easily be heading for 18,000 and FTSE for late june high of 6875 (from memory)
jimmy b
- 13 Jul 2015 08:55
- 18182 of 21973
Sounds like Greece have done some kind of deal ,although whether it's one that will please markets we will see .
Now we have China to stick a spanner in the works .
cynic
- 13 Jul 2015 09:04
- 18183 of 21973
as i keep on saying, there's a lot more to this than meets the eye .....
for example, it is almost guaranteed that lot of existing debt will be rescheduled at minuscule interest rate and to 50 years hence (rumour has it that this was already in place but could not be admitted) and that IMF/ECB will fund some major infrastructure developments, partially paid for by the large scale privatisations
deltazero
- 13 Jul 2015 09:12
- 18184 of 21973
could be cynic ref 18000 & ftse.................
jimmy - looks like the greeks have no option - then pass it through their gov with a few key personnel changes............... interesting day / week ahead
china - lol yes but this would help them too if correct ref greeks.............
deltazero
- 13 Jul 2015 09:14
- 18185 of 21973
yep murky indeed cynic - not forgetting the red bear russia.......................
deltazero
- 13 Jul 2015 12:13
- 18186 of 21973
flat p1ss by comparison today...............
deltazero
- 13 Jul 2015 12:27
- 18187 of 21973
Here is a quick summary of the key points in the statement from the European Union:
Greece will need between €82-€86bn in bailout funds.
It will get those funds when the Greek parliament has passed reforms and the EU wants that done by Wednesday 15 July.
The final deal will need to be ratified by national parliaments - that could be done by the end of the week.
The reforms are substantial affecting VAT, pensions and requiring an independent office of statistics.
A €50bn asset fund will be formed to be run by Greeks but supervised by Europe. Half of that will be used to recapitalise banks, which will then be privatised.
The ESM [European Stability Mechanism] is prepared to provide an immediate €10bn to recapitalise banks.
A 'haircut' or reduction of Greeks debts will not be offered. But the debts might be restructured to make repayment easier, but only after Greece has introduced all of its promised reforms.
cynic
- 13 Jul 2015 14:43
- 18188 of 21973
i'm currently long DOW from 17,875 (now 17,935) so watching to see if 18,000 can be hit ...... shall almost certainly bank the profit just shy of that level
am also long FTSE from 6725, but that has currently stalled, but shall leave to run
deltazero
- 13 Jul 2015 15:07
- 18189 of 21973
good luck cynic - i have just cashed in profit dow - the greek news wasnt as mind blowing as expected, other global events may well take precedence
long still looks a good call but wont take much to tip it into a bit of reverse imo..........if it goes further north dont mind good for others
gl