CL Redux

Quote from JoshDance:

Out .44, this time buyer at .38 .. will short .37

Out .38 -- they just keep buying

ADD short .25 need .16 to break
ADD out .39 -- THIS one hurts, not the small loss I was looking for.
 
Shorted .15, out .06 ... friggin slow internet cost me moving my target to .95 quickly enough

Do any of you guys have a redundant internet setup? Perhaps just one that works for me would be good. I have Charter .. terrible.
 
After that last trade had a loss short .98 (at 12:50) out .12, then reversed long .21 out .49, then got a sandwich, then shorted .34 (1:13) out .21 .. now just looking at what's what, and trying to be smart about my trade selection.
 
<b>GDP , Deficit numbers over years </b>

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-...-to-tea-party-at-expense-of-u-s-taxpayer.html

S&P maintained its AAA rating on the U.S. during George W. Bush’s presidency as the national debt grew to pay for wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, tax cuts in 2001 and 2003, Medicare prescription drug benefits and the bailout of Wall Street. Together, <b>those costs added $3.4 trillion to the national debt, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.</b>

Stimulus Package
Obama’s stimulus package will total $830 billion by 2019, according to a May 2011 Congressional Budget Office report, half the cost of the Bush tax cuts and less than two-thirds of what has been spent on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The U.S. went from budget surpluses averaging $139.7 billion from 1998 through 2001 to a deficit of $1.29 trillion last year, Bloomberg data show. <b>The shortfall peaked at $1.42 trillion in 2009, the first year of Obama’s presidency.</b>

Federal revenue as a percentage of gross domestic product GDP fell over the past several years as the weakened economy sapped income tax receipts. <b>Revenue was 14.9 percent of the economy in 2009 and 2010, the least since 1950, according to the Office of Management and Budget. </b>

Under the administration’s February budget, which would have allowed tax cuts to expire in 2013 for individuals making more than $200,000 and married couples making more than $250,000, revenue <b>would reach 20 percent of GDP by 2021. </b>

<b>Most Republicans say they would like to keep federal revenue closer to 18 percent of GDP, nearer to the post-World War II norm.</b>
 
Quote from JoshDance:

Short .64, stop .79, target .20

Lost my internet just as it went +20 ticks and ATM put stop at BE, and instead of capturing some, my stop was hit. Seriously, I'm switching internet asap.
 
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