Overall Trading Record of Closed Positions Including Today's Trades (Since March 3, 2011)
Cumulative W/L = 57 - 13 (plus 220 - 53 from 2009 trading sample)
Cumulative Non-Compounded Gain = 35.65% (plus 139.22%+ from 2009 trading sample)
Today's Trades
Cum Compound
Symbol Buy Pr Sell Pr Short Pr Cover Pr Tot Gain W L Cum W Cum L Gain Gain
YRCW 1.73 OPEN
All Currently Open Positions
YRCW 2.44*
YRCW 2.37*
YRCW 2.32**
YRCW 1.69***
YRCW 1.25****
YRCW 1.76*******
YRCW 1.73********
DXD 18.10*****
DXD 18.06******
DXD 17.85*******
DXD 17.80*******
DXD 17.71*******
*Trade was made March 7DXD 18.10*****
DXD 18.06******
DXD 17.85*******
DXD 17.80*******
DXD 17.71*******
**Trade was made March 9
***Trade was made March 16
****Trade was made March 17
*****Trade was made March 25
******Trade was made March 29
*******Trade was made March 30
********Trade was made March 31
Overall Trading Record of Closed Positions Including Today's Trades (Since March 3, 2011)
Cumulative W/L = 57 - 13 (plus 220 - 53 from 2009 trading sample)
Cumulative Non-Compounded Gain = 35.65% (plus 139.22%+ from 2009 trading sample)
Images To Verify Price Of Trades
Note: When the stock market is busier than usual (such as 9:30 - 10:00 AM & 3:30 - 4:00pm), the bid/ask showing on my real-time quotes is actually delayed by a few minutes. (This is explained in my first few trading posts around the date of March 3, 2011). If you would like further verification of this, simply contact me and I can create a new image for you that verifies the slight bid/ask time delay!
However, the "last" price showing on my real-time quotes is always current. Therefore, regardless of any bid/ask time delay, the "last" price imaged below should always match and verify the price that I predicted on Twitter and in the table above.
When the last price is showing to only two decimal places (for example, 1.90), that cannot prove whether the bid is 1.90 or whether the ask is 1.90. In order to provide proof, I attempt to take images when the “last” price is showing to three or more decimals places. That way, the bid and ask can be pretty reliably determined: for example, if the “last” price is showing as 1.907, it’s very likely the bid is 1.90 and the ask is 1.91.
Note: The following Twitter images/predictions can also be verified by visiting my Tweet history on my Twitter profile:
http://twitter.com/#!/MakeTheseTrades
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