Does the exchange send out this data with their trade data? I took a look at trade conditions and don't see anything that differentiates SELL or SELL SHORT. But trade conditions are complex. Or does this data stay away from public view?
This one has already been fixed and only impacted those who used this particular bridge while the hack was active. It's important to keep in mind that no wallet was directly plundered. All these "crypto hacks" aren't going into people's wallets and taking tokens. You can protect yourself from...
If burry is long then something is brewing. Years before he did his "big short" he was known for drilling deep into details. He did not buy GEO on a whim.
I have no position in GEO.
It looks like they charge $1000/month to use their API. You still pay commissions, exchange fees, regulatory fees and other minor/usual brokerage fees on top of that. That extra $1000/month just to enter orders through the API sounds punitive. Makes me feel like I'm being bullied. What on...
Please. Who is your broker? lol. I just ask because IB has been playing games lately with marketable limit orders. I've shown them log files and the answer is simply, "we don't know. still researching it."
Powell technically can't. That would cause high default rates and the banks would fail. It's just not the same as when Volker was pulling the levers. Remember that it's a collection of federal reserve member banks. They don't eat themselves.
1) Please define "your model". I've designed many. Most don't work good enough to trade with. But a few do. And those run live every day the market is open.
2) How are you defining "are fairly efficient"? The answer is complex. If you know nothing about the underlying data then you might...
If the odds are a market rate and there are multiple markets, then yes, you can "beat the odds". You bet in each market where the participants have skewed the odds incorrectly based on the sizes and sides of their bets. You just look for pricing errors. This is also the winning strategy you...
No. You can literally make your win rate (number of trades won / number of trades lost) whatever you want using math. I realize how counterintuitive this thinking is to beginners. But this fact does not do anything to turn the strategy into a profitable one.
It sure can but you don't know. Depends entirely on what positions they are holding, their leverage, who will rapidly unwind if they fail to make payments to a counterparty in a trade, etc.