Perpetual Lottery Tickets Drawer

Discussion in 'Journals' started by random trader, Sep 9, 2003.

  1. i must have missed this in your thread. If it only costs you one dollar each side and your profit is taking that cost into consideration, then it looks like you havve a winning strategy that may bite you in the ass in the future! haha With penny stocks, you never really know what's going to happen. suppose half of the stocks you are in went bankrupt on a partiuclar day? THis is quite possible! Good luck and I hope you have continued success. It would be nice if rather than just saying N=20, you could list the 20 stocks you bought or sold.

    So where do you pay only $1 per side for penny stocks? where do you trade? Also, how many shares of each stock do you buy?
    Is what you do called basket trading?

    Thanks
     
    #111     Nov 3, 2003
  2. IB. 100 shares each.
     
    #112     Nov 3, 2003
  3. 11/4/03

    N = 24
    X = $1075
    Sum(P) = $54

    Stock market to the middle class is lottery to the underclass.
     
    #113     Nov 4, 2003
  4. 11/5/03

    N = 24
    X = $1075
    Sum(P) = $55

    Stock market to the middle class is lottery to the underclass.
     
    #114     Nov 5, 2003
  5. 11/6/03

    N = 24
    X = $1075
    Sum(P) = $115

    Stock market to the middle class is lottery to the underclass.
     
    #115     Nov 6, 2003
  6. 11/7/03

    N = 24
    X = $1075
    Sum(P) = $115

    Stock market to the middle class is lottery to the underclass.
     
    #116     Nov 7, 2003
  7. 11/10/03

    N = 24
    X = $1075
    Sum(P) = $159

    Stock market to the middle class is lottery to the underclass.
     
    #117     Nov 10, 2003
  8. Added two today.

    11/11/03

    N = 26
    X = $1138
    Sum(P) = $138

    Stock market to the middle class is lottery to the underclass.
     
    #118     Nov 11, 2003
  9. Quick question, the profit is a running total?
     
    #119     Nov 12, 2003
  10. Yes.
     
    #120     Nov 12, 2003