That wasn't a shot at you lol.Come on what?
I was just laughing at the whole B1 thread in general.
My bad.
The "come on maaan"... is the latest political catch phrase. Biden's thing.
That wasn't a shot at you lol.Come on what?
If you put on trades randomly, then yes. But if your strategy has a statistically significant positive outcome (could be as simple as going long in ETFs in an average year), that is literally not gambling. (when the outcome is pure chance)
The correct sentence is though: Every trade is a prediction.
That wasn't a shot at you lol.
I was just laughing at the whole B1 thread in general.
My bad.
The "come on maaan"... is the latest political catch phrase. Biden's thing.

This is soooo true, especially with stocks that you know, and you know how they'll close the day if the spotlight has fallen on them for whatever reason. The noise in between is what gets many players.Time stops can be a better option for some traders, depending on the types of analysis / signals they use. Sometimes I am fairly confident that the price will close higher or lower than the prior day but have no idea of the path that it will take to get there. In fact, on days when I have a strong daily signal which suggests a highly probable move for the next day, I often will get in at the end of the current day and then don't check the market until mid afternoon the next day. At a certain level, you have to trust your analysis and let the trades play out -- I have micromanaged way too many trades in the past.
thnxJust a kindly reminder that House Rep. Speaker Pelosi and US Treasury Sec. Mnuchin will speak at 3 PM ET.