An ET member ("Geneticien", I believe) questioned my June 17 short EUR/NZD position. He said it was a "fake" trade or some other nonsense/lie of that nature. I quickly answered his comment by showing him the proof but he did not bother to answer. See, that's the problem with all these trolls, professional liars and born troublemakers: they are all cowards to the bone! When you expose their little lies in public they shut the hell up and never reply back. And then they wait for your next post and try to discredit you some more, by any means necessary. You can tell them the sky is blue today and they will say "NO!! The sky is grey in (some random town), you are a scammer and a fraud!!". They are clinically sick. Anyway, here is that 06/17/2020 short EUR/NZD trade again (from the FXCM chart). But first an important notice: : on occasion there may be a slight delay before a trade is posted on this ET Journal. Of course I do my best to post the trade as soon as possible but it is not always possible. My FIRST and ONLY goal is to make money from my Forex trades, not to post some trades in some trading forum (and seriously, who cares about Tradex's trades anyway?), so I have to check and double check each trade on my trading platform before I even think about posting it online. So by the time the trade is actually posted, the currency has probably moved 3 or 5 pips in my favor or against me. This is something I have no control over. So anyway, around 6:32 PM I went short EUR/NZD at 1.7401, see the FXCM chart below (bid price). And then after I triple checked everything on my trading station (you really have to be extremely careful before an important financial report like GDP), I posted the trade on ET, a few minutes later. The trade moved almost 50 pips in my favor before hitting the break-even stop (around 6:45 PM). Again see the (second) chart, this time for the ask price of course (since I am buying to cover the short position). There you have it, plain and simple. No "scam" and no "fraud", don't believe a word these liars/trolls/mentally-insane-people say, they just want to create doubt in your mind. They can only feel better when they put down others. And that's precisely what they are busy doing, on a daily basis. Don't pay any attention to these weirdos, always check the facts yourself. Short EUR/NZD around 6:32 PM (red line is the 1.7401 price) Break-even stop is hit a few minutes later (price moved almost 50 pips in my favor):
Hilarious! The "Bascom Palmer Club" in Miami Beach! Back in 2000, I did the Inca Trails to Machu Picchu, and I was wearing glasses back then, and they kept slipping, and I could not wear my contact lenses, as my hands were super dirty. It was a mess, but I swore that upon my return, I would get LASIK, and ditch the glasses. And it worked, but 20 years later, things are getting "blurry". Obviously, staring at screens all these years did not help the cause. Thankfully, my original surgeon is still there. SO, People, staring at computer screens all day, does fuck up your vision
Oh yes, no doubt. I use a free software that blocks the blue light from the screen, it helps a lot, especially during the evening/night. https://justgetflux.com/ Thanks for the "Addicted to love" video, a classic.
More BS. Shows a chart but no journal entry showing the closed position... and ALL of his fills are complete BS by as many at 20 pips.
Once again, as you can clearly see, the pathological liar (his nickname starts with a "D" and ends with an "O") is unable to prove anything. This seriously deranged troll loves to crawl the forum to spread lies and even more lies. And then he runs like a coward when someone shows real data.
On Sunday's, fading the initial move and/or trading the gap fill are usually good strategies, if there is a confirmation at the price action level. The initial move has to be strong enough of course.