Opening Orders - 2008

Discussion in 'Journals' started by Don Bright, Jan 3, 2008.

  1. EMZ

    EMZ

    3 fills long, 2 small win/scratch, 1 tough loss XTO ouch!
    No specific news, opened and sold down fast. No breather there.
     
    #561     Apr 29, 2008
  2. I suspect Oil down $2 might have had something to do with it.
     
    #562     Apr 29, 2008
  3. I was caught on HAL today -$600....

    I try to cancel everything after 3 minutes, but was on phone with a trader doing a hard to borrow locate, darn, LOL.

    Back to "normal" hopefully tomorrow.


    Don
     
    #563     Apr 29, 2008
  4. Blocked 2/3 of my roster on news. One short fill on a small position, good for a gallon and a half of gas.
     
    #564     Apr 29, 2008
  5. EMZ

    EMZ

    2 fills, 2 shorts, 1win, 1 loss, net in the penalty box.
    Overall April, earnings month, has been tough.
     
    #565     Apr 30, 2008
  6. Arnie

    Arnie

    NYSE, Nasdaq Urged
    To Cut Price Divergence
    By AARON LUCCHETTI
    April 30, 2008

    A group of brokerage-firm traders, investors and other market participants are recommending that the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq Stock Market find ways to eliminate growing price discrepancies at the 9:30 a.m. Eastern time opening of trading.

    In a report being released Wednesday, the Security Traders Association said that the two largest U.S. stock exchanges should work on "an appropriate and coordinated opening process" for stocks. The findings have important implications for investors, because shares of most U.S. companies trade on the Big Board, a unit of NYSE Euronext, or Nasdaq OMX Group Inc.'s Nasdaq.

    The transformation of exchanges from brokerage-firm-owned clubs to for-profit companies has helped make trading cheaper and faster. It also has unleashed competitive forces that can make trading less orderly and more volatile.

    Wall Street traders say problems have become more evident since Nasdaq started its own auction process last year to gain more business on the opening in NYSE- and American Stock Exchange-listed stocks.

    "Divergent prices confuse investors," said John Giesea, president of the traders group. Chris Concannon, Nasdaq's executive vice president overseeing U.S. stock trading, said he is sympathetic to concerns about price discrepancies but isn't sure how coordinated pricing would work. He adds Nasdaq's approach is more transparent and fair.

    NYSE officials said their system produces more accurate prices and is becoming more efficient and transparent. "We've got the largest liquidity pool, and we're making enhancements based on customer feedback," said Colin Clark, NYSE's vice president of strategic market analysis. The NYSE recently waived exchange fees charged to brokers making trades at the opening.

    Write to Aaron Lucchetti at aaron.lucchetti@wsj.com
     
    #566     Apr 30, 2008
  7. trom

    trom

    I saw that in the WSJ today, as well. It will be interesting to see what happens. I trade the NASDAQ open/closing crosses exclusively, no NYSE. Granted I'm biased, but I would love to see the NYSE crosses become more like NASDAQ's.
     
    #567     Apr 30, 2008
  8. How much of the price movement to Fair Value is the specialist buying/selling and how much is other folks like funds etc rebalancing?
     
    #568     Apr 30, 2008
  9. gehko

    gehko

    2 fills / 2 short

    2 wins / +$250


    End of month summary:

    Month P/L: $(1310.00)
    Month Average Gain: .075
    Month Average Loss: -.4054
    Month Winners: 42
    Month Losers: 11
    Month W/L ratio: 3.81

    April showers bring May flowers.
     
    #569     Apr 30, 2008
  10. Nothing to do with reversal to mean or other involvement. We simply sell when the stock opens above our calculated selling price, or buy under our estimated buy price...when the stock gaps up or down. The Specialist will be on the same side when this happens.

    Don
     
    #570     Apr 30, 2008