Quote from box:
Sometimes, when I'm long, I will look out the window, and a red car will drive by. Then my stock will rally. Do you think the red car driving by has anything to do with my stock going up?
I don't mean to sound like a jerk. I'm just bring up a point.
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you made me laugh

No, but it is widely true that the urge to post and make fun overwhelms many ET members. Never base the worthiness of your posts from the quality of responses you get.Quote from proptr8r:
So are you all trying to say I am stating the obvious?
Quote from proptr8r:
Anyone that thinks this particular trade is a figment is absolutely clueless about short-term trading. Just set up a scan to search for large NYSE offers. Link the scan to NYSE Open Book, and you will see the offer "step down" on every down tick. This was an unbelievable trade before NX-Direct Plus came around. You could short ahead of the large seller with bullets and then go long as soon as the offer started to get taken out. Without NX, the Specialist could control the stock more and not let it trade on the offer until he was long and ready for the stock to go up a little. However, with NX, now traders can make it trade on the offer and ruin the momentum of the play. It still works, just not as well as it once did.
I'm actually kind of surprised by the responses and lack of responses to this thread. I've been on elitetrader for a while and rarely do I see any useful strategies discussed or shared. Maybe this strategy is just nothing new to the traders around here.
Quote from Mecro:
Dude,
I'll spell it out for you.
YOU ARE STATING THE BASICS OF SHORTS SCALPING ON NYSE.
And it also seems that you do not really understand how badly this strategy can hurt you unless you involve more factors like daily volume , price, prints, specialist, news.
Oh and the going long is called bounces and those are much more dangerous unless you really know what you are doing. Try to bounce every stock and you will end up badly gross negative.
Quote from box:
I don't know if it's a trick or not, but I have noticed when trading stuff like KLAC / EBAY / QLGC that from time to time, there will be an ISLD / ARCA or other ECN, with an odd lot showing, and if it doesn't fill right away, others will soon join at that price. So it could be from time to time 1 share, 50 shares, or any other odd lot could control the price (as opposed to 100 shares). Anyone else notice this?
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