Showing posts with label speculators. Show all posts
Showing posts with label speculators. Show all posts

Thursday, October 16, 2008

What Forex And Stock Brokers Can Learn From 1929

September 1929 felt the first shock waves of the earthquake that was to topple and destroy the great bull market of the Twenties.

Unheeding, still cheering each other on with the clich??s of the new prosperity, the speculators plunged in again on the premise, true so often in the past, that every dip heralded a rise to an even higher plateau.

This time they were wrong. The market danced erratically for a while, but over-all it was losing ground, losing momentum, failing to show the resilience on which the nation so desperately depended. By the third week of October, the Crash was in being.

Even today the events of the week culminating in the terrible Tuesday that was October 29 make sad and distressful reading. The only way to suggest them is in terms of the great natural disasters: the avalanche, the tidal wave, the volcanic eruption. And the human response was equally fundamental: terror, panic, despair, and here and there courage.

When it came, the Crash utterly reversed the pattern of the times. Up became down, high became low, rich became poor, success became failure, prosperity became depression. It happened, too, with bewildering speed, and nothing checked the descent.

It will be remembered that basic to all market action is the trade, the negotiated transaction between buyer and seller. With the Crash, the inconceivable occurred: suddenly, the buyers vanished. Suddenly, everyone was a seller. From all over the nation, almost as if on signal, the orders poured in: sell, sell, sell. Thousands upon thousands of shares were offered at the market???and there was no market.

Down tumbled issue after issue from the proud heights which supposedly were only foothills of the heights to come.

The pace of the market accelerated beyond human comprehension. The ticker lagged by hours. Prices dove vertically down, 10, 20, 30, 40 points. Inexorably, the great downward pressure grew. Margin calls went out, and went unanswered by thousands of speculators, big and small, whose entire fortunes were tied up in the stocks now diving through the floor. Facing the loss of the billions they had loaned, the brokers threw the collateral stock onto the market for whatever it would bring, thus swelling the floodtide of unwanted securities.

There was no safety anywhere. No stock was strong enough

to withstand the hammering. The best and bravest names in American industry were in full retreat, like any overblown utilities holding company, like any cat and dog.

The huge investment trusts, commonly regarded as financial Gibraltars impregnable against the waves of adversity, were crumbling like the rest. Then" reserves, supposedly a cushion under a falling market, were insufficient and ineffective. They, too, were dumping.

At the end of the day, 16,410,030 shares had changed hands at fantastically lower prices. And the end was not yet. On through November the slide continued. Amer Tel & Tel fell to 197, a loss of 138 points. Steel dropped to 150, a loss of 129 points. New York Central sank to 160, a loss of 96 points. General Motors fell to 36, a loss of 145 points. The values represented in the leading stock averages were cut in half. The Crash wiped out all the gains so spiritedly made since 1924???and more. In 1930 the market twitched feebly, trying to get off its back, but eventually sank even lower.

In 1931, it hit bottom, plumbing new depths that made even the 1929 lows look good.

A doleful story, a dark chapter in financial history. Even today, veterans of the Street speak of it wryly and with respect, like the survivors of a memorable battle or a fire at sea. The market, of course, did not cause the Crash.

The market never knew what hit it. No one can ever say what subtle shift in the thinking of thousands of stockholders across the nation changed the eager scramble for the sunlit summits of September into a stampede back down the slopes. Perhaps it was no one thing, and perhaps if it was, it is not important; jitters were evident on many occasions before the panic.

But whatever may have pulled the trigger, the fact remains that the market was powerless to withstand the blow. Surveys of the wreckage pointed up the unhealthy use of credit that had so disastrously accelerated the collapse when it came, pointed up the manipulative operations that had gone unchecked, pointed up the inadequate information available about listed securities.

Had none of these abuses existed, it is still likely that the Crash, as the signal of a general economic collapse, would have occurred. But it can be argued that the market would not have slid so far or so fast if, for instance, more stock holders had owned their shares outright and been able to ride out the storm.

The road back was long and hard. Principal steps toward recovery were the Securities Acts of 1933 and 1934, and the establishment of the Securities and Exchange Commission, a government agency, to administer them. Financial experts can see loopholes and deficiencies in the acts and some Wall Streeters squirm under the onus of Federal regulation, but it is generally acknowledged that tighter control of the securities market was essential, if only to restore public confidence after the debacle.

Actually, the provisions of the acts can also be viewed as not stringent enough.

They require, first, that all new securities offered to the public, with some exceptions (Federal and municipal bonds, national and state bank stocks, and, in some cases, issues under $300,000, to name a few), be registered with the SEC. Registration, it should be noted, does not make the SEC an arbiter of a security 's worth, and does not in any way constitute an endorsement.

It is merely a procedure to place on the public record a full and fair account of the financial, technical, commercial, and legal condition of the issuing company.

Capitalization, earnings, compensation of officers, stockholdings of officers or options and other benefits available to them ???all this and more must be disclosed. As anyone who has ever plowed through a stock prospectus knows, the material is often difficult to digest, but it is complete, and no one need feel he is buying a pig in a poke. The SEC 's only responsibility is to see that the information submitted is adequate and not misleading.

The acts also prohibit all manipulations, such as pools, fake sales, or any artificial trading which, by creating the appearance of activity, stimulates buying or selling by others.

Finally, they control, through the Federal Reserve Board, the flow of credit into the securities market. The Board must approve the source from which a broker borrows, and it is responsible for setting margin rates.

There are other powers which the SEC may exercise "in the public interest," but by and large the registration procedure, the ban on manipulation, and the control of credit have been the principal areas of government intervention to assure an orderly market.

Requirements for listing a stock on the Exchange have tightened up. At the same time, the exchanges???the New York Stock Exchange in particular???have undertaken to police themselves more rigorously.

Today we can also use software to help us predict price movements with regard to shares and the Forex.


Sunday, October 12, 2008

How To Trade Successfully In The Forex Market

This article talks about the Forex (Foreign Currency Exchange) Market and lists key elements needed to make money effectively. Some have done their homework and still received the short end of the stick, but the vast majority who turn what looks like a good investment into something that a savvy investor can smell a mile away, more times than not haven???t done their homework. The investors and speculators I???m referring to have sunk good money into investments and lost it within days, weeks or months. There are a lot of investors who have made some really questionable trades when everything looked so good.

To trade successfully in the Foreign Currency Exchange (Forex) Market, there are certain principles that must be adhered to at all times.


Liquidity is Key:

Believe me; I know from personal experience how to lose good money after bad???as do many in my family. I keep telling myself it must be genetic. One way to really get yourself in deep is to play the pink sheets, also known as penny stocks. These are the stocks which typically have very low trading volume each day and if you have enough shares it is nearly impossible to trade them without severely affecting the price of the stock. And the more volume you trade the more you begin to affect your own price whether you are buying or selling. Needless to say, I have crossed those investments off my list as of a few years ago. They just don???t have the liquidity you need to give yourself an advantage. Sure, you can find a needle in the haystack, that one in a million stock, but for every successful penny stock, thousands go under or don???t return much if any on your investment.

This brings us to the Forex Market. What better market to get the best liquidity possible. With my days of trading penny stocks, complete with their thin trading volumes, over, I am naturally attracted to trading which takes place in an arena where the definition is liquidity. When a trading arena is liquid, you can always trade your investment without affecting other positions you want to buy or sell. You don???t have the problem like you would trading penny stocks where a small move here or there dramatically affects the price of the stock you are trading. The Forex Market is too big and too many governments, organizations, funds and individuals participate.

Perfect Your Strategy:

Some of the most successful Forex Trading occurs when a person perfects their strategy and executes it to perfection each and every time based on the core belief that their strategy is the best for them. It takes practice to perfect a strategy, but most successful Forex Traders have one. They don???t simply jump on every new ???potential strategy??? or ???tip??? that comes along. From time to time it is good to try new aspects of other strategies to see if you can improve on a good thing, but to know your strategy inside and out and be able to duplicate it makes all the difference. A good rule of thumb to use is when you aren???t sure of a trade, do nothing. Don???t trade if you are not positive it fits your strategy. It also helps if you concentrate on one market at a time. Like the old adage, you literally don???t want to be a ???Jack of all trades and a Master of None???

Go Long:

Trading successfully in the Forex is about longevity. The longer you can keep trading the Forex, the longer you have to perfect your strategy and the longer you can stay in the game. It reminds me of craps when I occasionally have time to play. I have friends that can blow through $1,000 in an hour or two and then they have to take the rest of the day off so they can have enough funds left to try it again another day. I take a different approach. I can survive all day long on $500 and most of the time I can double or triple that amount and be able to stay at the table all day if I want. It is both entertainment and profit that I am after. If I stay entertained longer, I have the chance to make more money.

It can really get in the way of successful trading. Many of us don???t want to admit defeat, but it is necessary to be successful. You should always check your pride at the door when trading any market. Getting out of a losing position takes brute courage, but you will thank yourself for getting out quick if the position is not going the way you would like.

Fight the urge to get out of a position when it makes you a quick profit. Let your profits ride and you will be more successful. And speaking of profit, you will want to remember to keep your profitable positions for a longer time than you keep your losing positions. to increase your education and perfect your strategy, the more you will profit from it. The longer you can ???hang in there???

The point I am making is this: Staying power is key with any investment. strategy and I don???t try every new one that comes along in the multitudes of craps books that my friends read. The reason I can last longer is because I have perfected ???My???


As long as you stick to your strategy and make sure you let your profits ride and cut your losses, you will become successful in Forex Trading. With the tips and thoughts above, hopefully you will feel right at home trading the currencies of the most powerful nations in the world. Foreign Currency Trading (Forex) Trading is exciting.


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