The only one capable of answering which trading strategy is “right” or “wrong” is the trader. The answer depends largely on psychology.
— Michael Lamothe (@MichaelGLamothe) July 2, 2014
There’s no single “right” or “wrong” trading strategy but there are “right” and “wrong” trading strategies for each trader.
— Michael Lamothe (@MichaelGLamothe) July 2, 2014
Great interview with O’Neil disciplie David Ryan by @covel http://t.co/KEo5Bs34Jf
— LM_Tentarelli (@systemstrader95) July 4, 2014
Are hurricanes positive or negative for GDP?
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) July 3, 2014
“The bottom line is that you need an edge” – Monroe Trout
— Andrew Selby (@DontTalkStocks) July 3, 2014
that was a normal ramp
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) July 3, 2014
@WeeklyOptTrader Be grateful for the complainers; says the trend isn’t over yet.:)
— Chandra Kumar (@gabbrobooks) July 3, 2014
“@SJosephBurns: The $QQQ chart thinks its 1999 & $SPY thinks its 2013 again.” <— Easy money train. Volatility to zero and delist the $VIX
— ETrader (@WallStreeTopGun) July 3, 2014
If we are intermediate or long term traders, we must fight the urge to micro manage our positions. Intra-day action is noise.
— Michael Lamothe (@MichaelGLamothe) July 2, 2014
We all must define what kind of traders we are and what time frames we trade.
— Michael Lamothe (@MichaelGLamothe) July 2, 2014
Still lots of good info on CNBC, when it’s company specific. But the input on market direction, bonds and stocks, couldn’t be more wrong.
— Mike Valletutti (@marketmodel) July 2, 2014
@SunriseTrader @SJosephBurns it’s not about logic or probability but the FED!!
— Abiola (@AbiolaHP) July 1, 2014
“First of all, never play macho man with the market. Second, never overtrade.” – Paul Tudor Jones
— Andrew Selby (@DontTalkStocks) June 29, 2014