CL Redux

I lost half my profits for the day on these whipsaws.

Excellent couple of week's of trading though, i think i only had 1 losing day which wasn't much of a loss, so rather pleased.
 
Quote from schizo:

I have a nasty feeling that we might go back down for a double-bottom. I clearly don't trust this type of raging hormone running on very low volume. One bad news and the entire froth could blow up in your face. We shall find out in the next few days.

Who thinks we're going back down to 95 by next week? Ah-ee.
 
Quote from riskaddict:

We could be at 98 by 3pm est if 100.50 breaks. If I had any sense I would add short but I have a lot of other stuff going on.

That's the measured move from this morning applied to the afternoon. But I ain't too sure the bulls are that willing to give back what they so easily earned yesterday. Maybe 100.30-ish on the May contract or roughly 99.40-ish on April.
 
Quote from riskaddict:

We could be at 98 by 3pm est if 100.50 breaks. If I had any sense I would add short but I have a lot of other stuff going on.

Or some piece of news hits the wire and we shoot up again to 105 :eek:
 
Quote from schizo:

But I ain't too sure the bulls are that willing to give back what they so easily earned yesterday.

So these hedgies don't believe in easy come easy go? If they don't want to give it up how can we take it?
 
Has any posted this?


SANA'A: As at least 41 protesters, including a child, were killed and over 100 others were injured in police firing on tens of thousands of anti-government demonstrators outside Sana'a University in the Yemeni capital, Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh on Friday declared a state of emergency in the country.

The declaration of emergency came after Saleh's meeting with the country's higher National Defense Council, where the President expressed his deep regret over the shooting on the protesters after Friday's prayers, an official of the defence ministry told Xinhua.

Twific al-Yaziday, a witness of the Friday's police firing, said: "The child was hit by a bullet in his head."

There were more than 20 protesters who suffered injuries in heads and necks, al-Yaziday added.

Al-Yaziday, who is at the hospital outside Sana'a University, citing doctors' reports said that over 200 protesters were injured and the toll could well rise further.

"After the Friday prayers, police forces fired live ammunition at about 200,000 protesters," al-Yaziday stated.

Till Thursday, over 30 people had been killed in government crackdowns on the anti-government demonstrations which have shaken Yemen since Feb 11.

Encouraged by the uprising sweeping the region, Yemenis have been demanding an end to President Ali Abdullah Saleh's 32-year rule as well as political and economic reforms.
 
Back
Top