Long ago, when I was in my early 20s I wanted to work in the music industry and went to college to study all aspects of it, from recording to the business back end. But I never followed through with it, because I was afraid to be stuck working for $5/hr cleaning a recording studio for years before getting a chance to produce music that no one would like. I ended up switching majors to business and then international relations, where I finally thrived. Years later I discovered De Phazz, the music that sounded like what I had hoped to produce.
Wow, check the dance. They operate well on those tunes, no doubt. Very nice. Thanks for the heads up. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De-Phazz De-Phazz is a downtempo jazz ensemble integrating modern turntablism and elements of soul, Latin, trip hop and drum and bass into a lounge music sound. De-Phazz is led by Pit Baumgartner, a German producer who has varied the lineup of artists for every new album.[1] Some regular members are Barbara Lahr, Karl Frierson and Pat Appleton.[2] The band has released records on Mole Listening Pearls and Universal Jazz Germany along with single releases on Edel Records and United Recordings, and also remixes existing https://dephazz.com/ youtube.com/watch?v=Q3VEyCz0u7M&list=PL35441D567C59574F
Interesting interpretation. My image was more of a neo 20s cabaret band of sassy black women in electro pink and blue hair with zoot suited latino men as back up singers
In a single day, perhaps. You could have done the math to come to a different conclusion but you did not, oh well...
I would say artistic and intuitive trading as this fits my brain, however I believe rules based is still applied to it in a way and I call it discipline and risk management. Based on my current strategy, I'm more comfortable trading a higher timeframe. With the timezone, I think I'd be able to answer the question of which session I can trade when I understand fundamentally the behavior within the sessions and there I can pick which would be more reasonable for me to spend time with.
Yes I have observed this, as I get better I'm able to switch between timeframes from 1H to 1D. But I also look at 15m, 30m, 45m and 1W just to see confirmations.. Yes I'm one of those traders, who blow up their account. But the thing I learned why I blew up the account is the lack of knowledge with fundamental analysis. I underestimated what the geopolitcal events can do to the charts; meaning even if I thought it doesn't make sense anymore for DXY to still go up, but because of the geopolitical events, it did and I was stubborn enough to accept I'm wrong. My theory is that DXY is in a bubble right now for some whatever reason, that it'll colapse anytime soon.. Last monday I've been bearish with it but it just kept on making higher highs. And the problem is that I only realize what made this happen when I blew up my account and humble enough to stepback (which is a painful lesson). This is the link of my page where I think you can get an idea of my strategy. I was doing livestreams on this too, but I realized that my software for it isn't working well when i switch tabs so I just kinda stopped doing it. But again you will still see me execute my trades and its results if you skip. facebook.com/simeoncapital/photos/a.111012368374663/121819090627324/
Sales book? If you meant trading book... I tried reading "the disciplined trader" by mark douglas but didn't finish it for some reason.
Yes, I meant sales book. Why? See the info below that you posted about your background. What kind of preparation did you have and did any of it come from Sales Books? If so, what would be a couple of them that stood out to you as particularly helpful.
I can't really remember the books I read then, but I like "Way of The Wolf: Straight Line Selling," by Jordan Belfort a lot.. I'm not sure why my sales background matter, but since I was a kid I guess I can sell although I'm not actively selling stuffs. I just know I can sell, and I find it hard to sell products I don't personally believe in..