$STAY
Extended Stay America Inc
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- Consumer Services
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$20.46 -
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7,158,474
DAY RANGE
20.44 - 20.47
52 WEEK
0 - 20.47
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@trademaster #TradeHouses
20 minutes agoBy Laura Sanicola and Muyu Xu (Reuters) -Oil edged lower on Wednesday ahead of a panel meeting of OPEC+ ministers, as the market weighed expectations of supply tightness against fears that high interest rates could reduce fuel demand. Brent crude oil futures dipped 6 cents to $90.86 a barrel by 0345 GMT, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude (WTI), fell 5 cents to $89.18 per barrel. Data on Tuesday night showed that U.S. job openings increased by the largest amount in more than two years, prompting a further sharp rise in Treasury yields. Along with fears that interest rates will stay high for some time, oil benchmarks also have been pressured by concerns that the strengthening dollar would dent demand, as it makes oil more expensive for holders of other currencies. "A resilient labour market is deemed to be providing more room for the Federal Reserve (Fed) to keep rates high for longer," said Yeap Jun Rong, market analyst at IG. The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allies, or OPEC+, is expected to keep output policy unchanged when it meets on Wednesday, after members Saudi Arabia and Russia extended output cuts to the end of the year. Saudi Arabia is expected to raise its November official selling price of Arab Light crude to Asia for a fifth straight month, according to a Reuters survey, as market participants expect supplies of medium sour crude to remain tight. "The recent oil price reversal could be a reason for the cartel to keep their supply cuts unchanged in today's review meeting," said ANZ Bank's analysts Brian Martin and Daniel Hynes in a note. Meanwhile, talks to restart Iraqi oil exports via a crude oil pipeline that runs through Turkey are still ongoing, an Iraqi oil official told Reuters, one day after Turkey said operations would start again this week following a near six-month stoppage. Russia is setting no time frame for a fuel export ban it introduced last month, and which will remain in place as long as necessary to stabilize prices and address shortages on the domestic market, Interfax cited Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak as saying. Investors are also closely watching supply and demand in the United States. Industry data showed crude stocks fell by about 4.2 million barrels in the week ended Sept. 29, according to market sources citing American Petroleum Institute figures on Tuesday. [API/S] U.S. government data on stockpiles is due on Wednesday. Eight analysts polled by Reuters estimated on average that crude inventories fell by about 500,000 barrels in the week to Sept. 29. [EIA/S]
10 Replies 8 π 10 π₯
@trademaster #TradeHouses
recentlyInvesting.com -- U.S. stocks were falling early Tuesday, adding to losses for the month as investors worried about interest rates staying higher for longer and about the potential effects of a government shutdown. At 9:37 ET (13:37 GMT), the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 151 points or 0.5%, while the S&P 500 was down 0.6% and the NASDAQ Composite was down 0.7%. Indices set for losing month on hawkish Fed The main indices on Wall Street are still feeling reflecting investor reaction to last weekβs surprisingly hawkish Federal Reserve meeting, with the policymakers signaling another rate increase this year and just two rate cuts next year, down from the four forecast at the June meeting. Officials sent the message that they believed interest rates would have to stay higher for longer to cool inflation toward their 2% target rate. Minneapolis Federal Reserve Bank President Neel Kashkari emphasized the point on Monday, staying that given the surprising resilience of the U.S. economy, the Fed probably needs to raise borrowing rates further and keep them high for some time to bring inflation back down to 2%. On Monday, the benchmark S&P 500, tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite, and 30-stock Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed, snapping four-day losing streaks. But all of the indices are still on course to finish September sharply in the red, with the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite down 5.4% in September, heading for its worst month since December, while the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average had lost 3.8% and 2.1%, respectively. Moodyβs warns about shutdown damage Also weighing on sentiment is the uncertainty surrounding a potential federal government shutdown, an occurrence that would harm the country's credit, rating agency Moody's (NYSE:MCO) Investors Service said on Monday. Lawmakers on Capitol Hill are trying to hammer out an agreement at least on a temporary funding measure that would buy them more time, but Saturday's deadline is quickly approaching. The warning by Moody's comes just a month after Fitch downgraded the U.S. by one notch on the back of a debt ceiling crisis, meaning Moodyβs is the last of the major agencies to still maintain the U.S. with the premier triple βAβ rating. The yield on 10-year Treasury notes rose as high as 4.566%, a 16-year peak, pushing the U.S. dollar to a 10-month peak. Economic data due for release Tuesday include August new home sales and the September consumer confidence, which are both expected to show a small decrease from the prior months. Alibaba to list logistics unit in Hong Kong In corporate news, earnings are due from warehouse retailer Costco (NASDAQ:COST) after the closing bell. Whole Foods distributor United Natural Foods (NYSE:UNFI) beat profit expectations and reported revenue in-line with forecasts. Shares fell 19%. Additionally, Alibaba (NYSE:BABA) is set to list its logistics unit Cainiao on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, the Chinese e-commerce giant said in a regulatory filing on Tuesday. Alibaba will continue to hold more than 50% of the shares of Cainiao after the spinoff. Crude rebounds from losing week Oil prices fell Tuesday as renewed stress in Chinaβs property market raised concerns about economic growth this year in the worldβs largest crude importer. Embattled developer China Evergrande (HK:3333) Group warned earlier this week that it was unable to issue new debt, putting the focus firmly on the release of key Chinese purchasing managersβ index data for September later in the week. (Oliver Gray contributed to this item.)
50 Replies 11 π 12 π₯
@trademaster #TradeHouses
recentlyBy Stella Qiu SYDNEY (Reuters) - Asian shares fell on Monday, dragged by China, after central banks last week reinforced the message that interest rates would stay higher for longer, while investors braced for inflation data from the U.S. and Europe. The yen was jittery near the closely watched 150 per dollar level amid intervention fears, after the Bank of Japan made no change to its dovish monetary policy. Governor Kazuo Ueda is giving a speech and taking questions from 0130 GMT. [FRX/] Europe is set for a subdued open, with EUROSTOXX 50 futures off 0.3%. S&P 500 futures, however, rose 0.3% while Nasdaq futures gained 0.4%, after Hollywood's writers union reached a preliminary labor agreement with major studios. In Asia, MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan dropped 0.5%, edging back to a 10-month low plumbed just last week. Japan's Nikkei, on the other hand, rose 0.9%, as investors bought beaten-down shares. (T) Chinese shares fell after a rebound on Friday, as property concerns and pre-holiday caution weighed. The blue chips index eased 0.5% and Hong Kong's Hang Seng index slumped 1.2% as Chinese property developers dived more than 3%. [.SS] Evergrande, the embattled developer, said late on Sunday it was unable to issue new debt due to an ongoing investigation into its main domestic subsidiary, Hengda Real Estate Group Co Ltd, the latest trouble in firming up a debt restructuring plan. S&P on Monday lowered its forecast for China's economic growth to 4.8% in 2023 from 5.2%, and to 4.4% in 2024 from 4.8%, saying the fiscal and monetary easing had remained limited. "Policymakers' emphasis on containing leverage and financial risks has increased the bar for macro stimulus," said Louis Kuijs, Asia-Pacific chief economist. Markets will be looking for clues on whether China's economy is regaining traction, with a week-long national holiday set to begin on Friday that will be a key test for consumer spending. The big test in the week ahead would be the manufacturing and services PMIs on Saturday. BOND ROUT Bond investors were still smarting from the U.S. Federal Reserve's more hawkish rate projections, which caught markets by surprise. Coupled with the recent resilience in the U.S. economy, markets now see about a split chance that the Fed would resume hiking in December, while drastically scaling back rate cut expectations to just 65 basis points next year. U.S. central bank officials will be out in force this week, starting with Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari on Monday. "What's driven the move this year is the acceptance that inflation shock isn't transitory, but is going to require restrictive monetary policy for much longer than we first thought," said Andrew Lilley, chief rates strategist at Barrenjoey. "For bonds to rally globally, we're going to need a coordinated rate cutting cycle, particularly from the Fed. Personally I don't see the Fed cutting in 2024, so I don't think that 2024 will be a particularly good year for bonds either." Ten-year Treasury yields inched up 3 basis points to 4.4662% on Monday, after retreating from a 16-year high of 4.508% on Friday. Two-year yields were little changed at 5.1162%, having fallen from a 17-year top of 5.2020% hit last week. Much will depend on U.S. data. In a sign of slowing growth, U.S. business activity was basically at a standstill in September, with the vast services sector essentially idling at the slowest pace since February. The Fed's favoured inflation gauge, the core Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index, is expected to show a 3.9% annual increase in August, easing from 4.2%. Other U.S. data in the week includes final Q2 GDP. Euro zone preliminary inflation figures for September are due on Friday and are expected to ease to 4.5% annually from 5.2% in August. Markets are expecting that the European Central Bank is done hiking. In the broader currency market, the dollar was on the front foot, extending its gains from last week. The yen last traded at 148.37 per dollar, after touching a fresh 10-month low of 148.49 earlier in the day. Oil prices resumed their climb on Monday, not far from their 10-month highs. Brent crude futures rose 0.6% to $93.79 per barrel. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures were also up 0.5% at $90.44. Gold was 0.1% lower at $1,922.76 per ounce.
116 Replies 13 π 13 π₯
@trademaster #TradeHouses
recentlyInvesting.com -- Oil prices rose Thursday, rebounding from the previous sessionβs sharp losses in the wake of the U.S. Federal Reserve signaling interest rates would stay higher for longer than previously expected. By 09:35 ET (13:35 GMT), the U.S. crude futures traded 1.5% higher at $90.97 a barrel, while the Brent contract climbed 1.1% to $94.58. BOE and SNB pause tightening cycles Confidence has returned to the market Thursday following the news that both the Bank of England and the Swiss National Bank decided to keep interest rates unchanged at their policy-setting meetings. The BOE halted a run of 14th consecutive increases, starting in December 2021, and the SNB ended its run of five consecutive increases since it began lifting rates out of negative territory in June 2022. This raised hope that the era of monetary tightening in Europe may be coming to an end, potentially lifting economic activity and thus crude demand. Hawkish Fed stance hit market This contrasted with the tone on Wednesday after the U.S. Federal Reserve projected another quarter-percentage-point increase by year-end, while signaling that it will take longer than expected to start easing. This stance, it is feared, may dampen economic growth and overall fuel demand, while also leading to the U.S. dollar surging to its highest since early March, making oil and other commodities more expensive for buyers using other currencies. Both benchmarks fell sharply then, but remain not far away from 10-month highs and on course for a fourth consecutive winning week given the continuous concerns on tight supply globally entering the fourth quarter. Supply to remain tight Production cuts from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allies are set to continue until the end of the year, while data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration, in its monthly drilling productivity report earlier this week, showed U.S. oil production from top shale-producing regions was on track to fall for a third month in a row in October to the lowest level since May 2023. The EIA also reported on Wednesday that U.S. crude inventories fell just over 2 million barrels last week, less than the over 5 million barrels forecast by the industry body American Petroleum Institute on Tuesday, but still an indication that demand remains solid in the largest oil consumer in the world.
108 Replies 8 π 12 π₯
@Trader7 #Trader24
recently**Market Update β September 20 β FED will stay on hold; Dot Plot, SEP are key** In a day that will be centred around the Fedβs deliberations this evening, and above all the quarterly economic projections, the new dot plot and Jerome Powellβs press conference, we start with China where the PBoC just now left its benchmark rates unchanged, with the one-year and five-year loan prime rates at 3.45% and 4.2% respectively. https://analysis.hfm.com/731605/
139 Replies 11 π 8 π₯
@trademaster #TradeHouses
recentlyBy Yoruk Bahceli and Naomi Rovnick (Reuters) - Traders are standing firm on bets that the European Central Bank will cut interest rates next year, challenging the bank's "higher rates for longer" signal in the face of a souring economy. The European Central Bank raised its key rate to a record 4% on Thursday and revised up its inflation forecast for next year, but with the euro zone economy in the doldrums, it signalled that the hike was likely its last. Traders cheered the expected end of rate hikes that have raised borrowing costs from minus 0.5% in just over a year. That sent euro zone government bond yields tumbling, the euro down and stocks higher. Italian government bonds, a proxy for euro area risks, led the rally. Benchmark 10-year yields fell as much as 15 basis points (bps) and were set for their biggest one-day drop in three weeks. "The consensus is that this was a dovish hike, the last one and it's clear skies from here," said Charles Diebel, head of fixed income strategy at Mediolanum Asset Management. The decision had been on a knife edge as policymakers and investors had to balance still-sticky inflation with a deteriorating euro area economic activity. Inflation concerns ultimately won out at the ECB, but for traders, growth seems the bigger concern as they stood firm with their bets on rate cuts next year, expecting a first 25 bps cut by June. The ECB cut its outlook for euro area growth this year to 0.7%, while economists polled by Reuters expect growth of 0.6%. "There is a disconnect between market pricing and the levels of economic growth that the ECB expects," said Simon Bell, portfolio manager at Legal and General Investment Management, referring to rates expectations. "If the market believed the ECB's growth forecasts it would not be pricing a mild recession." The euro's 0.6% fall meanwhile was a further sign of investor concern with the growth outlook. While bond and stock investors breathed a sigh of relief that further hikes were off the table, central to the ECB's message was also that rates would stay high for a "sufficiently long duration" to help bring down inflation. "Taken at face value, what (the ECB) are saying tells us rates are up at a level that is going to be sustained for a while," Jason Simpson, senior fixed income strategist at State Street (NYSE:STT)'s SPDR ETF unit. A market rally is also likely unwelcome to the ECB. A board member said in late August that markets rallying while the economic growth outlook weakened had undone some of the bank's monetary tightening. "We think... market pricing will start reflecting (a higher for longer narrative) in coming days and weeks," said Anna Stupnytska, global macro economist at Fidelity International. Key to the bond rally was also the ECB's pledge to continue reinvesting proceeds from the 1.7 trillion euro ($1.82 trillion) Pandemic Emergency Purchase Programme (PEPP) until the end of 2024. Those are crucial to the likes of Italian bonds as the ECB has more leeway to decide where it reinvests the proceeds. "The removal of the threat of rate hikes is arguably a bigger benefit to Italy over Germany and equally important was no mention of messing around with asset purchases," Mediolanum's Diebel said, explaining the rally in Italian debt. But the optimism may not last. Hawkish policymakers have started calling for an earlier end to PEPP reinvestments, and the ECB is likely to begin a debate on furthering its balance-sheet runoff with rate hikes likely done. Some analysts expect the ECB to curb or end PEPP reinvestments earlier. Divyang Shah, strategist at LSEG's IFR Markets, said the markets not delaying expectations for rate cuts highlighted the scale of uncertainty over the policy outlook. Indeed, ECB chief Christine Lagarde told reporters the bank did not say it had reached peak rates, and did not discuss what keeping rates high for "long enough" means. "You have what is priced but (it's) hard to extend unless you make an assumption," Shah said.
112 Replies 15 π 14 π₯
@jpintx #P I V O T B O S S
recentlyAs I said above, some averaging might improve, but I'll let someone else test it, until then I'll just stay with years of using it. A traditional squat does NOT always indicate a change in direction, but you will only very rarely see a meaningful change in direction wthout a squat (not the greenie) in the two bars precedingt the top, the top or the two following
140 Replies 9 π 11 π₯
@trademaster #TradeHouses
recentlyBy Stella Qiu SYDNEY (Reuters) - Asian shares fell after Wall Street wobbled overnight with markets bracing for key U.S. inflation data on Wednesday, while an oil price spike stoked anxiety about persistent price pressures, complicating the interest rate outlook. The euro was supported by a hawkish shift in expectations for the European Central Bank on Thursday, with bets now favouring a hike, after a Reuters report that the ECB expects inflation will stay above 3% next year in its updated forecasts. Europe is set to open lower, with EUROSTOXX 50 futures falling 0.5%. Both S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq futures were mostly unchanged. In Asia, MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan slipped 0.3% while Tokyo's Nikkei eased 0.1%. Chinese blue-chips dropped 0.7% on still-fragile sentiment about the outlook for the world's second largest economy. Hong Kong's Hang Seng index reversed earlier gains to be mostly flat. At the forefront of markets' minds is the crucial U.S. Consumer Price Index (CPI) report expected on Wednesday, which should shed further light on the inflation outlook and provide some clarity about whether the Federal Reserve is done tightening. While core CPI is seen cooling to 4.3% year-on-year in August from 4.7%, rising energy costs are forecast to keep headline inflation elevated at 3.6%. And the latest spike in oil prices to ten-month highs is unlikely to escape the Fed's attention. "What's happening with oil and headline inflation is still too soon for the Fed to be signalling the all clear as far as the risks of some incremental tightening before they're done," said Ray Attrill, a currency strategist at National Australia Bank (OTC:NABZY). "When you have those sort of volatility in the food and energy components, the worry is that if it's persistent then it does tend to bleed into core inflation measures over time." Oil prices extended gains on Wednesday. Brent crude futures settled 0.3 higher at $92.31 per barrel, nearing a ten-month peak that it hit a session ago, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures were up 0.3% at $89.13. [O/R] On Wall Street, the S&P 500 fell 0.6% overnight, the Nasdaq declined 1% while Dow Jones was mostly flat. Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) dropped 1.8% after unveiling new iPhones while not increasing prices as it faces a global smartphone glut, and Oracle (NYSE:ORCL) shares tumbled more than 13% after the cloud-services provider forecast current-quarter revenue below targets. The euro was supported at $1.0753, nearing one-week highs on the Reuters story, while markets moved to favour a rate hike from the ECB on Thursday with a 75% probability, compared with a split chance previously. "The leak raises the possibility of a hawkish hike which would be much more supportive for the EUR," said Steve Englander, global head of G10 FX research at Standard Chartered (OTC:SCBFF), referring to the Reuters report. "Our baseline view is that the ECB will signal a hawkish hold and be deterred by soft growth from further hikes... We think it is a close call." The U.S. dollar recovered some of its recent losses against the yen, up 0.2% to 147.35 yen after comments from Japan's top central banker on a possible early exit from its negative interest rate policy sent the Japanese currency soaring. [FRX/] Treasury yields climbed on Wednesday, with the two-year note touching 5.0263%, compared with a U.S. close of 5.005%. Ten-year yields held at 4.2842%, up from the close of 4.264%. Gold price was flat at $1,911.29 per ounce.
129 Replies 8 π 10 π₯
@PivotBoss #P I V O T B O S S
recently**PivotBoss Pre-Market Video [September 06, 2023]: New Key Range in YM** SEPTEMBER 06, 2023 β WEDNESDAY AM Multi-day narrow ranges in the ES, NQ, and YM could lead to high-range moves ahead, especially should expansion occur soon. We have pre-market econ data, and Beige Book later today, which could provide some volatility. The YM minted a new key range. Crude Oil bulls need price to stay above 84, and Gold bears are looking for mLO.
45 Replies 7 π 9 π₯
@perse01 #droscrew
recentlyis always a possibility. if spx500 reaches 4650 and claims it correctly, I will have to close my short positions and take my losses. the market can stay irrational longer than i can stay solvent. > @Housty said: @perse I think we got to make a new top first QQQ 405 is my target
136 Replies 8 π 7 π₯
@trademaster #TradeHouses
recentlyBy David Shepardson and Andrea Shalal SHANGHAI/WASHINGTON (Reuters) -China has defended its business practices after U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo said American firms had told her it had become "uninvestible," highlighting a trend of global investors turning away from assets in the world's second-largest economy. The commerce secretary is the latest Biden administration official to visit China in a bid to strengthen communications, particularly on economics and defense, amid concern that friction between the two superpowers could spiral out of control. She insists the United States does not want to decouple from China but her comment on the difficulties U.S. businesses face have shone a harsh light on trade and investment flows between the geopolitical rivals. Asked to respond to the comments Raimondo made in China, the spokesperson for the Chinese embassy in Washington, Liu Pengyu said that most of the 70,000 U.S. firms doing business in China wanted to stay, that nearly 90% were profitable, and that Beijing was working to further ease market access for foreign companies. "China is actively advancing its high-level opening-up and making efforts to provide a world-class, market-oriented business environment governed by a sound legal framework," he said. "China will only open its doors even wider to the outside world." The Commerce Department declined to comment. Global investors, who have been spooked by unpredictable crackdowns on sectors from e-commerce to education in recent years, have been streaming out of Chinese assets lately. Foreign net selling of 82.9 billion yuan ($11.4 billion) in Chinese stocks this month is a record outflow. Corporate investment is also going missing, with foreign direct investment at its lowest since records began 25 years ago. Raimondo is in Shanghai on Wednesday for the last day of meetings before returning to the United States. Asked what her message was to U.S. business in China, Raimondo said: "The message is to continue to do what you're doing. We want you here investing, growing." But on Tuesday, she told reporters on a highspeed train from Beijing to Shanghai that U.S. companies had complained to her that China has become "uninvestible," pointing to fines, raids and other actions that have made it risky to do business in the world's second-largest economy. She is pressing China to take actions to improve business conditions. China was no longer seen as a "top three investment priority" by American firms for the first time in the 25-year history of the American Chamber of Commerce in China's annual position paper, it said early this year. 'QUITE COMPLICATED' Raimondo said American firms are facing new challenges, among them "exorbitant fines without any explanation, revisions to the counterespionage law, which are unclear and sending shockwaves through the U.S. community; raids on businesses β a whole new level of challenge and we need that to be addressed." She said there was "no rationale given" for Chinese actions against chipmaker Micron Technology (NASDAQ:MU), whose products were restricted by Beijing this year, and rejected any comparisons to U.S. export controls. Raimondo said this week she did not pull any punches in meeting with Chinese officials discussing the concerns of U.S. businesses, including raising the treatment of Micron. Raimondo, in opening remarks at a meeting on Wednesday with Shanghai Party Secretary Chen Jining, struck a positive tone saying she wanted to discuss "concrete ways that we can work together to accomplish business goals and to bring about a more predictable business environment, a predictable regulatory environment and a level playing field for American businesses." Chen said a stable relationship between China and the United States was crucial for the world. He said Shanghai had the highest concentration of U.S. businesses. "The business and trade ties serve the role as stabilizing ballast for bilateral ties. However, the world today is quite complicated. The economic rebound is a bit lackluster. So stable bilateral ties in terms of trade and business is in the interest of two countries" and also the world community. She will visit New York University's Shanghai campus as well as Shanghai Disneyland on Wednesday, a joint venture of Walt Disney (NYSE:DIS) and Chinese state-owned Shendi Group and hold a press conference at a Boeing (NYSE:BA) Shanghai facility before departing. Raimondo, who has said China is blocking tens of billions of dollars in deliveries of Boeing airplanes to Chinese airlines, said she raised the airlines' refusal to accept delivery of Boeing 737 MAX airplanes but won no commitments.
114 Replies 15 π 6 π₯
@dros #droscrew
recentlyyou mean stay red today sort of thing > @Housty said: doubt we go green before we rollover
116 Replies 12 π 7 π₯
@scottzman #droscrew
recentlymight stay bullish till wednesday when they have vix expiration
112 Replies 11 π 10 π₯
@Housty #droscrew
recentlyyeah @navneet , where there is smoke as they say. I traded the stock a few times, but it was a waste of time for me. I mean i think it probably isnt a bad bet here, but i think market is going to get crushed in next few months and i am trying to stay out of trouble and remain focussed to catch a big move down, hoping we might pop into August expiration but little sign of that as yet
58 Replies 11 π 13 π₯
@thegiz18 #ivtrades
recently10yr Treasuries sure didn't stay below 4% for long. Good reentry point in /TN here at 115'180
94 Replies 11 π 15 π₯
@danbrey #ivtrades
recentlyI'm afraid to day trade on the PUT, because those stocks I use are all solid companies and so I stay on the CALL side.
117 Replies 12 π 10 π₯
@Atlas #Emporos Research
recentlyall the entries are right within levels , wheat is the only one that went out of level from all actives , just 1/4 distance away from the the stop loss , some times entries do have minor set backs , but remember these are daily entries , so we never expect to see them go against daily momentum in just one day , stay sharp and keep a close eye
146 Replies 14 π 12 π₯
@Atlas #FOREX
recentlyall the entries are right within levels , wheat is the only one that went out of level from all actives , just 1/4 distance away from the the stop loss , some times entries do have minor set backs , but remember these are daily entries , so we never expect to see them go against daily momentum in just one day , stay sharp and keep a close eye
91 Replies 15 π 9 π₯
@CarlosH-carvan #ivtrades
recentlyOk...imho i think market stay consolidation until labor day....Typical pattern 80% of the years..well..if not recession coming sure. Rhe good for options is premium going cheaps.
145 Replies 14 π 7 π₯
@Atlas #Emporos Research
recentlywe will have clients execute D1 Limit entries for 3 months , after that they will have the option to enter the D1 Raw entries , D1 Raw happen at set 4 hour intervals of 9am 1pm 5pm and 9pm A.S.T , the other hours are for resting , after we get some agents we can run them at every 4 hour mark 5 days a week , this process is necessary to provide clients a smooth trading experience , most of the time we will tell clients to just stay with D1 Limit entries , as they will have a better life experience , then to be over tracking with D1 Raw , to increase their D1 Limit lot size a little bit more , if they want a little more cash , would make more sense , as practitioners , is good to have more options
116 Replies 12 π 10 π₯
@Atlas #FOREX
recentlywe will have clients execute D1 Limit entries for 3 months , after that they will have the option to enter the D1 Raw entries , D1 Raw happen at set 4 hour intervals of 9am 1pm 5pm and 9pm A.S.T , the other hours are for resting , after we get some agents we can run them at every 4 hour mark 5 days a week , this process is necessary to provide clients a smooth trading experience , most of the time we will tell clients to just stay with D1 Limit entries , as they will have a better life experience , then to be over tracking with D1 Raw , to increase their D1 Limit lot size a little bit more , if they want a little more cash , would make more sense , as practitioners , is good to have more options
79 Replies 8 π 14 π₯
@cRUSTYTrades #ivtrades
recentlyif i had the larger account i would stay 1-2 strikes itm
61 Replies 11 π 6 π₯
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Website: https://www.extendedstayamerica.com/
HQ: 11525 N Community House Rd Ste 100 Charlotte, 28277-3610 North Carolina
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