Twitter talk: Finding it hard to find the time to trade? Look at time trading, then you know exactly when to look at a chart rather than where. » ↓ Here is all the ‘cycles’ stuff ↓
Using The Clock to Pull Off The Heist
Are you a heist flick fan? I sure am. The more complicated the heist the better. There’s one thing that is pretty common to all heist flicks and that is “time”. The protagonists almost always have the narrowest window of opportunity to steal something rare, exotic, and priceless. The window can be based on a security guard shift change, a security system backup and reset, or something as silly as the mark always reading the paper on the porcelain throne for 30 min. at 7:30a.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays.
Naked Time - Part 3
For the third and final installment of this Naked Time series, we’re going to address some other bar count numbers to add to the arsenal. Specifically some Gann type numbers. Any one Gann technique can easily take a good sized book to explain and show examples. But there is one simple method that can easily be applied to any trading system be it naked, draped in squiggly lines and indicators, or carefully plotted out with squares and angles. The method is simply dividing time into sections of the circle.
Time Trading
There are usually two reasons for trading, either you have a destructive want for excitement, fame, money and (rarely) glory, or you are looking for a life where money is not an issue and where time is determined by you rather than your job. Personally, I am all about the latter, I am programmer by trade, the last thing I need from a career move would be more time in front of a computer screen, developing scorched retinas and a callused posteria.
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