Friday, April 3, 2009

Closed

Sorry to keep the page blocked for so long. I'm reopening the content but not the site. Thank you to everyone who visited while I was open: a lot of you have helped me grow.

If you want to visit another trading site, check out riding the noise. Also, every site to the right has enough good information to keep you occupied for weeks (if not months).

Thank you and take care,

CP.
StumbleUpon

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Side Project

Two people wanted a newsletter or newsletter-like service. Even though that is a relatively small number, I’m going to give it a shot.

If you would like to join, for $1 you will be given access to view CP's Letters from Wednesday until Saturday (March 17th – March 21st). Also, you can view next week from Sunday until Saturday (March 22nd – March 28th) for $2.50 more. If you want to see all of the posts and information up until March 28th, you can subscribe for a total of $3, a savings of $.50 (that would otherwise probably go to paypal; hence the encouragement to purchase all $3 worth at once).

What you receive:

- Morning “Coffee” Talk: By 9:00 AM EST, I will post some notes. I’ll talk about market developments, what I see as likely scenarios, economic news items to be aware of (numbers, businesses, government), and an S&P 500 chart (might be SPY or the ES emini, but they’re largely interchangeable).

- My real-time trades: I buy and sell stocks and futures.

- Technical analysis of stocks you choose (probably not more than 10 charts a day max, but it depends on what you desire).

- Technical analysis of intraday ES (S&P 500 emini) charts. Largely 5, 10 (sometimes), and 15 minute charts. This will be updated throughout the day.

- Intraday charts of several stocks I am following (plus one to three outside suggestions).

- Chat box (a la jabify) to ask questions in real-time.

- An analysis of the close.

This week and next week are preliminary weeks. I do not know how long I will run this side site, but I wanted to give it a try, especially with a break from school next week and limited stress (I have A’s!) this week.

If at any time you want a refund, let me know. No explanations are required. I’ll just tell paypal to put the money back in your account right away.

If you would like to see something else on the site, let me know.

Suggestions, Questions?


FORM CLOSED
StumbleUpon

Monday, March 16, 2009

A Check Up

I think it is partially luck, a bit of excess caution, growing confidence, psychological development, and some nice charts, but I haven't had a losing trade since I tried to trade the after hours emini market several weeks ago (I wasn't used to the speed and the limited liquidity). All trades since then have been winners with the exception of one break even trade in the futures market. I don't mean to brag, I just want to say that it is possible. Enough of the horn tooting (watch me screw up tomorrow's trades =D)

On to some charts (all continuations of yesterday's postings):


Look at that beautiful shooting star, the turning stochastic, the decent volume, the RSI bouncing off of 50, the resistance at ~775 (look back to late February), and the shitty news, and I'd just about want to buy a put or two. Be careful of good news, and as always, watch the financials for hints as to the strength of any rally or pullback.



I shorted this today. It held on stronger than I would have ever expected, but I came out profitable (my highest yield with real money yet). While the S&P500, GS, and APPL all broke down, JPM held on until the end of the day. Look at the resistance formed by the previous gap down around 25. I used that as an entry point.



GS had the perfect opening. Gap up, easy short. Unfortunately I was in class, but one days like today (short term overbought) a gap up is definitely suspicious, especially if there wasn't any news to justify such a blip. I could see this continue downward tomorrow.



I don't really know what to say about GDX. Looks like it's having trouble getting above its 50-day MA; but its stochastic is not in overbought territory. I'd be extremely careful, but I'm still looking for a pullback.



I didn't jump on this ride, but some lucky bastards did! =D As long as the market continues down, I like this. But my disposition wouldn't allow me to hold this overnight. I'm just too scared. It really looks like a good deal though.



I like trading AAPL. I always get an image of unsophisticated (trading wise) fanboys/girls who do not know the difference between an MA and a Stochastic. This could be completely incorrect (I wouldn't doubt that most of the trading is done by institutions through bots), but AAPL still has beautiful range. I tend to keep my eye on it for a good entry.


Take care.
StumbleUpon

Sunday, March 15, 2009

A Few Charts

Check out Trader Mike for several good charts as well.





StumbleUpon

Friday, March 13, 2009

Velocity, Acceleration

It's really hard to show the "speed" of stock movements without recording trading in action. I'm guessing that's why most sites don't talk about the speed of a movement very much. For those without trading software (it's a necessity for serious trading), you will have an even harder time getting a feel for the speed of whatever stock, future, whatever you're following. Yes, I used to constantly refresh the charts at Zecco and Sogo Trading when I had a small account size. It helps, but the lack of streaming updates detracts from your ability to feel things in action. And, it limits your ability to quickly enter an order.

Scott of Fear and Greed Trader used to talk about getting a feel for the markets--learning to ride the "waves," getting in and out as movements started and finished. I like to imagine that he was talking about what I am feeling during my trading sessions right now.

What do I mean by the words "velocity," "acceleration," and "speed?" I think of it in terms of physics (using calculus, you could probably write some pretty spiffy trading indicators). Velocity and speed are similar. Both basically tell you how fast you're going (velocity gives you direction too: for our purposes, positive or negative). Applied to trading, velocity would probably be something like +/- $.03 per second. Acceleration is how fast the velocity is changing. If the velocity is at a constant +/- $.03 per second then the acceleration will be zero (velocity/speed is unchanged). This is rarely the case in real life. Instead, the velocity may be something like -$.01 per second meaning the velocity is decreasing at one cent per second (i.e. +$.03/sec, then $.02/sec, then $.01/sec...). And, of course, the velocity and acceleration are in a constant state of flux--all of which depends on the entries and exits of many, many traders and the direction the vast majority feel to be profitable.

How does this all fit in with successful trading? Well, I suppose you don't really need to understand things in the form of exact numbers like I wrote out above. The examples are just to give you an idea of what I'm talking about (and quite possibly encourage someone to write an indicator!).

It can all be done without the above. Just look at the chart (it really needs to be streaming) of the security of your choice and watch the candlestick movements. If things are moving pretty fast and begin to slow down, speed is waning and there could be a possibility of a reversal (depending on the location in relation to resistance/support/etc) or consolidation (look for maintained price, uncrossed MA's).

How fast are people bidding up the price? How fast is it falling? If the price is slowing, that means one side is gaining power over the previously dominate side (either through a diminishing faith or a ambush in the opposite direction). The speed at which a stock progresses also tells you how the traders are reacting psychologically. Are they hurriedly picking up shares in fear of losing short profits? Perhaps, they are overreacting to good news, or bad.

Speed is something that feels better to absorb while it happens. A bar could be a dollar high, but did it get there in one quick burst, a violent battle, or over a stable ascent? You can't really tell just by looking at a bar chart. Just because it's a 5 minute chart and the bar is $1 high, doesn't mean its speed was a constant $1/5minutes. There's another whole story between the lines (i.e. candles).

Learn to absorb it.
StumbleUpon

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Newsletter?

Anyone interested in purchasing a daily (weekly optional, for a lower price) newsletter? Each evening, before 9PM PST you would receive an email containing a PDF file, the newsletter.

In the newsletter:

- I'll discuss what happened in the markets that day and how I interpret the price movement (e.g. was it a short covering rally?, the start of a bear market rally?, a potential short, long).

- I'll focus on various points throughout the day on the S&P500 and occasionally the DOW (I prefer trading the S&P500 eminis and find it to be a better representation of the market). I'll touch on where ideal points of entry are and how I would identify them before price reaches that point (it does you no good to identify good points of entry after you can enter at the identified point).

- I'll also suggest possible scenarios for the following day. Sometimes it is easy to point out the most likely scenario. Sometimes having a few in your mind is necessary to stay on top of the game.

- With each newsletter I'll point out a few stocks that I am currently following. For instance, I followed AAPL for the last two days, successfully trading it a couple times for nice profits. I'll let you know what I am looking for and what ideal entry points are or are not. I'll list some trades I took, and why I took them.

- Furthermore I'll update you on possible news and developments (oversold or overbought conditions, etc) that you should keep in mind and what to expect should more information be released.

Also, I will make a deal that anyone who does not recoup the costs of the newsletter (assuming a reasonable beginning account size) will get a refund. Of course, you have to actually utilize the information in the letters. I'll have to consider exactly how we will quantify this, but I don't aim to rob you of your money. I want you to be successful, as it will reflect well on me.

Furthermore, despite limited time during the day to actually trade the markets (which is why I hope to make a little cash by writing information for others who can trade all day), I have made my friend 6% in overall profits in the last three weeks or so. It's not much, except when you consider the short bursts of time I actually have during market hours to trade (I love making $200 in 20 mins or so =)).

Let me know what you think.

Not sure about prices yet...would require PayPal payment as well.
StumbleUpon

He Hit the Number, and So Quickly...

I posted a quote from a newsletter two weeks back (link) that I find rather amusing at the moment. Here's a section of it:

"For those looking for a silver lining, at least we are going to have a deeper bottom to bounce off. Applying a classic recession-trough multiple of 12x against a forward EPS estimate of $55 would imply an ultimate low of 666 on the S&P 500, likely by October if our estimate of the timing for the end of the official downturn is accurate."


Other parts of the letter suggest a lower P/E which would definitely disqualify the 666 number as the ultimate low (at least from my understanding). What I find amusing is not that the analyst happened to pick the current low right on the number (I'll forgive the lack of fractional accuracy), but that he suggests we will reach the low by October. We did. We also reached his suggested ultimate low two weeks after it appeared in print.

If the market continues to do crazy things, like today, I wouldn't be surprised to see it collapse lower and, as of today, think it will go lower. I just do not like the action, and do not feel as though it is rallying action. Follow the financial stocks, though. They will lead the way. Any more good news (such as the Citibank news) will cause euphoria, but as soon as they lose steam, they'll come crashing back down.

Something to keep on your bullish radar is Trader-X's recent post on the reinstatement of the uptick rule. Such a change in how the game is played may cause more euphoria than any banking news could possibly hope for. Be careful. That has possibility of rekindling strong bullish sentiment.
StumbleUpon

Monday, March 9, 2009

Historic Chart


I found this on my hard drive the other day, and I thought I would share it. If you go to the site mentioned on the image, you'll find an even more recent chart showing the current decline of the S&P500 P/E ratios (not yet below 10).

This chart will hopefully give you an idea of where the current market stands. There have been "double tops" before that have not signaled the end of the market, something pointed out every now and then by the doomsayers. Also, there are other times where we have dipped below the outlined consolidation levels. While the chance for a Great Depression like dive exists, I personally think we'll get some movement towards the upside as soon as P/E ratios dip below 10. According to the data I find at Shiller's website, the S&P500 P/E ratio is about 12 as of March 3, 2009. In order to get real bullish sentiment, I think we'd need to fall to ~7 or so. We could fall lower, but that level 5-8, is probably as good as it will get for buyers.

Then again, the doomsayers could be right: the United States could just burst into flames.
StumbleUpon

Saturday, March 7, 2009

Motives.

Motivations, as a friend once told me, are what you need to figure out if you want to understand people. To begin the process ask, "What does this person want?" The benefit of knowing what the other person (or group of people) want is that you can use this information to collate your own wants and desires and see if they are opposed or in congruence. The difficulty in doing this, is that many people will not state their motives up front, or, often, they do not understand or want to understand their true motives.

This can hurt you if you choose to take the person's words at face value. For instance, if someone says, "I want to make you a better person," but constantly performs actions to the contrary (e.g. beating, name calling, neglect) then taking them at their word will lead to confusion: "This person is trying to make me a better person, but I keep feeling terrible and getting worse." The symbols (words) used to convey reality conflict with reality. Obviously, this is going to end terribly for the person who continues to believe the person performing the abuse.

Perhaps even more insidious is when the abuse is not overt. Take CNBC. They state that their aim is to help the investor better understand investing and to make money. However, the views presented are often conflicting (even from the same source, day to day), and since most people cannot or do not record the shows for future reference and reflection, they forget the advice that has hurt them and end up assigning much of the guilt of poor performance to their own misunderstanding.

The base of this problem stems from the misrepresentation (whether intended or through a lack of self-understanding on the hosts) of motive: "We are here to help you invest." If this were the case, why so many ambiguous or outright incorrect statements? It is because their true motive conflicts with your motive to be a better investor through a better understanding of the business world. They are reflecting your motive back onto you. But that is not their motive.

CNBC's motive is to profit from advertising. As many know (whether or not they act upon the information) biased, skewed, exaggerated, "yellow" journalism attracts a larger audience than fact-based, "boring" analysis. People like watching arguments between people who share extreme and conflicting views. It is exciting. CNBC's motive is to provide you with this entertainment. It is how they increase their viewer base and how they increase advertising revenue.

Providing their motives to the viewer (or helping the viewer better understand him or herself), however, would hurt their bottom line. It's not in their best interest.

But it is in your best interest to look at the motives (and even the general world view) of those who you read, watch, and follow. If you take people at their word without confirming their word with action and outcome, your successes will be hit and miss.

----- In Relation to This Site ------

The above can stand on its own, but I wanted to post my own motives for maintaining this site (at least my best understanding of what my motives are). As many of you may have noticed, I no longer have advertisements on the right hand side of the site. I'll be receiving my check from Google soon and have decided not to continue placing hope in profiting from advertisement. I guess, the amount of time I dedicate to thinking about how I can get traffic up and clicking on ads is just not worth the amount of return I can get. I'm much happier dedicating my time to in depth analysis of economics and markets (and whatever else interests me! This is my site) and making money through the markets themselves using the knowledge I gain through the maintenance of this site.

Yeah, the last sentence was a little convoluted, but the main point is: I want to focus on what makes me happy. If you haven't heard, most major sources of journalism are in the red. Although I'm sure there are blogs that make enough to support a human life, I think many do it with other products (Tim Syke's alerts/videos/etc or WeeklyTA's advisor service). I may do that at some point in the future, if anyone wants to follow me throughout the day. But, at the moment, I don't have enough time to be online throughout every trading day, and I doubt enough experience to confidently direct beginners; not to mention, I am having enough success making money trading that I really don't need those extra sources of income. Eventually, I hope such sources will pale in comparison to what I make trading.

Instead, what I hope to gain from this site is a few new friends, an increased depth of knowledge about economics, trading, human psychology, and politics (or whatever floats my boat--such as terrible cliches), and a better understanding of the English language. Truth is, I enjoy to write. Always have, always will. The creative process stimulates me, keeps me alive, and provokes another activity I love: thought.

I'm sure there are other reasons I continue posting. But without ads to the right or a detailed record of my successes (while it may help some bloggers to present this information--and I do not judge them, and enjoy many of their straightforward p/l and goal charts--it tends to hurt me, puff up my sense of superiority or inferiority, and detract from my learning/trading) or a trading service, I thought some may be wondering why I am writing. Well, the above gives some idea.

I'm no CNBC. I hope I am not abusing any of you either. But, my motives, while far more complex than I can really understand (just like everyone else's), are important for you to know while reading my posts and important for you to consider. They'll change with time. And I'm definitely no selfless, savior figure: I don't intend to make you a trading or investing God.

But, then again, CNBC doesn't aim to either.
StumbleUpon

Friday, March 6, 2009

Another Poker Analogy

In online poker, all the chips on the table have been paid for, and with each subsequent pot the house takes its "rake" (i.e. a small fraction for hosting the game). Any money you make in online poker comes out of the pockets of those who you are playing against, and even if you were the best poker player on the table and looted all the stacks, you still wouldn't leave with all of the money that had been on the table. This is because of the rake fee.

The stock market is similar. All of the money you make comes from the pockets of the other participants. After each trade a commission fee takes place to cover the transaction between the two individual traders/investors (players). At the end of the day, even if you were the best trader in the world and were able to drain the participants of all their capital (impossible for many reasons, but for theoretical purposes--) you would still walk away with less money than had been put into the market (sans dividends, should the stocks have any) because of broker fees.

I guess the message I am trying to get across here is that for every winning hand or profitable trade, there will be a losing hand or a losing trade on the other side, at least when markets grow faster than the underlying companies and economy. Those who come out on top are relatively few, because they tend to obtain the "stacks" with their confidence, skills, and eventual ability to buy the pot. The others who come out on top (assuming they have a good business model and aren't wasting money on excess people/equipment) are those who bring the transactions together.

Oh, and another thing: on average, people like to think they are better than average poker players. I think the same goes for the financial world.

Thoughts?
StumbleUpon

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Surrendering to Gravity and the Unknown

Shorting is a necessary tool for any serious trader. Gravity--i.e. entropy--will always take hold, and things will eventually fall. Furthermore, things fall faster than they rise. How much more needs to be said in favor of shorting?


"Gravity" off of Thirteenth Step by A Perfect Circle.
StumbleUpon

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Fear

Fear is always the result of your beliefs about the threatening nature of the environment. What could be threatening about the market? Nothing, if you had the confidence and completely trusted yourself to act appropriately under any given set of market conditions. Essentially, what you fear is not the markets but rather your inability to do what you need to do, when you need to do it, without hesitation.

- Mark Douglas, The Disciplined Trader
StumbleUpon

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Nap

The site has been put on the back burner for the last few days, and it looks like it may have to stay there for a while. I have my final "midterm" tomorrow, but with public transportation (in Southern California) and dedicating my time to trading my friend's account, I am struggling to find time for the site. While I still try to keep a journal of my trades (riding the bus is good for that and reading), I tend to crash when I get home. Naps are the fruit of the Gods.

I really need to spend some time outside as well. With my brother or with friends. I may come back, and I hope I do (I enjoy you people); and I definitely won't stop reading your sites (whether or not it's healthy, I spend quite a bit of time reading blogs). I just don't know exactly when I can update daily again, or if it is even a good idea to utilize my time that way.

I won't hold it against you if you take me off your blog lists. Actually, if I'm not back and posting within a week, I'd recommend it. I'm tired. And I think I need a long nap.

The contest finishes up on Friday. The results are below and it looks like Charlie's goal is so far achieved =). Whoever wins, send me an email with your address and I'll get your copy of Liar's Poker sent off to you. I'll still be doing the lottery for The Losing Game if anyone is interested in it (it's probably a little too gloomy, angry, and not backed up with many facts for most of you; at least for me).

As always, check out the links to the right. Those are some high quality blogs over there.




Thank you for reading my blog. Take care,

Ryan (aka Complacent Panda)
StumbleUpon

Saturday, February 21, 2009

Panda Love



Panda cubs certainly look ugly by most standards. The same could be said of fledgling traders. But both have the potential to turn into such beautiful creatures.


Here are two, one helping the other make it up a tree, or something, perhaps to get a warm apple pie. With the help of others (or as John Lennon said, with a little help from my friends) perhaps the arduous journey can be accomplished.


But, breeders have so much difficulty with the pandas. The process of getting them to, uh-cough, mate with one another is frustrating and time consuming. Many processes are tried. For instance, the one to the left is watching pr0n.


Moral of the story: I have too much time on my hands and have begun accumulating far too many panda pictures on my hard drive.

Stay Tuned =)
StumbleUpon

Another Look at Three Charts from Last Week

Last week we had a good discussion on a few charts (link). I thought it would be nice to see what our volume and price analysis yielded and where one might proceed given current charts.


GDX held its own with quite a bit of strength. As I said last week, it will have trouble breaking above 37 because that is the price level where the 50 and 200 are crossing in a bearish manner. Although gold may be showing strength, or at least verbal strength among the media (we are headed towards an apocalypse, no?), gold mining companies are not the same thing and don't react the same way.

With the high volume giving a, what looks like, perfect doji on the weekly, I'd be surprised if this didn't pull back during the next week. It's a possibility, but odds point towards some downwards movement.


Last week I said, "RIMM is flirting with its 50 day moving average" and that a "break below the 50 is not a good sign" for the longs. Looks like RIMM took the flirting to the next level. I drew some possible support lines. I think it's good that the volume is picking up again, but I wouldn't consider going long until there was some serious buying. Not sure if that will happen. An interesting stock to day trade.

On the huge downward movement last week, I was worried that COH might break. It held up nicely, though--just as many predicted would happen last week (check the comments). Even with the strength I'd watch for the downward movement of the MAs and make sure the bottom in the RSI doesn't break.


Here's a perfect example of how a point and figure chart should be used (and how it can help "support" an interpretation of a candlestick chart, or vice versa). I drew a support line across the bottom, right above $13 or so. You want to watch levels like this (especially when you have three definitely rows using it as support) because the level often leads to a breakdown or a intermediate bottom. You can also use it as an excellent entry position. For example, you could purchase a share at a recent low (somewhere above $13) and place your stop below support. This creates a nice low risk entry point.


As always, take responsibility for your own trades, and take care of yourself.
StumbleUpon

Friday, February 20, 2009

On Scalping

After watching Jules scalp the S&P500 emini, I figured I'd give it a try. Here are some of my thoughts:

I am convinced that successful scalping, while possibly profitable with a quick trigger finger and minimal technical skill, is predicated upon the development of solid chart analysis and a healthy dose of mental discipline.

Trading is exhausting and stressful, especially in this environment. Utilizing a poor understanding of the market to execute your trades will deplete your mental stamina quickly, perhaps faster than your competition's. Without a clear, clean, crisp mental image of the market, you will find yourself wasting precious processing power on tasks that others, better disciplined, can execute more efficiently and thus more effectively.

In the short amount of time that makes up a scalp, instances of waste or conservation can make the difference between a gain and a loss. Practice with chart analysis will increase your efficiency and make you more competitive. Learning to watch your "mental" stamina will get you in the game when you're at your best and get you out when your accuracy starts to fade.

And, yes, I did fairly well today =D I'm happy and so is the owner of the fund I manage.

Take care.
StumbleUpon

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Contest Ranking as of February 19th


Looks like the market blood bath took quite a bit of the paper profits made in the last weeks. I'd be proud with my position, but it betrays my lack of participation. I traded GOOG just so that I would be listed as ~0% gain. But my position does not matter. Basically, whichever one of you manages to protect and/or grow your money the best will receive a copy of Liar's Poker in the mail*! I received a complimentary copy of a book called The Losing Game in the mail just this week and will be raffling it off to one of you as well (completely random, so any of you could win).

The contest finishes next week. Good luck!

*You will have to give me your address or a PO Box. I know, privacy. But don't worry. I won't be delivering it to your home personally, and I have no history of stalking people.

As for those of you who would want me to show up with the prize and feel somewhat disappointed, let me assure you that it would be nothing like the Publishing Clearing House give-a-ways. It'd be terribly anticlimatic.
StumbleUpon

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

144 Trading Blogs Online!

I'm probably nowhere near done compiling the list of trading blogs that I began two days ago. Yet, it already holds 144 blogs. If you don't see yours on there, or if you have a favorite that is missing (currently updated or not), then feel free to send me a line. I know there are quite a few missing, and I will get to them soon. For now, enjoy all of the information and personal experiences given by these bloggers!
StumbleUpon

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Busy; Blogs; Computer Setup; and, Free Culture

I have had and still have a lot of school work for this evening. It's going to be a long night. But I wanted to say that I have received a few emails about trading blogs to be added to the list. They've been added and I will try to add anymore that I receive as soon as I can. Feel free to send yours in; otherwise, like I said before, I'll be adding a large amount very soon. Tomorrow will be a more lenient day (well, after the early morning).

Today was exciting in the market! Hope everyone of you came out alive. Personally, while I didn't have but a half hour at most to dedicate to trading, I did get the setup I talked about a few posts ago completely working. Because the account I'm trading is still short the day trading requirement, I got the screens running futures. It's pretty sweet how IBCharts allows connection to IB's TWS over a lan.

On a continuation of a former tangent, here's a quote from an amazing book called Free Culture by Lawrence Lessig. It's about intellectual property rights, so those of you only interested in trading will may want to call it quits for the evening on this page =) Check out some of the links below or to the right. Otherwise:

"For some films, the benefit of releasing the film may well exceed these costs [lawyer fees to clear rights]. But for the vast majority of them, there is no way the benefit would outweigh the legal costs. Thus, for the vast majority of old films, Agee argued, the film will not be restored and distributed until the copyright expires.

But by the time the copyright for these films expires, the film will have expired. These films were produced on nitrate-based stock, and nitrate stock dissolves over time. They will be gone, and the metal canisters in which they are now stored will be filled with nothing more than dust."

Please stand up against the insanity that our copyright laws have become. Patents expire after 20 years, while copyrights after the 1920's go on, currently, practically indefinitely. It benefits a few large corporations who have control of old icons that still make them money, but it also destroys a good portion of the history of our culture. Copyright is supposed to encourage innovation, not destroy knowledge.

Don't let the talking heads dumb the debate down. I'm not advocating pirating or copyright infringement of new works. I'm advocating the preservation of culture and spread of knowledge that no longer needs protection, as the innovation it contributed to society has long since been compensated.

Freedom is one of my passions...take care everyone.
StumbleUpon

Monday, February 16, 2009

Trading Blog List

I will update the below; I know it's not complete. My goal is to compile a list of links to current and old trading blogs. I have a few things I have to do today, and I have already dedicated too much time to the below =) If you really want your blog added right now, send me an email (comments will be turned off). Otherwise, be assured, I will get to you soon.

Last update on February 19, 2009

10kthrownaway
59 Cedar Street
Abnormal Returns
AC Investor
Action Points
Active Traders
Afraid to Trade
The Aleph Blog
AlphaTrends
Am I Bald?
Anarco's Blog
Anne's Forex Blog
Apex Trader
Attitude Trader
The Balance Sheet
Beanieville
Between the Hedges
The Big Picture
Big Trend Trader
Biiwii.com
The Bonddad Blog
Buy on the Dip
bzbtrader
Chicken Smith
Chris Perruna
Closet Daytrader
Cluster Stock
Clueless Q Trader
Cobra's Market View
cogTRADER
Critcal Mass Blog
Crude Oil Trader
Daily Options Report
The Daily Speculator
Danny's Blog
DehTrader
Dematties [dot] com
The Denarii Trader
Dinosaur Trader
The Disciplined Investor
The Dogwood Report
Don Miller Trading
Downtown Trader
Dummy Spots
Emini Addict
Est. 2007
Fallond Stock Picks
Fear and Greed Trader
The Financial Ninja
The Fly
Forex Intraday Trading
Formerly ADD Trader
Fresh Salt Water
Gaming the Market
Gio
The Gold and Oil Guy
Green on the Screen
Had Enough Therapy?
Hawaii Trader
Hector Trader
HeadlineCharts
High Probability Trading
The Housing Time Bomb
How I Daytrade
Howard Lindzon
The Impatient Trader
Infiniteyield Forex
Jules in Jumbles
Just Charts
Kevin's Market Blog
The Kirk Report
The Lauriston Letter
Leonard the Monkey
little2rich4u
LOLFed
The Lonely Trader
Luna $ Ticks
The Macro Trader
Maoxian
Market Monk's Musings
Market Rewind
Market Roll
Market Time
Master of the Universe
Match Point Trader
Mish's
Miss Trade
Momo Stock Trader
Move the Markets
Musings of a Trader
Naked Trader
Neural Market Trends
No Brainer Trades
Nocturne Strat Espial
Not the Real Thing
Not Really Sure
O. G. Options
One Bad Trade
Online Stock Trading
OONR7
Option Maestro
Options Expiration Trader
Overcoming Bias
Phileo's Picture Windows
Phil Town
PRD-day trader
Pursuing Wealth
Predict Wall Street
Quantifiable Edges
Rajun Cajun
Read the Prospectus
Really Not the Real Thing
Reflexivity in Finance
The Reformed Broker
R-Multiples
Robin Hood Trader
Ryan O'Keefe
Simply Options Trading
Skill Analytics
Slope of Hope
The Smart Money Tracker
SMB Training
Stock Bee
Stock Chartist
Stock Insight
Stock Market Psychology
Stock Punk
StockJunkie
Stock Rookie
stockTagger
Stops Are In
Stump News
Swing Trade Stocks
Technically Speaking
The Technical Trader
Ticker Sense
Timothy Sykes
Todd's Trade
Toni Hansen's Online Trading Blog
Trade 4 Cash
A Trade a Day
TraderAm
Trader Eyal
Trader Development
Trader Feed
Trader Gav
Trader Ghost
Trader Mike
Trader Rick
Trade or Invest
Trader Psychology
Trader-X
Trade While Working
Trading 4 Living
Trading Advice
Trading Bots
Trading Goddess Stock Blog!
Trader's Narrative
Trend and Value
Ugly Chart
Upside Trader
Value Blog Review
Very Smart Investing
Vital Trends
VIX and More
Wall Street Fighter
The Wall Street Matador
Wall Street Warrior
Wang's Happy Trading
We're All Full of Bull
Weekly TA
Woodshedder
Zen Trader
zstock7.com
StumbleUpon