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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
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Mobilicom Ag | LSE:MOM | London | Ordinary Share | DE0006622400 | ORD NPV |
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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- | 0 | EUR |
Mobilicom Ag (MOM) Share Charts1 Year Mobilicom Ag Chart |
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1 Month Mobilicom Ag Chart |
Intraday Mobilicom Ag Chart |
Trade Time | Trade Price | Trade Size | Trade Value | Trade Type |
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Top Posts |
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Posted at 30/9/2002 10:41 by bluewave42 STOCHASTIC INFO:All I would add to the above Russell info is that the Slow Stochastic is very useful combined with the MACD. BUT, don't just use it as an overbought/oversold indicator...it was originally designed to be used to show bear/bull divergences compared to the actual price. ..for further explanation and example chart. (a good site for explaining TA in general and other stuff). For Lycos Intraday 1 min charts I find stochastic values of 30,3 reduce the whipping up and down. |
Posted at 23/9/2002 09:41 by jools100 This is a very helpful thread and I have picked up some v useful info from it. I need a little assistance though - I am new to spread betting and I have an account with D4free. I use their charting facilities to try and get entry/exit points. I use a 1 min chart and tend to hold the position for only a short time. They only have charts relating to either the bid or the offer price though and not the actual FTSE/Dow price. Therefore Am I disdvantaging myself using this data because I am not able to see the spread bias? Do other people use charts with just the bid/offer price?Any advice would be appreciated |
Posted at 19/7/2002 22:09 by druid2 Someone on the Traders' Thread asked about Tick & Trin and another poster referred him to this thread(MOM). I have found it very interesting and informative. All the posters show a great depth of knowledge and are friendly unlike on some threads. Thanks rufus druid. |
Posted at 30/4/2002 09:05 by gedy I have just signed up on ird for a 7 day free trial. I have been using the Lycos web site for watching how the TICK and TRIN behave in different market conditions. I do have an account with IG Index, but after some rather reckless bets I am now being much more careful. A question that I would like comments on please: Yesterday (Monday) the Dow futures were well down some hours before the market opened, suppose I took the view that the futures were indicating a much too pessimistic open and placed an up bet (I'm not sure that IG Index allow bets "out of hours" anyway). As it happened the futures price rose as the open approached and an up bet could have been closed for a small profit. In the market conditions at the open yesterday the Dow in fact rose and if it were possible an up bet could have been closed at a higher level than just before the market open. I know that it is extremely risky to trade at the market open, but is it as risky to trade before the open and close any position before the market opens. I do prefer to trade when the market has "settled" after the first 30 minutes of trading as the TICK and TRIN figures can give a more informative indication of short term movements. In fact yesterday at the open TRIN was less than 1.0 but rose to around 1.5 fairly soon after the open and never while I was watching fell near 1.0 for the remainder of the session. I went out yesterday evening and checking after I returned, I found that the Dow had fallen 90 points on the day, which was not a surprise to me. My stategy is to use TICK and TRIN to find entry and exit points and charts/TA and news to determine the general direction. At the moment I feel that the trend is still down, I see nothing that could trigger a strong rally except a sudden feeling that the market had fallen to far and bargain hunters are tempted out, in that case I would expect a "suckers" rally and would be very wary of betting up, although if it the rise is as good as the one in March then 500 points is not a bad move to make some decent profits on! |
Posted at 24/3/2002 12:41 by jimmylaw9 Russell good thread would like to say that i am making good points profits at the moment with my settings which are best seen on a posted chart below. I refer to the momentum trend line. Simply draw a line over the tops for downtrend or bottoms for uptrend and when trendline breaks buy or sell accordingly. Although i have posted stocks it also works well on the dow on lycos.The above example so an uptrend at the beginning of feb and ended by a break at end of march. A sell on this mom trend line break would have netted a nice profit. It's a very good indicator and with discip[line works a lot of the time. |
Posted at 28/9/2001 19:25 by melfaraj the brewer.the 20/80 levels are indicative only and should be taken in along with other indicators. treat it as one beakon that would provide you some guidance but not quite lead you to your exact destination. also, rsi and similar indicators are not useful in a rising market/dropping, for they would indicate an overbought/overbough |
Posted at 28/9/2001 09:35 by currypasty try setting 4 graphs up, with say dow + macd, dow + RSI, Tick + macd, and trin + macd. I use INT 1, LEN 5.Using the size facility, have that lot at the top 7/8 ths of the page, and FINS Dow price quote at the bottom. |
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