5% - 10% profit per day trading

Discussion in 'Journals' started by spanish89, Aug 14, 2008.

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  1. i would have prefered a 60.86 sell entry, but only just looked at the chart. lol

    Im doing this based on a combination of the monthly, weekly, daily and 1-3minute charts.
     
    #6871     May 19, 2009
  2. we're going to test today's high of 61.00.
     
    #6872     May 19, 2009
  3. Spanish, hitting 5%-10% a day was the original topic for this thread. Now that you have been at it for awhile have you reached a conclusion on whether or not you can hit 5%-10% a day?
     
    #6873     May 19, 2009

  4. ALoha mate, yeah the conclusion was that yea it is do-able,
    since i did it most days of the week for quite a few months back when i was doing this fulltime for a living.

    However you need-
    Lots of good volatility, to withdraw every few days, and to have LOTS of spare money sitting in your bank account as safety money. :)


    Plus you need to really really want to do this for your whole life and career and most importantly you need to ''enjoy doing it''.




    I no longer talk in percentages anyways though mate... :)

    Since they are for when your comparing your relative performance to other peoples,
    which i used to do constantly. lol

    But now i just do this for some easy extra cash each month.

    Not hate doing it, but like the feeling and reward after having done it, like i felt.
     
    #6874     May 19, 2009
  5. seems we settle at best 6030 by 14:30 EST
     
    #6875     May 19, 2009
  6. Certainly agree with the spare money in the bank account. Scared money is never rational money.

    Good luck
     
    #6876     May 19, 2009
  7. IEA: downturn sets up surge in oil prices
    ------------------------------------------------------------------

    LONDON -- Energy investment is "plunging" because of the recession, paving the way for
    oil-price surges within three years, the International Energy Agency warned in a new report.

    The Paris-based watchdog for the world's major energy-consuming nations said that in recent
    months, oil companies and investors have canceled or postponed about $170 billion of investment
    equivalent to roughly two million barrels a day in future oil supply.

    An additional 4.2 million barrels a day in future oil-supply capacity has been delayed by at
    least 18 months as companies slash spending.

    The study will be presented to energy ministers from the Group of Eight industrialized
    nations this weekend in Rome and to G-8 leaders at a July summit.

    The report highlights the growing risk that the crude supply -- though currently abundant
    because of weak global consumption -- could tighten quickly once the world economy gets back on
    its feet.

    "What we're saying is that come around 2012 the impact of this big recession on oil
    investment and capacity, if current trends continue, could be severe with much higher oil
    prices," said IEA chief economist Fatih Birol. The IEA is funded by the world's 28 biggest
    energy-consumers, notably the U.S. and Japan. It has long argued for more aggressive investment
    in building oil capacity.

    The report, which was reviewed by The Wall Street Journal, also notes that most delayed or
    canceled projects are located in politically stable non-OPEC nations like Canada. Those
    resources take more years to develop than crude oil found in the members of the Organization of
    Petroleum Exporting Countries, which is typically easier and cheaper to get out of the ground.

    The rate at which world oil demand recovers remains a critical -- and unknowable -- variable.
    Several governments in the developed world are advancing energy-efficiency measures, which
    could temper the rise in oil prices as demand recovers.

    The IEA estimates oil demand this year will fall by 3%, the sharpest drop in about 30 years,
    to about 83 million barrels a day.

    Many analysts, however, say they believe crude prices in the next few years could again soar
    over the $100-a-barrel mark seen last year because of two factors: relatively rapid energy
    consumption growth in emerging markets like China and the fact that much of the world's
    easy-to-tap oil is already discovered.

    Benchmark crude prices on Tuesday closed up 62 cents at $59.65 a barrel on the New York
    Mercantile Exchange.

    Through criticized at times for missing some industry developments, the IEA is still seen as
    one of the most reliable energy statisticians in the industry, in part due to data from its
    member countries.

    The agency said Canada, with the world's second-biggest proven oil reserves after Saudi
    Arabia, has been worst hit by falling investment.

    Around 15 Canadian oil-sands projects involving 1.7 million barrels a day in production
    capacity and $150 billion of investment have been suspended or canceled. Oil sands yield a
    viscous and expensive-to-produce crude.

    But oil sands usually need at least $55 to $60-a-barrel crude prices to be produced
    profitably. Oil has traded below that level since late last year.
     
    #6877     May 19, 2009
  8. usman88

    usman88

    what is your stop on this one?
     
    #6878     May 20, 2009
  9. usman88

    usman88

    i have revised my target to 62.95. Ill post rationale if i get time
    moved stop to 59.70 to lock in 10 ticks profit (current rate = 61.40)
     
    #6879     May 20, 2009
  10. short 61.70, target 61.40.
     
    #6880     May 20, 2009
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