CanOz
Home runs feel good, but base hits pay bills!
- Joined
- 11 July 2006
- Posts
- 11,544
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- 521
Yep IB has just the one contract. As they should its the same contract.
Interesting to note that eSignal really does have two contracts for the SPI, one for ETH and one for RTH. However, it seems that there is no way in NT to get both contracts plotted together....on a chart.
Yes ridiculous isn't it. For a company that specializes in Data wouldn't you think they could sort it.
I guess the SPI isn't a priority.
Futures exhange down!!!!
can't trade
maybe got something to do with this story on SMH...
"ASX directors resign over US share scandal"
http://www.smh.com.au/business/asx-directors-resign-over-us-share-scandal-20130919-2u0qi.html
I can see prices moving on my ladder?
I don't think its constant. Consider for example,funds are buying heavy into the constituents in an up-trending bullish market, they're not likely starting to hedge their positions. During a market top (bracket near the highs), commercials may start hedging their long positions if they're getting nervous, all that selling may create a dip that gets arbed...dipping stocks.
Just thinking out load really to illustrate thats it a complicated relationship. I think around tops and bottoms they may change lead a bit...
Hi Canoz, thanks.
I'd like to know how institutions do their buying and selling. Do you know if they re-set their bots each day with a slightly different instruction depending on circumstances? Or do their bots have all the required algorithms to know what to do for a whole year unassisted? Do they say in their morning meetings "we're going to buy 10 mill worth of BHP over the next week" and then give that job to a trader to do manually? How do they do it? They're the ones who move the market after all, so it's something I should know!
I was going to post this over on the "What's happened to the SPI thread", but it's been closed.
TH reckons that the introduction of bots could be responsible for the reduced range over there over the last few months. I just made a graph illustrating the reduction in range, so thought I might as well stick it up here.
This shows the 1st & 99th percentiles for the difference between the 1-min-running-mean and the 10-min-running-mean (high, based off 5-sec bars). Black is 2011, red is 2012.
Could have chose any metric for this, but the point is just that the SPI does not have the range, at least in the high-frequency, that it had 4 months ago.
Haven't traded the SPI for years.
Volatility is normally pretty flat.
I cant remember a 100 tick day.
That's why I went DAX/FTSE.
Well done on your grand pick up.
What a day on the SPI, one way train, I haven't traded it for a long time, but getting back into it again lately due to work commitments, but I don't remember seeing a 100 point move pretty much in one go on the SPI for ages? Usually it dies during midday but its just kept plugging away. Have nabbed 41 points this morning, was expecting it to just fluff around over lunch so I got out. Might look for something in the last hour or so again, otherwise happy. Many guys trading the SPI these days? <img src="https://www.aussiestockforums.com/forums/attachment.php?attachmentid=60533"/>
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