Friday, December 09, 2011

How to Predict the Markets (in Hindsight)

A few days ago I blogged about how predictable the markets are. I went on to explain that this didn't mean it was easy to predict market movements, only that that way they react to events is really quite predictable.

So, in fact the markets are only 'predictable' in hindsight. And you might say that means they're not really predictable at all. Except...

We live in a 24-hour world and a global economy. Whether you think globalisation is a bad or a good thing, it's a fact, and that means their are financial markets all around the world, all reacting in sequence to each other, each responding to the others' movements as well as to world news.

What that means is that the London market will respond to events and trends in the far east, New York then reacts to London, Hong Kong reacts to New York, and so on. And what that means is that you can often predict the reaction of the London markets from events that happened overnight in the far east and the previous day in New York.

That's why most of the major trading is often done in the first half hour after opening, and why you need to be trading (or not) in that time window if you want to share in the profits. How?

Breakfast Trading shows you how.

How to read the signals
How to start your trading career
How to minimise your "exposure" (or risk)
How to trade daily at breakfast time, before your working day begins
How to make anything from tens to hundreds of pounds each time

All for £97 while the special offer lasts.

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