FTSE Mib Futures solointraday - Cap. 2

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confermo
è avvenuto il cross del macd monthly sullo spoore
precedenti cross agosto 2007 al ribasso e aprile 2009 al rialzo
grafico con gartley inclusa
1316638586immagine3.png
certo che se viene confermato il cross in close monthly ( sette sedute) e dovesse avere il segnale del macd una durata simile a quella dei precedenti segnali diventa una storia parecchio lunga
1316639005immagine3.png
 
lo ha postato MR. l'epserto è lui
ma se si convinto del movimento euro/usd e magari fanno un rimbalzello tra stasera e domani non credo costi tanto di più di oggi

sto provando il metatrader di lud con lo schaff sembra funzioni


30m da short 1 h da short 4 h ha girato short lui di la' da short convinto

italy 40 -280
 
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sto provando il metatrader di lud con lo schaff sembra funzioni


30m da short 1 h da short 4 h ha girato short lui di la' da short convinto

italy 40 -280
lo seguo sempre. è bravissimo
non si è scomposto di una virgola sia per la mossa bce che per la fed.
deve avere una esperienza importantissima di borsa perchè ha capacità di lettura dei movimenti fuori norma. e per fare quelle cose li non bastano indicatori e grafici , di qualsiasi piattaforma siano.
oggi credo che anche molti big siano rimasti sorpresi non dalla discesa del mercato ( che parrà strano ma a me sembrava quasi chiara. ma si a sa sono tifoso ultrà talebano short che però non capisce un rimbalzo nenache se fa +15% ) ma per l'intensità della discesa. vedremo domani o venerdi se tenteranno e riusciranno in un pullback che consenta di vendere o alleggerire quelli che sono rimasti sorpresi. se non ci sarà sarà una storia di violenza e sodomia come dice nico87
 
Ultima modifica:
lo seguo sempre. è bravissimo
non si è scomposto di una virgola sia per la mossa bce che per la fed.
deve avere una esperienza importantissima di borsa perchè ha capacità di lettura dei movimenti fuori norma. e per fare quelle cose li non bastano indicatori e grafici , di qualsiasi piattaforma siano.
oggi credo che anche molti big siano rimasti sorpresi non dalla discesa del mercato ( che parrà strano ma a me sembrava quasi chiara. ma si a sa sono tifoso ultrà talebano short che però non capisce un rimbalzo nenache se fa +15% ) ma per l'intensità della discesa. vedremo domani o venerdi se tenteranno e riusciranno in un pullback che consenta di vendere o alleggerire quelli che sono rimasti sorpresi. se non ci sarà sarà una storia di violenza e sodomia come dice nico87

non essere modesto tu hai beccato l'entita' cosa notevole lui ing. molto bravo
ha dato lo short x 7/8 gg
 
l'ultima della giornata

crudo scende ben sotto 86 ( 84,8 ora) e rompe la tline rialz congiungente i minimi di agosto e sett
tnote si riaffaccia a 131 (130,84) verso la tline disc dai max di agosto e settembre
spoore a ridosso della flag dai minimi di agosto
dax ha fatto un movimento bestiale ( sembra diventato il mib30 )
gold sotto 1800 e appoggiato sulla tline asc congiungente i minimi di agosto e sett dopo aver fatto un doppio max a 1900 con successiva ( apparente ) distribuzione da 1900 a 1800
bene chi la ferma la discesa? il ftsemib pieno di bancari che devono fare i conti col 5,76% del decennale, instabilità politica, pil a zero qualche malumore sociale e tutti che ci danno addosso per le figure meschine che facciamo all'estero?
mi sa che se i cinesi avevano pensato di fare spesa, adesso o ci stanno ripensando oppure proveranno a comprare a prezzi migliori

buonanotte
 
azzz
ci mancava la caduta del satellite adesso


(AGI) - Washington, 21 set. - Le chance maggiori e' che precipiti in mare ma la Nasa non esclude che alcuni detriti del satellite Usa, 'Uars' da 6 tonnellate', potrebbero cadere anche sull'Italia.
 
stanno cominciando davvero a rompere un po troppo gli obama's boys
ma dove vogliono arrivare? a sanare i loro debiti come hanno sempre fatto storicamente ?


By Jim Wolf and Chris Buckley

WASHINGTON/BEIJING | Wed Sep 21, 2011 5:17pm EDT

WASHINGTON/BEIJING (Reuters) - The Obama administration told the U.S. Congress on Wednesday that it planned a $5.3 billion upgrade of Taiwan's F-16 fighter fleet, angering Beijing but disappointing new arms-sales advocates.

China condemned the retrofit of Lockheed Martin Corp F-16 A/Bs sold in 1992 as a "grave interference" in its internal affairs and warned that it will damage military and security ties with the United States.

In January 2010, China froze military-to-military ties and threatened sanctions against U.S. arms makers after President Barack Obama approved a potential $6.4 billion arms sale to Taiwan left over from the administration of George W. Bush, including Black Hawk helicopters, Patriot anti-missile missiles and two refurbished Osprey-class mine-hunting ships.

The upgrade of the 145 F-16s will give them essentially the same capabilities as late-model F-16 C/Ds that Taiwan has sought for five years without success, U.S. officials said. They said Taiwan would get the capability sooner and cheaper, a point of contention with advocates of new F-16s.

The administration also notified Congress that it planned a five-year, $500 million extension of F-16 pilot training at Luke Air Force Base and to sell $52 million in spare parts for Taiwan's F-16s, F-5s, and C-130s. All together, the potential sales total $5.85 billion.

The Chinese Foreign Ministry said Taiwan was an "internal matter" that affected China's territorial integrity and the national feelings of 1.3 billion Chinese people.

"China urges the U.S. to clearly understand the acute sensitivity and serious harmfulness of selling arms to Taiwan, and to treat China's solemn stance seriously," Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Zhang Zhijun said.

Beijing deems Taiwan a renegade province and sees U.S. arms sales to the self-ruled island as the top obstacle to improved ties between the United States and China, now the world's two biggest economies.

China has shown no sign of ending an arms build-up that is focused on Taiwan. Beijing has never renounced the use of force to bring the island under its control.

Taiwan's military supply options are limited to the United States, with other countries refusing to sell it weapons, fearing an angry Chinese response.

MORE COMBAT CAPABILITY

In Taipei, Taiwan's defense ministry said the F-16 upgrade will contribute to regional peace by improving its defense capability in the face of what it called a continued threat from China.

Taiwan would continue to press for newer F-16s to replace its F-5 fighters that are more than 30 years old, the ministry said in a statement.

The retrofit will provide a substantial increase in the survivability, reliability and combat capabilities of the F-16A/Bs, said State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland.

"This will help ensure that Taiwan maintains the capability to protect its airspace in both peacetime and during any crisis," she said in a statement.

The United States firmly believes that its arms sales to Taiwan contribute to the maintenance of peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait, Nuland added in a statement.

Taiwan's request for new F-16s remains under consideration, Kurt Campbell, assistant secretary of state for the region, said at a news conference in New York.

The U.S.-Taiwan Business Council, whose members include arms maker Lockheed Martin, said the correct approach would be to have both programs running sequentially, so that new F-16 C/Ds would be delivered to Taiwan before it starts pulling front-line F-16 A/Bs out of operations.

"As presently structured, Taiwan will actually see a reduction in the number of operational F-16s over the next 10 years," council president Rupert Hammond-Chambers said.

RADARS AND MISSILES

The Pentagon said in its notice to Congress that Taiwan had requested 176 state-of-the-art Active Electronically Scanned Array, or AESA, radar sets, in addition to a long list of advanced air-to-air missiles, laser- and GPS-guided bombs and other weapons systems for its F-16 fleet.

AESA radar "offers a significant capability that would be able to maintain Taiwan's qualitative advantage" over currently deployed Chinese fighters, said Mark Stokes, a former Pentagon China desk chief who heads the Project 2049 Institute, an Asia security research group.

Raytheon Co and Northrop Grumman Corp (NOC.N) are expected to compete to supply the AESA radar sets.

The deal also would include 140 of the latest version of heat-seeking Raytheon AIM-9X Sidewinder missiles and 128 Joint Helmet-Mounted Cueing systems, which let pilots fire on targets from multiple angles without turning their heads or the plane.

In the U.S. Congress, 47 of the 100 U.S. senators and 181 of the 435 members of the House of Representatives have written to President Barack Obama since May to urge him to sell Taiwan the 66 late-model F-16 C/D planes it has sought since 2006.

The Obama administration is required by law to notify Congress of any proposed major arms sale. The sale may go ahead after 30 days unless Congress enacts a joint resolution blocking it in the allotted time.

Senator John Cornyn has proposed mandating the sale of at least 66 new F-16 C/D fighters to Taiwan as an amendment to legislation now being considered on the Senate floor.

Cornyn is a Republican from Texas, where Lockheed Martin manufactures the F-16. He said in a floor speech that Congress should pass his bill because, he said, China "respects only strength, not weakness." He has emphasized the jobs that building new planes would bring and the Taiwan Relations Act of 1979, which requires the U.S. government to provide Taiwan sufficient arms for its defense.

Republican presidential contender Mitt Romney deplored Obama's refusal to sell Taiwan new jets as "yet another example of his weak leadership in foreign policy."
 
Grazie solo. Il fatto è che a differenza di me tu hai la capacità di capire di quale segnale "fidarti" e di quale no. Quella discriminante che fa realmente la differenza. E poi hai la capacità di restare in posizione senza battere ciglio anche quando il mercato va temporaneamente contro le tue posizioni mantenendo inalterata la visione di mercato.
Domani mi guarderò il tutto a mente fresca.
sembra, sembra
è che operando con medie e indicatori di momentum , i segnali sono lenti e mai sui minimi o sui massimi,. per cui guardo il segnale e ne rimango convinto seppure in fibrillazione ( venerdi e un po anche ieri). ma guardando il segnale originario un po si affievola. il 4 ore snpcash per esempio non si è mai girato long. questo mi ha fatto rimanere in posizione dopo la mossa delle banche di giovedi
buonanotte
 
stanno cominciando davvero a rompere un po troppo gli obama's boys
ma dove vogliono arrivare? a sanare i loro debiti come hanno sempre fatto storicamente ?


By Jim Wolf and Chris Buckley

WASHINGTON/BEIJING | Wed Sep 21, 2011 5:17pm EDT

WASHINGTON/BEIJING (Reuters) - The Obama administration told the U.S. Congress on Wednesday that it planned a $5.3 billion upgrade of Taiwan's F-16 fighter fleet, angering Beijing but disappointing new arms-sales advocates.

China condemned the retrofit of Lockheed Martin Corp F-16 A/Bs sold in 1992 as a "grave interference" in its internal affairs and warned that it will damage military and security ties with the United States.

In January 2010, China froze military-to-military ties and threatened sanctions against U.S. arms makers after President Barack Obama approved a potential $6.4 billion arms sale to Taiwan left over from the administration of George W. Bush, including Black Hawk helicopters, Patriot anti-missile missiles and two refurbished Osprey-class mine-hunting ships.

The upgrade of the 145 F-16s will give them essentially the same capabilities as late-model F-16 C/Ds that Taiwan has sought for five years without success, U.S. officials said. They said Taiwan would get the capability sooner and cheaper, a point of contention with advocates of new F-16s.

The administration also notified Congress that it planned a five-year, $500 million extension of F-16 pilot training at Luke Air Force Base and to sell $52 million in spare parts for Taiwan's F-16s, F-5s, and C-130s. All together, the potential sales total $5.85 billion.

The Chinese Foreign Ministry said Taiwan was an "internal matter" that affected China's territorial integrity and the national feelings of 1.3 billion Chinese people.

"China urges the U.S. to clearly understand the acute sensitivity and serious harmfulness of selling arms to Taiwan, and to treat China's solemn stance seriously," Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Zhang Zhijun said.

Beijing deems Taiwan a renegade province and sees U.S. arms sales to the self-ruled island as the top obstacle to improved ties between the United States and China, now the world's two biggest economies.

China has shown no sign of ending an arms build-up that is focused on Taiwan. Beijing has never renounced the use of force to bring the island under its control.

Taiwan's military supply options are limited to the United States, with other countries refusing to sell it weapons, fearing an angry Chinese response.

MORE COMBAT CAPABILITY

In Taipei, Taiwan's defense ministry said the F-16 upgrade will contribute to regional peace by improving its defense capability in the face of what it called a continued threat from China.

Taiwan would continue to press for newer F-16s to replace its F-5 fighters that are more than 30 years old, the ministry said in a statement.

The retrofit will provide a substantial increase in the survivability, reliability and combat capabilities of the F-16A/Bs, said State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland.

"This will help ensure that Taiwan maintains the capability to protect its airspace in both peacetime and during any crisis," she said in a statement.

The United States firmly believes that its arms sales to Taiwan contribute to the maintenance of peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait, Nuland added in a statement.

Taiwan's request for new F-16s remains under consideration, Kurt Campbell, assistant secretary of state for the region, said at a news conference in New York.

The U.S.-Taiwan Business Council, whose members include arms maker Lockheed Martin, said the correct approach would be to have both programs running sequentially, so that new F-16 C/Ds would be delivered to Taiwan before it starts pulling front-line F-16 A/Bs out of operations.

"As presently structured, Taiwan will actually see a reduction in the number of operational F-16s over the next 10 years," council president Rupert Hammond-Chambers said.

RADARS AND MISSILES

The Pentagon said in its notice to Congress that Taiwan had requested 176 state-of-the-art Active Electronically Scanned Array, or AESA, radar sets, in addition to a long list of advanced air-to-air missiles, laser- and GPS-guided bombs and other weapons systems for its F-16 fleet.

AESA radar "offers a significant capability that would be able to maintain Taiwan's qualitative advantage" over currently deployed Chinese fighters, said Mark Stokes, a former Pentagon China desk chief who heads the Project 2049 Institute, an Asia security research group.

Raytheon Co and Northrop Grumman Corp (NOC.N) are expected to compete to supply the AESA radar sets.

The deal also would include 140 of the latest version of heat-seeking Raytheon AIM-9X Sidewinder missiles and 128 Joint Helmet-Mounted Cueing systems, which let pilots fire on targets from multiple angles without turning their heads or the plane.

In the U.S. Congress, 47 of the 100 U.S. senators and 181 of the 435 members of the House of Representatives have written to President Barack Obama since May to urge him to sell Taiwan the 66 late-model F-16 C/D planes it has sought since 2006.

The Obama administration is required by law to notify Congress of any proposed major arms sale. The sale may go ahead after 30 days unless Congress enacts a joint resolution blocking it in the allotted time.

Senator John Cornyn has proposed mandating the sale of at least 66 new F-16 C/D fighters to Taiwan as an amendment to legislation now being considered on the Senate floor.

Cornyn is a Republican from Texas, where Lockheed Martin manufactures the F-16. He said in a floor speech that Congress should pass his bill because, he said, China "respects only strength, not weakness." He has emphasized the jobs that building new planes would bring and the Taiwan Relations Act of 1979, which requires the U.S. government to provide Taiwan sufficient arms for its defense.

Republican presidential contender Mitt Romney deplored Obama's refusal to sell Taiwan new jets as "yet another example of his weak leadership in foreign policy."


grandi manovre iniziano?? E le pedine si cominciano a muovere come dopo il 29??? :(
 
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