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
ptholden
- 08 Nov 2011 21:13
- 7419 of 21973
For anyone interested in FX, Cable pierced a resistance downtrend this evening (a trend established between August and October).
It's dropped back below by a few pips, but the chart set up, higher highs, lower lows, consolidation within an uptrend since Oct 26 and pushing through resistance (albeit briefly) would suggest the pair is about to push on. Initial target 1.66
Health warning: I struggle to get my TA right with FX so please DYOR etc etc.
Edit: I should also add that perhaps the wary will wait for 1.6150 to be breached with some impetus before taking a long position.
gibby
- 08 Nov 2011 22:07
- 7420 of 21973
good to see that itie slime ball out at last - looking fwd to tomorrow!!
skinny
- 09 Nov 2011 14:30
- 7421 of 21973
Greek talks to name interim leader continue
Greece's political leaders are locked in talks for a third day as they continue to hammer out details of a unity government.
Initial reports that a candidate for PM had been agreed failed to materialise, but sources in Athens have told the BBC a deal has now been reached.
Outgoing PM George Papandreou will now address the nation at 14:30 GMT before meeting the president at 15:00 GMT.
dreamcatcher
- 09 Nov 2011 16:29
- 7422 of 21973
Italy at breaking point, Merkel calls for "new Europe"
Philip Pullella and Andreas Rinke, 16:02, Wednesday 9 November 2011
ROME/BERLIN (Reuters) - Italian borrowing costs reached breaking point on Wednesday after Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi's insistence on elections instead of an interim government opened the way to prolonged instability and delays to economic reform.
Italian 10-year bond yields shot above the 7 percent level that is widely deemed unsustainable, reflecting investors' concerns that they may not get their money back and prompting German Chancellor Angela Merkel to issue a call to arms.
Italian bonds rise past 'unsustainable' 7pc barrier and there are fears the contagion is spreading to Spain and France, as the ECB reportedly buys Italy's debt and Germany is under pressure to act to save monetary union.
cynic
- 09 Nov 2011 17:26
- 7423 of 21973
what a nasty day - rkh excepted - and not looking much better for tomorrow as dow slips away again (-252 @ 11916)
ptholden
- 09 Nov 2011 17:39
- 7424 of 21973
Hope no one took any notice of my FX comments, typically the exact opposite happened to what I expected. Having said that there was safety in waiting for confirmation of the break out.
All well Ricardo? You've been unusally quite for a while!
cynic
- 09 Nov 2011 17:42
- 7425 of 21973
thanks peter .... yes i'm fine and was trundling along quite well until today, which turned out very tiresome indeed ..... not many threads on here requiring an acid retort, so have been keeping occupied with other things ..... far too many actually, but all now sorting itself i think
ptholden
- 09 Nov 2011 17:52
- 7426 of 21973
Good o, I must admit this whole Eurozone thing is becoming a real pain and with no real solution. It seems the big boys with billions are moving the markets to their own entire satisfaction and creating this mega volatility. Paranoia is never far away!
ptholden
- 09 Nov 2011 18:20
- 7427 of 21973
11800 perhaps on the cards if we don't get a double bottom at 11860. Then maybe as far down as 11650 again.
Conversely, a rapid recovery and a finish of 12200!
In other words, who the feck knows??
ptholden
- 09 Nov 2011 18:56
- 7428 of 21973
This is getting stupid now :(
cynic
- 09 Nov 2011 19:00
- 7429 of 21973
unfortunately we have line probs at the office and can't log in to the system there where i have my gurus prognostications ...... i know his trigger point USED TO BE 11780, but i have a nasty feeling it's nearer 11900 now due to time lines/angles
ptholden
- 09 Nov 2011 19:06
- 7430 of 21973
11797 as I type. Wondering if we'll see -500 for the day
dreamcatcher
- 09 Nov 2011 19:10
- 7431 of 21973
The markets have have got hold of how serious the problems of Italy are. If Italy cannot pay its bills, how long will it be before thoughts of can Spain, Portugal etc.
HARRYCAT
- 09 Nov 2011 20:08
- 7432 of 21973
.
ptholden
- 09 Nov 2011 20:26
- 7433 of 21973
DC the markets have known for a long time Italy is next on the list and that seems to be exactly what we have at the moment, a list. Just when I think we will have a period of stability, the next potential defaulter is ramped up and hey presto, off we go again.
Is it coincidence that just as Greece seems to be nearing some sort of solution, the Italian bond interest rates scoot up to an unsustainable level?
I have no idea, but I'm sure a lot of money is being made out of all this, whether that money will be worth anything in a few months time remains to be seen.
Conspiracy theory I guess.
skinny
- 09 Nov 2011 20:50
- 7434 of 21973
11,771/75 atm - anyone hear those crazy yanks?
dreamcatcher
- 09 Nov 2011 20:56
- 7435 of 21973
Italy prepares to sell 4.2bn of debt amid costs meltdown
Emma Rowley, 20:42, Wednesday 9 November 2011
Italy faces a major hurdle on Thursday as it attempts to sell up to 5bn (4.2bn) of fresh debt against the backdrop of record interest rates on its current stock of debt.
Italian sovereign bond yields yesterday soared above 7.4pc, well above the 7pc threshold that led smaller eurozone neighbours of Greece, Portugal and Ireland (Xetra: A0Q8L3 - news) to seek bailouts.
Analysts expect Rome will struggle to find buyers for its auction of one-year bills on Thursday morning, but that it will stick to the planned sale as well a sale of up to 3bn of five-year debt on Monday for fear of spooking investors still further.
ahoj
- 09 Nov 2011 23:54
- 7436 of 21973
The shares are the assets of the countries. How far can they fall without serious consequences?
The rating agencies rated BearSterns, etc , etc 3A up to bankruptcy, now they downgrade with prospect of ?xxx? which may not materialize at all. Who is behind these, apart from rating agencies?
cynic
- 10 Nov 2011 08:47
- 7437 of 21973
fully expected ftse to open -120, and though opened -100, it is now only -47 ...... strangely resilient all things considered
skinny
- 10 Nov 2011 08:53
- 7438 of 21973
Yes its certainly worrying - I amended limit buys on RBS and LLOY, fully expecting them to fall further. Tempted by MER & CIU, but nothing as yet bar a small contrarian long on the FTSE.