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AnRan replied Sep 10, 2020I met a man when I was in China that traded something like this. He opened up a buy and sell at the same time. In some ways its actually less like scalping and more like trend following. Cause he didn't have the ability to understand price action ...
Just learned about hedging, does anyone use it for scalping?
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AnRan replied Sep 10, 2020There are some others. There is even a thread on FF with a bunch listed. 2 or 3 have stood out to me. You can take a look at that thread. If you can't find it, just PM me and I'll send it to you. I just don't want to take up FTMO's official thread ...
FTMO - For serious traders
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AnRan replied Sep 9, 2020Thats actually really good to know. Because they wrote "max allocation" on their website, and in an interview Okatar said they would need to change the agreement with their investor if they were to allow a trader to have more than 300k USD in ...
FTMO - For serious traders
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AnRan replied Sep 9, 2020If I'm not mistaken, it's 300k USD max allocation to any trader. You can't scale past 300k either. If you wanted more capital at that point, you'd need to have another prop firm and and use some copy software over to it. And the "accounts in ...
FTMO - For serious traders
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AnRan replied Sep 7, 2020In the interest of being fair, because trading is dynamic and there are so many different ways to approach the market. This post kind of proves Gil's point. There will always be someone who wants to push the boundary if he were to increase the ...
The5ers - Trading & Growth Program
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AnRan commented Sep 7, 2020You're right. There is no ability to pay it. The idea is that whole the number is huge, but it's value is less over time. Like 100 dollars today isn't the same as 100 dollars 50 years ago. Just on a much larger scale. Yeah, I posted cause I work ...
China may dump U.S. Treasuries as Sino-U.S. tensions flare: Global Times
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AnRan replied Sep 7, 2020You're using a fixed volume and trying to tie in % risk so the math is distorted. His example states 6 trades, each having a risk of 0.25% with 15 pips SL, totaling 1.5%. He would be forced to choose two of the six is correct. account balance x risk ...
The5ers - Trading & Growth Program
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AnRan commented Sep 7, 2020Your response is something I expected from a fan of the labor party. And I hold true to what I said. The Uk would 100% be one of the countries that bought a portion of the debt. They would need to to protect their own economy. The reality is your ...
China may dump U.S. Treasuries as Sino-U.S. tensions flare: Global Times
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AnRan replied Sep 7, 2020What? His example is perfectly legitimate. In my example, I use 0.50% risk and was already limited. LuXing Has brought up a point I said as well, that opportunity cost is ALSO a risk. Part of trading is trading what you see, even if you personally ...
The5ers - Trading & Growth Program
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AnRan commented Sep 6, 2020Yeah, you looked at those stats totally wrong. What does 5x the number of ATM's have to do with US debt? Also, 2000% the amount? there isn't even that much capital in the world, haha. How did you not think that one through first? In 2018 Chinese ...
China may dump U.S. Treasuries as Sino-U.S. tensions flare: Global Times
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AnRan commented Sep 6, 2020Honestly, thats a really cool glove or sapphire type of image. But when it comes to picking up debt that China would dump, it would be more of a necessity than a "want". Just look at Brexit and what has happened with EURGBP, and what its done to ...
China may dump U.S. Treasuries as Sino-U.S. tensions flare: Global Times
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AnRan commented Sep 6, 2020That was a typo, it was 350% as a later post I even wrote 200 to over 300. But they'll be over 400% next year, easily. Unless they take over HK faster.
China may dump U.S. Treasuries as Sino-U.S. tensions flare: Global Times
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AnRan commented Sep 6, 2020yeah, but it doesn't make that big a difference. But it does for countries like China. You're focused on this government, corporate, personal, but is it really any different? Governments keep printing, under-writing corporate debt. When the market ...
China may dump U.S. Treasuries as Sino-U.S. tensions flare: Global Times
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AnRan commented Sep 6, 2020The limit is actually still pretty far off. Like I said, US debt only just went over 100% of GDP. Where does it end? Well, if the debt keeps rising, outpacing inflation like we've seen with these bailouts, it'll lead to problems. But really just ...
China may dump U.S. Treasuries as Sino-U.S. tensions flare: Global Times
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AnRan replied Sep 5, 2020You know what I see! I see a trend line and you coming into some structure. You got this
image prop firm new model - my trading journey
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AnRan commented Sep 5, 2020The way debt works is a % of GDP and inflation goals. Whats really happening with debt is they are borrowing against future inflationary growth. That's why it's like stealing from the next generation. America is now finally past 100% GDP to debt ...
China may dump U.S. Treasuries as Sino-U.S. tensions flare: Global Times
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AnRan commented Sep 5, 2020It's about helping to control exchange rates. A country like China, if it sold off debt and started unwinding dollars, it would be in big trouble. They talk tough (i lived in China doing finance for 7 years), but the Chinese yuan is still tied to ...
China may dump U.S. Treasuries as Sino-U.S. tensions flare: Global Times
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AnRan commented Sep 5, 2020Haha. They already do buy the debt. You didn't really think it's just China and japan? Also, GBP, CAD, SGD, SEK, CHF, they are part of the DXY. They have direct risk. No one wants their currency sky rocketing against the dollar while America is ...
China may dump U.S. Treasuries as Sino-U.S. tensions flare: Global Times
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AnRan commented Sep 5, 2020This would be great, Japan, the UK, the Saudi's, Singapore, Switzerland would just buy it up. Meanwhile, China is pissing off every single country in its vicinity, be it by sea or land. The holding of debt gives too much security to the big ...
China may dump U.S. Treasuries as Sino-U.S. tensions flare: Global Times
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AnRan replied Sep 4, 2020What? Lol. Slippage happens because of the delay between your feed price, hitting that buy or sell, to the time the liquidity provider accepts the price. If its slow, especially if the market has higher volume, you'll get a requote and your entry ...
FTMO - For serious traders