Van the day you teach me anything about TA is the day elephants fly my friend. There you have truly picked a losing side... par ususal. If I have taught you all anything in my time here it's to regard my TA as close to bible worthy.
As I told you many swing traders use VWAP, using the price of an asset below the VWAP line as a assumed discount and as such a buy and above the VWAP line as a premium or overpriced and a sell.
With a swing trade you must have your exit in mind and you should already know this number.
It is only the frequent trading swing trader that need take heed- if you are holding for say a month-- then VWAP can be your friend.
Remember it is backward looking so when COIN spiked all VWAP bets were off. You were getting old info. Whoops!
Cons:
- The VWAP indicator strategytypically does not work well in very volatile markets, especially one that sees radical changes in volumes traded.
- The VWAP indicator is a lagging indicator, meaning its signals may tend to be generated at a time when they are already too late to be very accurate and useful.
- The VWAP indicator tends to be less suitable for very short-term or very long-term trading. It generally tends to work better on higher time frames like the daily, but perhaps not on the very high time frames like the weekly or monthly.
A trader I know recommens that you look for long entry signals when the VWAP 5 crosses above the VWAP 13 if price action is bouncing off support levels.
Wait for the candlestick to close above both and enter trade during a pullback. <----!
Or trade a breakout above the Daily VWAP after the VWAP 5 crosses above the VWAP 13.
Hope This Helps.
HANG ON TO YOUR SEATS FOLKS... THE BEE COLONY COLLAPSE THAT THREATENS MANKIND EXISTENCE HAS BEEN SOLVED!!!!!
US Department of Agriculture Identifies SteraMist iHP Technology as Potential Solution for Honey Bee Colony Collapse
TOMI Environmental Solutions, Inc.
Tue, September 5, 2023, 8:30 AM EDT
In this article:
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TOMI Environmental Solutions, Inc.
Study Shows SteraMist iHP Treatment of Beeswax Solid Substrates Greatly Reduced Deformed Wing Virus an RNA virus causing Honey Bee infections!!!!!
FREDERICK, Md., Sept. 05, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- TOMI Environmental Solutions, Inc.® (“TOMI”) (NASDAQ: TOMZ), a global company specializing in disinfection and decontamination solutions, today announced the completion of a study funded by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) and the National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) which demonstrated SteraMist iHP as an effective treatment of deformed wing virus (DWV) contaminated hive substrates.
The study aimed to determine if the use of cold plasma ionized hydrogen peroxide (iHP) can reduce the infectivity of DWV to naïve honey bee pupae. Deformed wing virus (DWV) is a widespread pathogen of
Apis mellifera (Western and European) honey bees and contributes to the collapse of established honey bee colonies. Widespread colony collapse could result in a significant decline in the diversity of fresh produce and substantially impact human nutrition on a global scale. Honey bees become infected by interacting with DWV-contaminated beeswax in the hive and it is of critical importance for the USDA and NIFA to identify a non-toxic, quick, and effective disinfection system capable of deactivating latent DWV on hive substrates.
The study utilized a SteraMist Environment System along with TOMI’s Binary Ionization Technology (BIT) solution which was passed through a nozzle that generated an ultra-fine 0.05 – 3-micron particle mist. The mist was then ionized by cold plasma generated between two pin electrodes for a 15-minute application time on aliquots or sub-sample of a larger whole of phosphate-buffered saline solution either with or without deformed wing virus (DWV). The aliquots were then injected into naïve honey bee pupae, which were allowed to progress for three days prior to DWV content analysis.
The findings confirmed the efficacy of iHP as a fast and effective method for pathogen decontamination of deformed wing virus in honey bee substrate. The development of infection in honey bees injected with DWV-positive aliquots treated with ionized hydrogen peroxide (iHP) was statistically significantly reduced compared to the infection levels in honey bees injected with the DWV-positive aliquots without SteraMist treatment. Additionally, iHP treatment was found to achieve higher levels of DWV inactivation at a substantially shorter treatment duration when compared to ethylene oxide treatment or gamma irradiation. SteraMist’s non-toxic properties provide further environmental advantages as ethylene oxide and gamma irradiation have potential risks, including toxicity to users and harmful byproducts. Treatment of DWV-contaminated hive substrates with iHP, even with honeybees present, may be an effective way to decrease the impacts of DWV infection on honey bees. The complete findings can be downloaded
here.







BRAVO!!!!