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are you ready for the break up ?


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#1 andr99

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Posted 19 January 2025 - 01:16 PM

tomorrow is the big day that all those who are long, have been waiting for since December. I'm one. 


Edited by andr99, 19 January 2025 - 01:18 PM.

forever and only a V-E-N-E-T-K-E-N - langbard


#2 trioderob

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Posted 19 January 2025 - 01:59 PM

what's bullish about new tariffs and deporting all the folks who pick the food from the fields ,,,,, tell me how THAT lowers folks' grocery bills ?

 

I am all ears 



#3 da_cheif

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Posted 19 January 2025 - 05:05 PM

december??????   :>)



#4 andr99

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Posted 19 January 2025 - 06:36 PM

december??????   :>)

 

I was talking about that I was waiting for a sky rocketing December that didn't materialize. Now it's time for it. As for the longer term,  i was short from the 31st of March 2022 till September-October 2022 when I reversed my

 

position from short to long which long position I'm still holding. All posted in this site. Should I have done better ? Should I have discovered life outside the Earth ? Or should I have found the laws of phisics that allow to transform s-h-i-

 

t in diamonds ? Sorry, I have got my limits, as everybody else. 


Edited by andr99, 19 January 2025 - 06:41 PM.

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#5 andr99

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Posted 20 January 2025 - 09:43 AM

in my comment ''tomorrow'' means ''the next open market day'' after last week's close or if you want ''the next trading session'' which is not today given that the market is closed. 


forever and only a V-E-N-E-T-K-E-N - langbard


#6 steadyquest

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Posted 21 January 2025 - 11:25 AM

Appears your crystal ball has once again pointed the way (unless I can jinx it).  Are 10% corrections obsolete?

NYA2.png



#7 OEXCHAOS

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Posted 21 January 2025 - 02:50 PM

Tariff's are a gambit. Deporting illegals takes pressure off the system, decreases demand, and frees up some real estate. That should lower costs, at the margin. There are guest worker permits for seasonal harvests.

 

Massive energy production and deregulation will also be disinflationary.


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#8 12SPX

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Posted 21 January 2025 - 04:01 PM

Appears your crystal ball has once again pointed the way (unless I can jinx it).  Are 10% corrections obsolete?

NYA2.png

Or if you move the trendliine down it never broke down lol!! 



#9 andr99

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Posted 21 January 2025 - 04:48 PM

what's bullish about new tariffs and deporting all the folks who pick the food from the fields ,,,,, tell me how THAT lowers folks' grocery bills ?

 

I am all ears 

 

well, apart that I trade patterns on charts and not what is behind what, what bad would be to impose tariffs to China which is the biggest predator of Western economies ?  Stopping China 

is a holy measure which will bring money back in western workers' pockets which thing by reflection can just be good for our markets. As for the illegal workers in agriculture who contribute to lower 

the grocery bills, what are the social and economic costs for keeping so many people on the shoulders of your national welfare system ? Mine is not a cynical approach, I just think that western countries

should help the third world's nations simply teaching them to improve their national economies instead of importing millions of illegals that very often end up in the hands of criminal organizations like it happens

in Europe. However all of these considerations go beyond anything I need to look at if I want to understand the next market's move which is not determinated by our reasonings, but essentially by how much money 

is parked outside the market, ready to enter it and the only thing that is interesting to understand is if the market is accumulating or distributing, because only that counts and only that makes you know in advance what

the next direction will be. .  


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#10 andr99

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Posted 22 January 2025 - 03:58 AM

I'm realizing that I wrote ''determinated'' which was wrong, instead of ''determined'' which is right. It's due to the fact that ''determined'' in italian is ''determinato'' and usually 

when there's such a similarity between words of the two languages to get the past participle in English it's enough to change the desinence of the italian past participle which is ''o'' with the one of 

English past participle which is ''ed''. Indoeuropean languages sometimes find me confused (by the way in italian it would be ''confuso''....lol)  


forever and only a V-E-N-E-T-K-E-N - langbard