Author: Surefirething
Research carried out by SureFireThing indicates that, on average, liquid securities or indexes tend to experience the Camarilla effect about 75% of the time. That’s 3 days out of 4. And that number is good over the last year, the last 2 years, even the last 10 years. This means that SureFireThing’s Camarilla Equation Calculator describes a fundamental aspect of any liquid market. Furthermore, these Camarilla breakouts typically involve strong moves of up to 50% of a day’s range, so they contain excellent money making opportunities.
Day Trading To Financial Freedom
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What is a Market
A market is any arena in which buyers and sellers meet in order to try and exchange their requirements.
The participants of a market are many and varied, and range from people like you (day traders), trading for themselves, all the way up to billion dollar funds managed by major corporations operating on annual timeframes. To trade a market requires a day trading account of some kind. Nowadays, most individuals who want to trade use online services, which allow them to place their orders over the Internet.
The established bodies who make millions everyday have a vested interest in convincing us of two things.
Firstly that the markets are fair, simply reflecting the undeniable laws of supply and demand, and that secondly, over time, all markets tend to rise. In direct opposition to this you may have come across individuals who appear paranoid, claiming that ‘the markets are rigged by the big boys’ or even that ‘the market itself is out to get me!’. Such outbursts should be taken with a pinch of salt
. Even the biggest banks in the world can only maintain a tenuous grip on something as large and powerful as a stock market. The fact that since 2000, ALL the major banks have been wildly off in their predictions for where the markets will end the year indicates that they have no better idea of where it is going than you or I.In fact, in 2002, the BEST any major bank could do was to be about 40% off the actual year end prices. Not particularly tight contol, is it?
As for markets always rising over time, the answer is a guarded ‘yes’. The general rise in markets seems to be a reflection of the increase in human economic activity, and over the last few hundred years, that economic activity has increased exponentially. As world economies boom and bust, stock markets go with them. The relationship, of course is not as simple as this, but nevertheless, there are good arguments for saying that over time, markets tend to rise. From a day trading perspective, whether a stock market rises or falls is irrelevant, as we trade both long and short.
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