Is manual day trading dead?
If it were, I would have died long ago! It, and I, are alive and kickin'!! Even with all the newfangled stuff that's around, the only thing that's changed is the speed of the price movement. And that is a benefit!
Actually there always is an initial notification issued right after a quake of the possibility of a tsunami. But the confirmation as to whether there will be a tsunami or not, and the warning if there will be, comes within a minute.
......what will you suggest me to do?
Study and learn enough to where you can think for yourself and don't have to ask questions like this!! Asking jerks like me this type of question will get you nowhere.
No, the volume for the day, for example today's day session is 389184, is actually counting only one side of the trade. So if I buy 1 contract, it's counted as 1. The seller's action is not counted as only 1 contract changed hands.
But for the broker's total buy volume posted by the exchange...
>grahamglover
The page you were looking at (http://www.jpx.co.jp/english/markets/derivatives/perticipant-volume/b5b4pj000001c6j3-att/20161107_volume_by_participant_night.pdf)
shows both new and closing trades in each column. When the exchange receives a buy order it doesn't know if it's a new...
The list published by the exchange is just the top 20.
As you can see in the attached, the blue column is the number of contracts sold at the bid, and red is bought at the ask. You can see that contracts are reported by ones, not twos. The volume in the far right column includes Monday's...
The list you have is incomplete. If I buy 1 contract that you are offering, it's counted as 1 contract in the volume figures, not 2.
AMRO, SG and ML are the major MM's and make up over half of the volume every day. Individual investors make up around 27% of the volume.
I don't know if http://stooq.com/q/d/?s=3837.jp&c=0 worked out for you or not, but in addition to dividends and normal splits, you might have noticed that it also adjusts for the changes in the trading unit from 1000 to 100 shares. All stocks must make that change by a date that I can't...
Would this work for you?
http://stooq.com/q/d/?s=3837.jp&c=0
As you can see the OHLC was adjusted for a split on 28 Sept.
You can download the data to a csv file.
You can go back as far as 1999 for some stocks.
While you can't download all the stocks at once, you could use the non-adjusted...