How to make money in the financial markets?
Historically, the stock market was in focus of the private
trader. Lately the FOREX market is gaining more and more interest and attracts
first time traders by its nature of pure leverage: $2,000 controlling $100,000.
Another market with long-term focus: Metals. For a good
while, I met people who shared their opinion about Gold and Silver: “It will
always go up”; however, since Gold dropped from $1,700 per oz. to $1,300, those
voices got quiet. An even more drastic development in Silver: Dropping form $40
per oz. to $20. You sure remember the hype in Silver: All cellphones and the
new tablets; they all need Silver coated connectors. In the new industrial future,
a desperate need for this metal was a given. Silver was stated as the most undervalued
material of the century and had to sky rocket to more highs after it reached
$40 per oz.
As we know now, many if not all of those predictions did not
hold true. What can you do?
Our answer: Understand supply and demand patterns and how
financial markets work, where assigned market makers provide liquidity and thus
an offering at multiple price levels on the bid and ask side of an asset. Some
still believe that the market makers live from the penny bid/ask-spread, but
when you see the amount of people that receive a paycheck from those companies
and the building they reside in, you recognize, there must be something else
that fuels their cash account.
How do all those fund managers make money? By the 1%
maintenance fee they charge? Surely not, but how does that work, because they
hold assets in the value of gazillion dollars from 401(k) and mutual fund
investors.
Do yourself a favor and check the income statements of the
big prop traders of our today’s world: Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan, Deutsche Bank,
UBS, Barclay’s and many more… Even so they
perfectly hide their source of income
through international corporate balance sheet consolidations, the picture gets
clear: A lion share of their income results from trading and not from the basic
banking business.
If you bring it all together:
·
There are many institutional participants who produce
and income above or beyond what you are making as a private investor.
- Following publically shared trade opinion’s does not lead to picking the market direction.
- Fund holders care more about their than your account development.
Conclusion: If you had a way to follow institutional money
moves to the up- and downside, you would be better on than you are now.
What to do to get there?
Suggestion: Finding a system, which helps you to identify
where institutional money is moving.
Spot and follow Institutional
Money Moves with NeverLossTrading
NeverLossTrading
Top-Line Chart for Gold Futures July 2013 – Aug. 2014
NeverLossTrading systems spot and follow institutional money
moves, offering high probability chart setups with defined entries and exits (colored
dot on the chart) and stops (red line).
Surely, this also can be done on lower time frames:
NeverLossTrading
Top-Line Chart for Crude Oil Futures: August 14th and 15th.
How about stocks?
IBM on the Daily NeverLossTrading
Top-Line Chart: July to August 15, 2014
How about FOREX?
EUR/USD on the NeverLossTrading
Daily Top-Line Chart: July to August 15th 2014
Take the chance to test us live:
Schedule a free consulting hour and we get together online, share our screens and answer your questions:
Call: +1 866 455 4520 or contact@NeverLossTrading.com
In case you are not yet subscribed to our free trading tips and market reports, sign up here:
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Please always consider the risk of trading and that past performance cannot be taken indicative for future results.
Good trading,
NeverLossTrading
A Division of Nobel Living, LLC
401 E. Las Olas Blvd. – Suite 1400
Fort Lauderdale, FL 33301
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