Spazio di prova, 2° capitolo

ma non avevi lo short su silver? già liquidato?
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Si, liquidato. A mio avviso è trade difficile ora, nel we magari lo guardo meglio (dal mio punto di vista)

GAS...altro trade difficilissimo....che incubo.

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ZUCCHERO

rotto definitivamente il canale rialzista e ripreso il canale di lungo ribassista
short con target 23,10

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ho dato un occhio al daily dello zucchero,e a sto punto strada in discesa ne ha,indi starne lontani per un pò,lo short sugar mi sembra poco negoziato con spread bid ask improponibili,long di nuovo sul cotton,da 2,02 dov'era partito il primo long chiuso a 2,12,mantengo sempre seml.mi(etf bond emerging local gvt) che la prossima settimana dovrebbe rompere il laterale e sfondare i 74(nel mese potrebbe incorporare il dividendo che darà a aprile a mio avviso)ciao;-)
 
GAZ..............................se facesse gradito presente lievitando un pochetto, avrebbe molti tg.

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GRANO........................................si potrebbe prendere un cippetto a leva, magari lunedì di prima mattina, senza che lo sappia xin, altrimenti me lo acquista lui...

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Raghazzi chi che mi dà una dritta su questo etf terre rare quotato al nyse in usd?lo tratta fineco,non è armonizzato,conviene secondo voi trattarlo,i prezzi mi sembrano interessanti.
Market Vectors Rare Earth/Strategic Metals-VE (REMX.N)
 

India Revokes Cotton Export Ban After China Complains: Limit Down Open For "Widowmaker" Trade?

Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/11/2012 - 18:44 China Crude Crude Oil Hong Kong India Morgan Stanley Natural Gas Trade War Volatility If there was any confusion as to who calls the shots in the world, the following anecdote should provide some needed clarity. Hint: it is not the US. After last week India announced it would proceed with a Cotton export ban, two days ago China logged "a formal protest against India's ban on cotton exports amid signs that India is rethinking the ban that was implemented a few days ago." As a result hours ago India announced that less than a week after enacting said ban, it is now overturning it. Of course, there is the diplomatic snafu of just why it did, and for India it has to do with "protecting" the interests of its farmers, who "complained that, due to higher production this year, they were already suffering from lower prices than they had expected and needed to export to recover their domestic losses." Of course, the farmers' position was well-known before the ban overturn. What wasn't known is just how vocal China would be, as suddenly it would scramble to find alternative sources as it fills its strategic cotton reserve. Turns out it was quite vocal. And India, unwilling to risk a trade war with the world's biggest economic power, promptly relented. As a result, any and all commodity traders who bought up the widowmaker trade may find themselves staring into a limit down market post open.
 

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