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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
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ST Helen's Cap. | LSE:SHCP | London | Ordinary Share | GB0005401087 | ORD 1P |
Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | |
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Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
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- |
Last Trade Time | Trade Type | Trade Size | Trade Price | Currency |
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- | O | 0 | 1.75 | GBX |
ST Helen's Cap. (SHCP) Share Charts1 Year ST Helen's Cap. Chart |
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1 Month ST Helen's Cap. Chart |
Intraday ST Helen's Cap. Chart |
Date | Time | Title | Posts |
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03/8/2009 | 16:29 | St. Helens - going bust? | 6 |
07/3/2005 | 00:12 | SHARESCOPE - Datamining thread | 30 |
Trade Time | Trade Price | Trade Size | Trade Value | Trade Type |
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Top Posts |
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Posted at 06/3/2005 19:40 by snorky2 When using the stochastic esc and the the lines are in the middle of the chart together what does this mean. Also if both lines go up or down what does this also indicate in the share price and its future price movement. Basicaly i am trying to use this software and deal on a medium to short term period, (monthly weekly daily basis). When data mining what should the critera settings be on if i want to find companies that have moved above or below their moving average of 5%. Thanks |
Posted at 06/2/2005 12:00 by peterstilgoe Is there a name for when the slow stochastic crosses upwards over the RSI line ? I presume there must be, it seems when this happens the share price goes into a short term rising trend, presumably this must be a known indicator ? Does anyone use this in Sharescope as a filter/indicator ? |
Posted at 22/1/2005 23:20 by mr vee Hi Peterstilgoe;Thanks for starting this thread, I think it's a great idea why didn't someone think of it before. I will try to visit whenever I can. I think I will stick with part time trading for a few years yet, it sounds appealing not having a real job yet earning good money but on the other hand I would have to be confident that I can drastically increase my profits before I take the plunge. Maybe I should take a month of work to do a trial period when the time comes. Scsw; Hi, I am happy with my system although there is no real formula I just use various forms of TA to find a stock that looks interesting then research that stock until the silly hours of the morning, if its appealing then it goes on my "to buy" list for when funds are freed up from a sale, then try and judge a good entry point and exit point. For the first 2 years that I started trading stocks & shares I made some serious errors at one point I was >50% down but the way you have to look at it is like this. Lets say you invest in a good share and it gains 100% but then it slowly drifts down and each day you think that it will come back so I will lower my stop loss a bit more, finally it plunges so you sell and suddenly you've lost 25% of your original investment, so lets say that cost you £1000, next time you probably wont make the same mistake so you have to tell yourself this you have gained a valuable piece of trading insight and it only cost you £1000. After all some solicitors charge £200-300/ hour so for the hours that you stewed over your decisions it wasn't really that costly. The mistakes will become less frequent believe me, but they wont ever disappear completely. Perseverance is the key, keep trying out new tactics, before you know it your stash will be making you smile every time you think about it. Good luck and happy trading Mr Vee |
Posted at 22/1/2005 21:24 by mr vee Scsw;The criteria "MA-price% 1day ago" If you change the higher limit (-5) to a lower limit say 15, then that will catch the more volatile moves through the 20D M.A. |
Posted at 22/1/2005 21:08 by mr vee Scsw;Try this combination To specify your period of flat or slight upness use the "MA% change since 40 days ago" as the timescale of flatness i.e flat/slight up over the last 40 days The other two criteria select the price moving up through the 20MA Is this what you were trying to achieve? Will be interesting to watch Cheers Mr Vee |
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