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One of the best things about Leofinance is the ability to write about something or analysis a price chart and go back to see how things played out. In the past three weeks I wrote about a Tesla derivative play that was a screaming buy at the time and unusual options activity in a lithium miner as a play on Battery Day. Lets see where prices are now.
https://leofinance.io/hive-167922/@rollandthomas/unusual-options-activity-in-lithium-americas-corp
https://leofinance.io/hive-167922/@rollandthomas/ziugliol
https://www.fool.com/investing/2020/09/28/piedmont-lithium-signs-five-year-supply-deal-with/
MY TRADING METHODOLOGY IN A NUTSHELL BELOW
I’m a supply and demand trader. The premise of supply and demand trading is when the market makes a sharp move up or down the large institutions i.e banks/hedge funds are not able to get their entire trade placed into the market, leaving pending orders to buy or sell at the zone with the expectation the market will return to the zone and the rest of their trading position will be filled.
I use multiple time frame (MTF) analysis to improve my discretionary trading decisions. MTF analysis involves analyzing the same asset on multiple time frames. The rule of thumb when using MFT is you want your charts to scale down/up by 4X – 6X. In my case I tend to look at:
Monthly Charts (curve time frame) – which represents that jet fighter flying over the football stadium.
Weekly Charts (trend time frame) – which represents the concession stands looking down at the field.
Daily Charts (entry time frame) – which represents being on the football field with the player.
4 Hr Charts (entry time frame) – which represents the center hiking the ball to the quarterback.
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