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Well, sanction, in the usual sense, is the ratio of sellers to buyers.
Ooh. Turns out there are buyers and sellers.
The best minds on the forum "numismatists conventionally" have argued that there is no supply and demand, in the sense that you flip a coin and you get a kukush anyway.
Ooh. Turns out there are buyers and sellers.
The best minds on the forum "numismatists conventionally" have argued that there is no supply and demand, I mean flip a coin and you get a gobble anyway.
From bad theory to good practice
;)
From bad theory to good practice
;)
The closer you get to being scientific, the further you get from being profitable.
You can't get far from the laws of nature.
The closer one gets to science, the further one gets from profitability.
You can't get far from the laws of nature.
Many here cast their fishing rods in a fishy place
but when you get burned, you swim ashore,
on the way in and on the way out with some foul language.
the truth was out there, but apparently it wasn't meant to be...
the moral of the thread is that the problem is solvable, but not like this, there are fewer strategy options, but different
the tired lost, may he who walks the roadThe closer one gets to science, the further one gets from profitability.
You can't get far from the laws of nature.
It all depends on how you want to trade, whether it's stable or just for fun. It depends on what you rely on and what you get. What was shown on the eurusd chart would show a continuous upward trend without any pullbacks, which in fact we do not observe in reality.
ha, it could have continued downwards actually
Why didn't it continue, that's the question.
where is that gloating pivot point?
ha, it could have continued downwards actually
Why didn't it continue, that's the question
where is that gloating pivot point?
First of all you need to understand the basic thing. Yes, there is a certain asymmetry of forces pushing the price up or down in the market. The problem is that these forces are equal if we don't consider a 2-3% advantage as inequality. Because of this, no one can get to these pivot points. Since no one can not offer a good algorithm for determining the offset of these forces in one or the other side. And the problem is the calculation period. Because if you yourself determine the period that you analyze, you will certainly face a subjective method of analysis on the basis of which you cannot say whether your analysis is correct or not. But this is all in simple terms. Here was discussed the same as above, but with the accuracy of science or "scientificity" to whomever is convenient)
I explained the calculation period above - it does not exist, as a quotire is a non-periodic series
in this case a quote has the potential to have practically negligible increments, with sufficiently wide possibilities to control the price
is proved by Fourier transforms.
I would argue about a 2-3% overweight, but I won't.
Just to give you an example - black swan on the pound in '16, about 90% stood to buy....
And the funny thing is that it was a no-break for all markets, huge livantos
Can a counter-trend strategy withstand such a move? The answer is hopefully obvious.
And what's above is a reversal strategy
The author is off topic, he's right.
Well, the market is usually defined as the ratio of buyers to sellers.
Well, there's no such data in forex. We have to emulate them somehow from the price and volume.
And even if we had them, we would need to know in what section they are looked at. In total, how much was bought and sold in the market.
That picture you gave is data of one brokerage company, it does not make a difference.
I explained the calculation period above - it does not exist, as a quotire is a non-periodic series
in which a quote is allowed to have practically negligible increments, with sufficiently wide possibilities for price management
is proved by Fourier transforms.
I would argue about a 2-3% overweight, but I won't.
Just to give you an example - black swan on the pound in '16, about 90% stood to buy....
And the funny thing is that it was a no-break for all markets, huge livantos
Can a counter-trend strategy withstand such a move? The answer is hopefully obvious.
And what's above is a reversal strategy
The author is off topic, he's right.