Trembling Hand
Can be found on the bid
- Joined
- 10 June 2007
- Posts
- 8,852
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- 205
joining one of the mentioned associations would certainly fast track me in that regard.
I will be able to meet professionals, more experienced traders, attend their networking or information events, and utilise their resources. However, I'm not sure which one is better or more suitable to me which is why I asked the question
What are you looking for that is prompting you to consider either?
Not so sure about that. You are more likely to find a plate of cookies and a collection of lost punters.
Maybe don't be so dismissive of Trembling Hand's comment."There's absolutely nothing wrong with right here, but like I said, I'm looking to broaden my exposure to the financial markets and joining one of the mentioned associations would certainly fast track me in that regard.
I might be cynical but why would anyone offer you - for $110 - a newsletter 'valued at $75,' plus a package 'valued at $267'? Most of these tip sheets will offer a free trial anyway, so you could approach them directly if you believe they contain the secret to success.Join the Australian Investors Association and you will receive a one month free trial to the Marcus Today Stockmarket Newsletter valued at $75 and a 15 day free trial to Intelligent Investor and 3 special email reports valued at $267. Member benefits include a range of publications; access to the members online forum; access to AIA meetings and more. One year AIA membership is $110 or two year membership is $190 plus a $20 joining fee.
Sounds terrific, doesn't it. I'm more inclined to agree with Trembling Hand's expectation of what you'd actually find.It is simply another avenue which I could use to further my knowledge. I will be able to meet professionals, more experienced traders, attend their networking or information events, and utilise their resources.
Hmm. You could be right but it doesn't seem like you've had a first hand experience of cookies and lost punters, so you could be wrong too. Thanks for your opinion though!
Maybe don't be so dismissive of Trembling Hand's comment.
I'm not sure why you believe joining either of the above mentioned associations would 'fast track' you.
eg The Australian Shareholders Assn. afaik, concerns itself with company failures, matters of governance etc which I doubt is especially relevant to someone with no capacity to actually buy anything yet.
You've just graduated and don't have the capital to invest, so perhaps investigate the many free alternatives like forums before you go paying $100 p.a. to any organisation which promises you untold expertise.
I note the AIA website says:
I might be cynical but why would anyone offer you - for $110 - a newsletter 'valued at $75,' plus a package 'valued at $267'? Most of these tip sheets will offer a free trial anyway, so you could approach them directly if you believe they contain the secret to success.
Perhaps contact the AIA and ask if you could attend one of their meetings.
Sounds terrific, doesn't it. I'm more inclined to agree with Trembling Hand's expectation of what you'd actually find.
Good luck and let us know how you get on.
Nah
He's spot on.
Experienced traders and professionals don't hang out in and around Associations---they don't have/want to.
Wanna'bes on the other hand---sadly chances are you wont pick it!
Enjoy your cookies.
pls.suggest a good forex broker to start with.sorry but im a newbie
Yep, just the 04xxxxxxxx mobile number. No area code.
Hi everyone,
Newbie here, as this is my first post, please be gentle. I am really interested in share trading but just don't know where to start. I understand charts to a degree. But other than trends etc how does one find a stock to buy? What makes a stock stand out amongst the rest? There is so many out there what makes for a good 20 for my watch list? I understand that good and bad stocks change all the time but what makes one better than the other. Thanks in advance.
James
... What makes a stock stand out amongst the rest?
Hi Sir,
well written and explain your thoughts.
I am wondering, I am newbie, I did couple of books, and doing the stock game ASX200.
what do u think about paper trading vs playing with 2000-4000 that i m not worried to lose
thank you all for replying and joining this lovely forums.
Guru - I find it depends on the person. For me, I do learn by paper trading, but you may or may not and I can't answer this because I don't know your brain. When I'm testing a new system, it's an exhaustive process (because I'm the sort of fellow who doesn't gamble - I take calculated risks). I generally data test first (use past market data to evaluate the system). This allows me to do a large number of simulated trades across different market types and confirm positive expectancy of the system.
I'll then paper trade using the current market. I usually want around 50 paper trades, trying to see if the live numbers match the previously created equity curve. Next step is to use a small amount of funds (normally about 20-25k) and run the system for a few months. I usually get a slight degree of slippage at this point, but once again I'm testing for any major differences in expectancy from the previous data sets.
Finally I'll move an appropriate level of funds into the system, depending upon which instrument I'm trading and the level of liquidity. (IE equity trading doesn't have the same level of liquidity and significantly higher risks associated with slippage than say FX).
...
... a) Generate some discussion about the transaction. ...
Held for over 12 mths
Lower high
AUD coming off.
You have to replenish your scotch stocks.
I wouldn't hold for 14 months
but if I did I would have exited at 20.50. At that point we are under the prior swing low and have stopped making higher lows which signals the end of the uptrend. It's just a general rule I go by. If for some reason I held I would be out right now due to the extremely high volume down bars and the fact we haven't made a higher high... meaning the end of the uptrend.
My guess:
Entry: Mid September 2012.
Exit: Mid November 2013 around $21.50.
Reason for exit ... falling below an arbitrary Maroon line on a chart.:
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