no point in halting the market.
The reason they halt the market the market makers cannot control one sided landslide selling
there are no bids and
for traders who are all 95% leveraged or even 99% and in futures
it's all LEVERAGED
in the cash market 10% is peanuts.
these illiquid markets man. either long
there used to be no overnight futures trading for a reason..the market is too illiquid and too much market manipulation
the gap on oil was down 25% was the stops had no chance of getting it. it gapped 25% on the open. on Sunday so if you are long,,you screwed.
a for banning shorts..these short position was the only demand in the market. keeping the market together.
in markets like this the SEC could just ban leveraged trading
traders in general trade with leverage and as most algos, or known as 'computer trading' for market making
there is no market to make when it's one market maker and one side trade all sell orders.
instead of halting the market ban overnight trading as it's illiquid and BS anyways.
The reason they halt the market the market makers cannot control one sided landslide selling
there are no bids and
for traders who are all 95% leveraged or even 99% and in futures
it's all LEVERAGED
in the cash market 10% is peanuts.
these illiquid markets man. either long
there used to be no overnight futures trading for a reason..the market is too illiquid and too much market manipulation
the gap on oil was down 25% was the stops had no chance of getting it. it gapped 25% on the open. on Sunday so if you are long,,you screwed.
a for banning shorts..these short position was the only demand in the market. keeping the market together.
in markets like this the SEC could just ban leveraged trading
traders in general trade with leverage and as most algos, or known as 'computer trading' for market making
there is no market to make when it's one market maker and one side trade all sell orders.
instead of halting the market ban overnight trading as it's illiquid and BS anyways.