General Trading Chat

arsh22g

Well-Known Member
Yes you can. Refer to NSE SLB mechanism. Volumes are not very high but you can short overnight.
Thanks for the info. How can I as a retail trader access that?
Also, futures for many stocks trade at a discount to the spot, and the difference is 2% upwards on monthly contracts. If such a mechanism exists, this difference should go away (ideally should be risk free rate after tax ~7% per annum), it still persists.
 
Thanks for the info. How can I as a retail trader access that?
Also, futures for many stocks trade at a discount to the spot, and the difference is 2% upwards on monthly contracts. If such a mechanism exists, this difference should go away (ideally should be risk free rate after tax ~7% per annum), it still persists.
You will need to go through a "bigger" broker like ICICI or Kotak or brokers who are already registered with SLB. You will have to ask your broker if he is registered and theres some paperwork involved with the client.

SLB in India is not very liquid and hence no real price discovery.
 

wisp

Well-Known Member
Mr. Bollinger's summary of Bollinger Bands - just looked it up to satisfy my curiosity, not trading it. (may be most of you already know this summary)

1. Bollinger Bands provide a relative definition of high and low. By definition price is high at the upper band and low at the lower band.

2. That relative definition can be used to compare price action and indicator action to arrive at rigorous buy and sell decisions.

3. Appropriate indicators can be derived from momentum, volume, sentiment, open interest, inter-market data, etc.

4. If more than one indicator is used the indicators should not be directly related to one another. For example, a momentum indicator might complement a volume indicator successfully, but two momentum indicators aren't better than one.

5. Bollinger Bands can be used in pattern recognition to define/clarify pure price patterns such as "M" tops and "W" bottoms, momentum shifts, etc.

6. Tags of the bands are just that, tags not signals. A tag of the upper Bollinger Band is NOT in-and-of-itself a sell signal. A tag of the lower Bollinger Band is NOT in-and-of-itself a buy signal.

7. In trending markets price can, and does, walk up the upper Bollinger Band and down the lower Bollinger Band.

8. Closes outside the Bollinger Bands are initially continuation signals, not reversal signals. (This has been the basis for many successful volatility breakout systems.)

9. The default parameters of 20 periods for the moving average and standard deviation calculations, and two standard deviations for the width of the bands are just that, defaults. The actual parameters needed for any given market/task may be different.

10. The average deployed as the middle Bollinger Band should not be the best one for crossovers. Rather, it should be descriptive of the intermediate-term trend.

11. For consistent price containment: If the average is lengthened the number of standard deviations needs to be increased; from 2 at 20 periods, to 2.1 at 50 periods. Likewise, if the average is shortened the number of standard deviations should be reduced; from 2 at 20 periods, to 1.9 at 10 periods.

12. Traditional Bollinger Bands are based upon a simple moving average. This is because a simple average is used in the standard deviation calculation and we wish to be logically consistent.

13. Exponential Bollinger Bands eliminate sudden changes in the width of the bands caused by large price changes exiting the back of the calculation window. Exponential averages must be used for BOTH the middle band and in the calculation of standard deviation.

14. Make no statistical assumptions based on the use of the standard deviation calculation in the construction of the bands. The distribution of security prices is non-normal and the typical sample size in most deployments of Bollinger Bands is too small for statistical significance. (In practice we typically find 90%, not 95%, of the data inside Bollinger Bands with the default parameters)

15. %b tells us where we are in relation to the Bollinger Bands. The position within the bands is calculated using an adaptation of the formula for Stochastics

16. %b has many uses; among the more important are identification of divergences, pattern recognition and the coding of trading systems using Bollinger Bands.

17. Indicators can be normalized with %b, eliminating fixed thresholds in the process. To do this plot 50-period or longer Bollinger Bands on an indicator and then calculate %b of the indicator.

18. BandWidth tells us how wide the Bollinger Bands are. The raw width is normalized using the middle band. Using the default parameters BandWidth is four times the coefficient of variation.

19. BandWidth has many uses. Its most popular use is to indentify "The Squeeze", but is also useful in identifying trend changes...

20. Bollinger Bands can be used on most financial time series, including equities, indices, foreign exchange, commodities, futures, options and bonds.

21. Bollinger Bands can be used on bars of any length, 5 minutes, one hour, daily, weekly, etc. The key is that the bars must contain enough activity to give a robust picture of the price-formation mechanism at work.

22. Bollinger Bands do not provide continuous advice; rather they help indentify setups where the odds may be in your favor.
 
ST sir,
Planning to invest 50k tommorow ..long term ..
Please suggest one script (blue chip ??) and target to exit ..long term means say a year or two ..please suggest
GUYS some one have any good advise ?
 
This is showing Price Data of Yesterday EOD -



And this is showing Volume Data. We can clearly see that there was lower volume in most counters.



Regards
what terminal is this
 
GUYS some one have any good advise ?
If you can stomach the high volatility, then Bajaj Finance ....else go for Asian Paints,HDFC Bank. Buy slowly as we go down , dont buy everything at once. Also devide your investments in 5-6 scrips.

Smart_trade
 

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