This strategy can be risky
because large price moves happen very quickly, and if you bet the wrong direction, you can sustain large losses.
Most investors will find it useful to study a long - term chart book in order to get a feel for how stocks
make large price moves.
Gap traders exploit stocks that have
seen large price moves with little to no volume (for example after the announcement of results), and swing traders seek to profit from a reversal of trend.
The latest Treasury - market news is from ICAP, which «is studying the possibility of temporarily halting Treasurys trading
following large price moves,» a classic idea imported from the equity markets.
New research shows that the most extreme events in financial data dynamics - reflected in
very large price moves - are incompatible with multi-fractal scaling.
From this you should learn that someone who is afraid to buy (or hold onto) stocks making new highs would automatically guarantee that they will never reap the benefits
of large price moves.
We saw
some large price moves, and these were significant enough for their increasingly negative levels to hit the mainstream financial press here, here and here.
In a cap - weighted index,
large price moves in the largest components can have a dramatic effect on the value of the index.
The goal is to capture
a larger price move than is possible on an intra-day basis.
We've found two very interesting market opportunities with a high probability of
larger price moves, and you have the chance to participate: