blackguard's Rule of 12 anyone?
Vertigo, not that I'm a TA freak or anything, but that looks more like a flag than a wedge. A bearish wedge, by definition, should point upward (in an uptrend).Quote from vertigo3:
I feel like forrest gump today. cause I just sat here and did nothin'.
I guess that was a bearish wedge today.
I gotta go get fitted for a new, bigger, better dunce cap.

Quote from vertigo3:
Spitzer and a prostitution ring?
Get a load of this.
CNBC just alluded to it, I put it into google and came up with this url
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/10/n...d828c78d717f5b&ei=5088&partner=rssnyt&emc=rss
Thanks for the pointer. I guess there's no end to learning. BTW I do use TA. I'm just not a big fan of patterns. I, on the other hand, follow the rhythm of the market like the flow of water between your fingers. Hope that answers your question.Quote from vertigo3:
saliva,
this url has examples, the bearish wedge examples start after the bull wedge examples
http://www.chartpatterns.com/wedgecharts.htm
but saliva, I have a question, If you do not employ TA, how do you decide when to buy and when to sell?
