Another rip the face off the bears rally (on nothing).
Poor bears, it takes them three days of hard fighting to get down 150 points (and with terrible econ data to back it up).
The bulls recover that in 10 min without any good news.
But it can all be explained:
Cutting Italy's rating...... that's bullish for the Euro
wait for pullback first before calculating the target is possible.
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jdow wrote:Cobra, i subcribe last night... i owed it to you... thnx
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OverUnder wrote:You don't cunt that 30 minute consolidation as the end of leg 1 and beginning of leg 2, still the first leg without any real pullback?
Cobra wrote:
johnnywa wrote:Cobra,target for 2nd leg ?
wait for pullback first before calculating the target is possible.
I don't count consolidation as pullback.
It's no science. if the 1st up leg is very small, then consolidation is enough to be considered as pullback.
what we have is very huge push up, so consolidation is nothing.
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How did this play out in comparison to your spreadsheet?
My spreadsheet assumes a rally on a gap up or a sell off on a gap down. Sometimes markets do the opposite. Reliability is lousy.
GXC & FXI (both China) had mixed signals but favored a gap down.
INP & EPI (both India) favored a gap down.
EWJ (Japan) was flat.
EWG (Germany) favored a gap up.
I could do a study, but I'm just lazy and it's been a while since I conjured up the formulas.
It seems that if I expected a gap up and we get a gap down, there's a good probability that the markets will rise to higher prices, as if we gaped up, and versa vice.
The spreadsheet generates a target close, but it's risky as anything to place bets that prices will head towards the target close. For instance, EPI (India) is sitting very high. You could short it, but it's risky.
Japan opens first. If it predicts a gap up, and Japan does gap up and rally, it could throw off China's predicted gap down. So, Japan is sometimes a wild card.
My satisfaction always came from beating the market, solving the puzzle. The money was the reward, but it was not the main reason I loved the market (Jess Livermore)
nothing to say, wait for this consolidation area to resolve first. the pattern is bullish biased.
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OverUnder wrote:You don't count that 30 minute consolidation as the end of leg 1 and beginning of leg 2, still the first leg without any real pullback?
Cobra wrote:
johnnywa wrote:Cobra,target for 2nd leg ?
wait for pullback first before calculating the target is possible.
I don't count consolidation as pullback.
It's no science. if the 1st up leg is very small, then consolidation is enough to be considered as pullback.
what we have is very huge push up, so consolidation is nothing.
Mr. T wrote:Another rip the face off the bears rally (on nothing).
Poor bears, it takes them three days of hard fighting to get down 150 points (and with terrible econ data to back it up).
The bulls recover that in 10 min without any good news.
But it can all be explained:
Cutting Italy's rating...... that's bullish for the Euro