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triphop replied Feb 6, 2011In a nutshell - eat paleo, exercise tabata, get some sunshine every day. I'm sure you can find 6 minutes a week to fit that into your schedule
PS Just looked up Tormo's recommendations - spot on.What's your way to keep fit, strong and healthy?
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triphop replied Feb 1, 2011OK I'll bite... — If you were really going to break this down, the question should be do groups of orders exist at regular intervals that form visual trendlines. If so, is it tradeable. If not, why not? And if only on occasion, which ...
Trend Lines Don't Work
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triphop replied Jan 31, 2011Great stuff — Adal, fascinating stuff thanks for the info. That sounds plausible (though probably not tradeable). Beman, people thought analysing social media to deduce sentiment was bonkers two years ago. While whether you got laid or not ...
weather affects market volatility
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triphop replied Jan 31, 2011I haven't used FXCM's because it used to (still does?) polls twice daily - Oanda polls every hour and has a bigger client based for what it's worth. It is useful so long as you're interpretative with it. FXCM once had a fund that ran off SSI which ...
Trading SSI anyone?
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triphop replied Jan 31, 2011This blows my tiny mind: "our results suggest that cloudiness and length of nighttime are inversely related to historical, implied and realized measures of volatility" ...I know correlation <> causation but if it did, what reasons would you have for ...
weather affects market volatility
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triphop replied Jan 28, 2011True that. The chances of any given price in hour 1 being seen again in the subsequent next 23 hours are around 90% on EU if I remember right (10y test) so your sample of 70 is pretty accurate. Explains why people 'learn' to hold on to losers. ...
Have you noticed a pattern in xx50 or xx00?
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triphop replied Nov 18, 2010The lower the cost of entry, the more you have to be contrarian - think of housing vs FX. In a booming housing economy, everyone can ride the trend for a long time. In FX, theoretically everyone could too, but the low cost of entry encourages them ...
People say systems don't work (only pure price action does)
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triphop replied Nov 7, 2010I really wish that was true, because I could turn the local creche into an economic powerhouse to take out Goldman Sachs. Diamond, I don't think you're wrong, I just think that Gladwell is a bit of a tit, so nothing personal
.Ridiculous Trading Myths
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triphop replied Nov 7, 2010Nice work — Superb stuff Adal, you've dicked all over my efforts. I've been collecting position data for nearly 2 years now, and it's been very useful. As for the web crawling; great again. I tried to convince a very big search company (not ...
Retail forex positioning
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triphop replied Nov 7, 2010I though f*ck me, that's sensible, I'll vouch for him, and then found out I had vouched for you, proving both that I have an appalling memory and I was right first time around. Even this thread is a classic example. No offence meant to anyone who ...
Ridiculous Trading Myths
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triphop replied Aug 12, 2010I saw him on your buddy list so put 2+2 together. And clearly came up with 5
Second you on the fraud and deceit... the levels some people go to are mind-boggling.Mentors & Tutors for new traders
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triphop replied Aug 11, 2010Ah Phil, an FF veteran. Great to see you back here again (if you've never heard of him before, read his back posts). I'm guessing you must have spent time with Rob Booker when you started off?
Mentors & Tutors for new traders
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triphop replied Aug 5, 2010Good grief. It was a question It wasn't meant as an attack and I'm disappointed you've taken it that way. I'm certainly not knocking your efforts, the long-term trend, the time you've clearly spent in this thread helping others, nor am I looking for ...
Building an equity millipede
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triphop replied Aug 5, 2010PipEasy, can I pose a question? If someone - anyone - was able to generate 3 x R:R 1 to 1 trades per day, there would be no need to even worry about long-term trends. If your entries are as good as this, why do you trade with the elaborate groups, ...
Building an equity millipede
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triphop replied Jul 28, 2010Killerbee, that's a good old-fashioned breakout you're describing, except you've just upped your transaction costs by hedging the initial entry. Trust me, the desire to be in trades at all times goes pretty quickly.
this is a debate about how to not predict the market
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triphop replied Jul 23, 2010You don't get anywhere without being a bit cheeky I guess - but no chance. Not for free and not for sale. I've already analysed the data to death - so when I say that the reason that they're on the wrong side of the market is predominantly down to ...
Why are most retail traders usually on the wrong side of the market?
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triphop replied Jul 19, 2010Well you know what they say about guesswork Pip. I'll leave you to it

Why are most retail traders usually on the wrong side of the market?
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triphop replied Jul 19, 2010Sure. Oanda's a proxy for the whole retail market. And the whole area of losing traders...
Why are most retail traders usually on the wrong side of the market?
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triphop replied Jul 19, 2010It's my special proprietary indicator which i'll be selling for a one-off fee. Or ... hold on a minute: http://fxtradeinfocenter.oanda.com/orderbook/open_orders_and_positions use aggregate positioning to work out % of profitable and non. And for ...
Why are most retail traders usually on the wrong side of the market?
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triphop replied Jul 19, 2010Yeah well it's definitely the most popular, but that doesn't affect the overall percentage, though it's certainly the scalper's favourite, and so the spread would be a bigger factor in why so many are on the losing side. 56% was probably the % ...
Why are most retail traders usually on the wrong side of the market?