Underlying symbols and contingent stops:
ATO 25.23
AYE 35.97
BVN 21.68
CB 45.47
CERN 41.37
CHRW 56.14
CNI 41.23
ARG 41.09
Slope initially began as a blog, so this is where most of the website’s content resides. Here we have tens of thousands of posts dating back over a decade. These are listed in reverse chronological order. Click on any category icon below to see posts tagged with that particular subject, or click on a word in the category cloud on the right side of the screen for more specific choices.
Underlying symbols and contingent stops:
ATO 25.23
AYE 35.97
BVN 21.68
CB 45.47
CERN 41.37
CHRW 56.14
CNI 41.23
ARG 41.09
Mornin', all…….
As regular readers know, I'm a pretty big fan of Retracement Levels. This is a third party product, and although I jokingly talk about the massive royalties I get, I actually have never received a penny – – – I just like the product.
Anyway, in the past, when I've shown /ES graphs, those horizontal lines would naturally show up. There's even been an instance or two where I've shown the histograms from RL. This was never intended to "share" this subscription-based information, but apparently a few subscribers to the RL service felt this wasn't fair to them, since they were paying for the service and Slope readers in general were not.
The gent who runs RL is a friend of mine, and he politely asked me, based on those subscriber complaints, to curtail showing any RL content, even passively (such as the lines on the graph). I will be suppressing those lines from now on, which means the /ES graphs you'll be seeing will be mysteriously devoid of drawn objects. Since those are important to me, it probably means I'll just show /ES graphs less frequently.
I just wanted to mention this in case anyone was wondering why the /ES graphs I use suddenly looked a lot simpler.
You people sure like to talk 🙂 I just didn't want to wake up to a 300-comment post, so……….cleanin' up! G'night.
This is a broadcast from a San Francisco Bay Area station back in 1981 about how newspapers were available on home computers. Boy, does this bring my memories. I had first used a computer in 1979, bought my first one in February 1980, and was an active online user by 1981 (the year of this broadcast). I get really misty-eyed over this stuff.