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I held plug o/n and collected profit pm, im looking for reentry, but $6 gonna be hard to break through. If breaks look out.
Funny - I was just looking at that - I held PLUG, FCEL, and BLDP overnight so I will be cashing out nice this morning if it holds. I will watch them all day and may trade them more - love these fuel cell rallies
Plug has alot of volume rt now as well
NEWL will be wild this morning on the GREYs. Be careful with it, but if you can time the bounce, should be a lot of money to be made. Very high risk trade so be careful.
Pgnx in at 4.43 out at 4.06
Shorted pgnx and mnkd.
Lets see wut happens
Got my ib account all set up, first day able to trade. So far been able to short wut ever i want. FYI
Im happy u been doing good lately, cant say the same here. Hopefully i can get things turned around to green.
Yea NEWL was hot last week,even today it had a good bounce,maybe continue tomorrow.OTCs have been dead,just not that many plays.GL
Last week I scored big with NEWL - this week, I have made a nice profit of ACHN. I held a nice portion into the gapup yesterday to take a big profit. This morning, I just hold a bit - I don't like to go back to the well too many times as I hate giving back profits, but it was running hard EOD so I took a chance. So far, it is up PM. For those not in, if it gaps, I am thinking of loading up big and dumping at 9:34-9:36 for some extra profit. If it trades down at all from the opening gap, this strategy won't work and I will dump immediately. Another potential gap and runner I hold this morning is END. On the OTC, I just have a little TRTC - OTC has been shitty this week so far IMO. Looks to me like we are entering a long crappy period for the OTC - maybe all the way until September. Hopefully, some decent tickers arise over the summer months, but the summer is typically crap season for the OTC.
Nice,welcome back
Sorry I have not been posting - I had a really good week, but the plays were risky - such as NEWL - and not ones I thought I should suggest. Anyhow, below is a great article:
The Myth of 2008: FAS157, Not QE Or TARP
by valueplaysMay 29, 2014, 2:07 pm
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Those who have not been a reader for the past 7 years now may not know who “Davidson” is or why his commentary fills these pages so often. His post, at the height of the panic on March 6th 2009 (the day the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (NYSEARCA:SPY) bottomed) told readers he “I would be buying with cash hand over fist if I was not already in” and on March 19th said “The current market is an extraordinary buying opportunity!” proved both highly contrarian and highly accurate. Since then his contributions have soothed readers during short term volatility and provided a roadmap for rational thought.
FAS157 rule was responsible for exaggerating the relatively much smaller sub-prime issue
“Davidson” submits:
Brian Wesbury provided an excellent ‘look-back’ yesterday on his 2008 analysis that the Nov 2007 Mark-to-Market FAS157 rule was responsible for exaggerating the relatively much smaller sub-prime issue. It was during Congressional testimony March 2009 in which Chairman Bernanke said that FAS157 was causing misleading mark-downs of value at lending institutions and amplified fears in the financial system. Barney Frank ended the rule immediately. The equity markets found their bottom that day!!
What this says about markets is that they in truth represent a set of rules which we have implemented over time to ensure that fairness occurs. Rules are changed over time and the markets respond accordingly. If the basis for market pricing changes with our perceptions of which rules we should or not use, then market prices from one period to another are dependent on changing valuation perceptions. The rules are in constant flux as we perceive adjustments are required. FAS157 was one such rule. FAS157 came into effect Nov 2007 after the Enron debacle. We did not know how bad it would distort markets till it exaggerated the market correction in 2008-2009. Then we eliminated it. What does this say then about our use of mathematical analysis of markets?
Since the introduction of Modern Portfolio Analysis under Harry Markowitz in the 1950s, we have applied mathematical analysis to markets with a force of tsunamic proportion. Even with massive use of computing power applied no solution has been revealed where we avoid ‘Black Swans’. The reason for this is quite simple: Mathematical analysis of stock/bond markets does not work! The myriad number of CFAs, CFPs, MBAs and PhDs earned using the current academic based mathematical approach is misdirected. The answer to understanding markets is not found in mathematics, but found in behavioral observation and coming to an understanding that markets reflect human productivity under a set of ‘fairness rules’ which we change from time to time. This is precisely why mathematics cannot work to isolate a market solution.
· Prices are human value perceptions subject to man made rules!
· They are not and never will be mechanical measures of value.
· Math can never be applied to human value perceptions to predict accurate times and prices!
· Once one knows this, one becomes a better investor!
Add to all this the fact that there are various types of investors who basically fall into two categories, i.e. Value Investors and everyone else. It is the minority of Value Investors who truly know how to judge value. This is the basis for my SP500 Intrinsic Value Index. Everyone else is a market follower believing that the markets are ‘rational’. I hope we all understand that this is not so!! Markets are only rationally priced at the lows when those few Value Investors are buying. The rest of the investing world believes that some ‘Invisible Hand’ magically controls prices and these same investors believe that markets are “Efficient’, ‘Rational’ and therefore understandable through mathematical modeling.
Wesbury’s piece yesterday reveals just how subject markets are to our rules. He spotted this in 2008 as the crash was occurring. He was not alone in seeing this. He does write well about it in this piece and I encourage you to read it. This is why I give the type of advice I do. I obtain useful future insights through my review of market history.
I highly recommend that you read Wesbury’s The Myth of 2008 which is presented in its entirety below.
http://www.valuewalk.com/2014/05/myth-2008-fas157-qe-tarp/
Watch List below. I had a good week. Made nice money on the PGFY post halt recommendation I made here - easy money as usual. SPEX was also great, and took little profits on a bunch of other tickers. Today does not look great for a Friday. I don't expect to do to well Monday. Here is what I am considering for now:
NASDAQ:NEWL NYSEMKT:PAL NYSE:NQ NASDAQ:MOBI NASDAQ:TLOG NYSEMKT:BTX OTCMKTS:KIRI OTCMKTS:GBLX OTCMKTS:TRTC
Spex is still up 20% PM, but had been up as high as 40%. If it gaps and runs, I will buy it on the way up and sell when the trend reverses; I expect that to happen.
Looks like SPEX is going to pay me out big this morning. Lucky - I picked this one up with 30 seconds left before close. I actually was alerted to this one by http://bluehorseshoestocks.com/ - they are penny stock scammers, but also have an "extended watchlist" that is not bad. I have been watching them for a couple months and noticed my screener picks up most of the same tickers they flag, but occasionally, they give me another idea, such as SPEX. SPEX was easy to see in this case many ways I guess as it was the Nasdaq's top gainer yesterday. On the OTC, I just hold some TRTC this morning. I hold a ton of big board tickers as my scanner was really lit up yesterday. I did not have time to post my watchlist as I did the scan close to EOD - stuck in meetings.
I actually bought some physical gold yesterday also. For traders with money out there, I think it is a decent idea to hold 5-10% of your wealth in physical gold and silver; I don't trust the ETFs. My gold and silver investments are not like my trading - I will hold what I buy until it doubles and then sell half - I have a ten year window in mind for this to occur.
Drtx shot up like rocket then got halted, i expect huge news but only med position just in case
Watch List
NASDAQ:NEWL OTCMKTS:MINE OTCMKTS:ERBB OTCMKTS:HEMP NYSE:RAD NASDAQ:ISIS NASDAQ:WAVX NASDAQ:YOD NASDAQ:TOUR NASDAQ:RBCN NASDAQ:KIN OTCMKTS:NTIP
Also, someone was asking me about trading post-halt day 1 tickers. I don't have a message board membership anymore as I was never using it. Anyway, I buy at open and sell between 10 and noon - 10:30 mostly
No, that was me - I love playing halts. The problem with FRTD is that it is already only .02, so it will open around .0025; I don't play sub pennies. I will play the PGFY post halt day 1; I play most post-halt day 1's, just not the subpennies (I don't like buying millions of shares - to slow and sloppy)
Almost bought LIVE at 3.50 and again at 3.70, now it $4.38.
Man that woulda been nice trade, i hate feeling like im chasing though.
If i remember correctly, dont u play halts?? I remember u would put in buys at market and get them filled over limit. Maybe that was someone else.
Thanks for the reminder RE the holiday. I am in Canada - our long weekend was last weekend so we don't coordinate this year. The FRTD halt will hurt the already bad sentiment on the OTC as of late so I don't expect a good day for penny tickers. Hopefully, the big boards have some decent tickers. LIQD gapped up nicely for me today to offset a lot of my FRTD loss.
Im sorry doc been there before, at least u werent loaded up.
Nothing i got really did anything so i sold for chump change, better then red though.
I have more cash than any tickers
Holding now
Cprx - small
Drtx - med
Admp - small
Remember 3 day weekend so ppl may sell before holiday
Shit - I lost a little cash in the FRTD halt - got halted this morning. Luckily, I had almost nothing in the POS, but still got hit. Down net $1K this morning now. Damn halts are a menace to the OTC; there sure have been a lot of them lately.
Agree, when i mentioned atos it was going up $2.21 i think (2:20pm ish) and thought it may keep going, but it fell back. Holding up ok AH though.
I had cprx from few days ago, got all i could out of it.
I shoulda grabbed liqd but held off. Froz also had nice bounce.
In morning, Watch vrng, drtx, and ziop for tomorrow, should all gap, wait for dip and rip. I bought dss which deals with patents, so news for vrng AH should help it also since in same field.
GL on trades tomorrow and post more, i like ur strategies and how u play. You help me trade better
I looked at CPRX and ATOS but didn't pick them up - my general rule is to only pick up the ticker if it is going up during the last 15 min, or at least the last 5 min if it is a small EOD correction and there is a nice HOD to gapup to.
I did not like much EOD. I just grabbed a little CTIC, YGE, FRTD, GFOX, and LIQD. I don't expect anything much from these plays - just some lunch money.
Hopefully some potential shows up tomorrow. Friday to Monday is usually the best gapup time. I will post my scan in the afternoon.
I made 8-11% on cprx today too, hold a little thru weekend. Wut u think about ATOS for a hold and gap up?
We need to get this board going again , used be the best with NT and mouth.
Made some money on WPWR and GFOX today - I will consider getting back in EOD if the look strong still
Good work - I took a profit on JKS and 2 other solars today also - good times; I love sector rallies. This has been a great week - mostly b/c of NEWL. That play is looking dead now but I will keep on watch. If I had to guess, it will crash hard soon, and then I will try to play the bounce. Preferably, a 30-50% crash and then bounce.
Out of JKS at $25.84, easy 6%. Thanks doc.
KALO is the next penny stock to reach the stratosphere, so heads up.
I went with jks, guess we will see.
Thanks doc
So many look good, hard to choose.
CSIQ, YGE, JKS, GTAT, TSL
Any solar favorites? Agree big day for solars.
Solars are killing it today - I will pick some up EOD for a potential gap tomorrow - just search for csiq in google finance and look at the related tickers below to get a list of potential tickers. I also like NOK
Well, anyone who listened to me on NEWL is very happy. I flagged here at .6 and it is $4.5 now in a couple trading days. I have been trading it every day and have made a killing. It is sill in action, but getting riskier. I am out for now, but will rejoin again if it closes strong with a high ceiling from today to get back to.
Other tickers I have been flipping include GFOX and NMED (a newer p&d)
(AXCG) STRONG BUY FOR TOMORROW PUT YOUR BIDS IN ....THIS ONE IS ABOUT TO RUN....
Well, anyone who took my NEWL advice Thursday night should have had a good day - I nailed that one. Don't know where it will go from here so I am out for now but will keep on watch. If I had to guess, based on its past moves, it will crash again, but b/c it is so damn low still, it may continue to bounce.
OTC looked terrible to me today and I didn't touch it. Seems the OTC is back to a post death of APS / pre-pot stock greatness, crappy stage with no volume and no decent tickers. The OTC can change fast, but we are headed into summer so it does not look good.
On the big boards, I held Zen and Quik overnight. Both of these have gap and run potential for Monday.
Nbg- still in up 6% today shoulda sold earlier but was busy. Prob keep over weekend
Halo - stopped out at break even. Still think its heading higher soon
Cprx strong bid support rt now at 1.8, catalyst for june, ill sell before then but looking for bounce to $2+
Broker wouldnt let me short jcp at 9.8, would covered at 9.52, if it woulda letme... Woulda made .28/ share
Stopped out of drtx and admp today for nice profit over last few weeks, will look to reenter.
Cldx gap needs to fill back to $13, will wait til then to go long.
Doc wut do u see to hold for weekend?
Nice call on NEWL
Long NBG yest at 2.92, looking for bounce
Long halo at 7.55, gap filed, i expect it to go back up, target $10
Shorted acad covered today for easy 4%.
Looking to short jcp today, still waiting for now, want to make sure top is in.
Long cprx for trade
If anyone wants to trade a wild Nasdaq ticker tomorrow, check out good old NEWL. This one was destroyed today after doing a 50-1 split to get above $1, and is all the way back to .39. It is up 20% AH - I almost picked it up EOD, but figured it was too risky. Not sure how I will play it yet, but it may make for a good quick flip if it gaps and runs. It went down 76% today and basically has no market cap. I have made money on this one in the past - along with FREE - but this is a new all time low and it may be tough to play this time.
Tickers I was trading today:
NASDAQ:ARTX OTCMKTS:RNBI NYSEMKT:RNN NASDAQ:PLUG NASDAQ:PTX NASDAQ:ZIXI NYSE:NMBL NASDAQ:FCEL NASDAQ:BLDP OTCBB:WORX
Markets were beat up today. Hard to say how we will open tomorrow before the long weekend, but it does not look great. I hope we rally into close to set up some long weekend gapups. I will post my potential ideas tomorrow afternoon after seeing how things are going.
Me too i have fidelity... Im thinking about opening w suretrader but its a bahamas company so still debating.
I tried to open account with IB but was having major issues getting money into my account so i stop trying.
If u figure it out let me know!
I feel ppl should not be allowed to short especially naked but hell if everyone can do it why not me!
Just some thoughts sorry for long post.
Today was a good day to be shorting. I would short more, but my broker hardly ever has shares of the companies I want to short. I am considering opening up an account with interactive brokers as I here they are really good for having short positions available on volatile tickers
Everyone seems to be selling any major pops, at least with big boards and biotechs.
Im not much for shorting but i have done pretty good last couple days with this approach ( CLDX, CLNE)... Just scalping, have to adjust in these markets.
AMFE entering marijuana sector with some great news and trading to match. This one could go north very easily. Ask is looking thin
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The grim reality is short-term trading and especially day trading can be hazardous to your wealth. Ninety-two percent of day traders trying to scalp loose money. Only eight percent are successful. Out of the eight percent, only two percent of the day trading public make money on a consistent basis. Why do 92 percent of day traders fail and what makes eight percent successful? Let's take an honest look at day trading without the hype and emotion that surrounds the subject and find out what it takes to be a successful day trader.
We go to school, gain an education, become employed, or start our own business. We learn what we need to know to be successful, but nothing in our education or work experience provides the comprehensive knowledge or psychological control necessary for success as a trader. Unfortunately, it's human nature to assume that if we succeed in one area we will automatically succeed in another. Most people who enter the market with the idea of becoming traders have a feeling of invincibility, superiority, and no clue of what they are about to experience. The dream of quick money and financial success can very quickly become a living nightmare. The first step in becoming a successful trader is to understand why so many day traders fail. Answer the following questions:
If you're saying, "Not a chance," guess again. That is exactly what you are doing when you start trading for the first time. You must prepare yourself and realize that you are going to be up against the best traders in the world. Training, experience, psychological control, and a realization that your are not invincible or smarter than the market will lead you to success. Wall Street is paved with the bones of those who did not learn this lesson until it was too late.
Most new traders have the wrong focus. If money is your focus, you have little chance of success. Many new traders look at trading as a way to escape a job they hate. They know they have to make a certain amount of money to pay the bills and this becomes a psychological guillotine. When the trader fails to meet the goal, he begins to push trading beyond his true ability and skill. The result is a series of losing trades that could have been avoided if the trader had the correct focus. Your focus and the measure of your success should be based on following the trading plan, not money. If you follow the plan each day, you are a winner. If the focus is money, it leads to emotional decisions and emotional decisions lead to uncontrolled losses. Successful traders make decisions based on fact and analysis. Do this and money will follow if your methodology is a sound one.
The Mathematics Of Trading
Almost everyone has heard the term "cut your losses." Nowhere is this lesson more evident than in day trading. Statistics tell us that most new day traders lose over $21,000 dollars in their first three months of trading. If they use leverage the average loss rises to more than $45,000. Nothing supports the reasoning for not overtrading and cutting a loss more than an understanding of the mathematics of what it takes to recover from a previous losing trade. If you were down 15 percent, you would need to make 17.6 percent in the next trade to breakeven. This does not cover slippage or commissions so in reality you would have to do far better than 17.6 percent. Now, imagine making 30 trades a day and most of them losses. It has been my experience that it is extremely difficult to recover from any loss of capital above 25 percent for most traders. This is because it takes 33.33 percent to recover in the next trade. If a trader has allowed the trade to lose 25 percent they simply are not managing the risk. I have known traders to have 10 winning trades and lose it all by not managing the risk on two trades. The successful trader is ruthless about cutting a loss because they understand the mathematical relationship of trading. I have been in this business for a very long time and if I have learned one lesson it is this-once you enter a trade you are no longer a trader you are a risk manager. Never forget this.
Not Every Day
One of the interesting observations I have made over the years about day traders is that they have great difficulty not trading. Who ever said every day was a trading day was wrong. Only make trades that have a high probability of working out. This means that successful day traders make fewer trades and do not trade everyday. Look for strong trending market days and trade stocks that trend with that market.
Many day traders are addicted to the action and making money has little to do with their true reason for trading. These individuals are not traders, they are gamblers. Action addicts will lose as many times as necessary just for the adrenaline rush to win once. Most successful day traders make no more than three to five high probability trades per day. It has been my experience that if a trader makes over 18 trades a day, they are in all probability gamblers not traders. Successful day traders know that not everyday is a high probability trading day and overtrading can be hazardous to your wealth.
High Probability Screening
Most day trading cowboys will shoot at anything that moves. In most cases they walk into their trading room with no game plan other than to listen to the news and trade the momentary euphoric hype in the room. If this is your preparation for battle, your days are numbered and the following might appear on your head stone: "Here lies the bones of a day trading master. He was fast on the mouse but somebody was faster."
Screening for high probability profitability trades is of the utmost importance. We teach our students to quantify and select the three highest probability trades that have a reward-to-risk ratio of 2.5 or greater. The screening process looks for and selects the maximum momentum acceleration points on a given security. Out of a database of 500 stocks, our traders select the three highest probability profitability trades for the following day. Ninety-eight percent of a traders success is due to the work done the night or day before the trade occurs. Success in day trading means a lot of work and very few people will do the work necessary. Losers are always looking for the easy way out. Success is directly proportional to the amount of work you will do that no one else will.
What Kind Of Day Trader Are You?
One of the keys to successful trading is to understand that you are an individual and as an individual you have strengths and weaknesses. One reason that day traders have such a high percentage of losses is that they are trained to use a standard one-size-fits-all approach. Unfortunately this approach is a day trading style known as scalping. A scalper trades for small fractions of a point-from 1/16 to 1/8. This style of trading has a 92 percent failure rate. Most people do not have the psychological control or ability to successfully trade with this strategy. Another strategy known as intraday trend trading has a much better success rate. The intraday trend trader will stay in a trade until the trend reverses. This could take a few minutes or several hours. This style of day trading makes time your friend and enables you to trade for points instead of fractions. The trend trader is far less likely to be whipsawed out of a trade because the focus is on staying with the trend. Notice that I did not say momentum. Momentum is usually associated with scalping too close to the axis of volatility. This volatility is usually displayed on a NASDAQ Level II screen. Years ago this information was very useful for traders. Today it is not as important as it once was and in fact, professional traders use the day traders own out-of-date information about the Level II screen to lure scalpers to their doom. If you are trend trading intraday, Level II has less importance and your chance for success is far greater. Traders trading this style tend to trade much less and statistically have a more successful outcome. Successful traders identify what type of trader they are and do not try to trade a methodology that does not fit their personality.
What It Takes To Be A Successful Day Trader
A consistently successful day trader knows his or her success in not found in the box (computer software or hardware). Many times traders look for the answers in technology and it is not there. They blame technology for failure so their answer is to buy more technology. The answer is understanding and controlling your own emotion and taking responsibility for your own actions and making decisions based on analysis. If you are wrong, you do not personalize the loss, you just say "next." Successful traders know that losing is part of the cost of doing business. Great day traders know that you will never learn how to win until you first learn how to lose. How a trader psychologically handles loss many times determines success or failure. Success in day trading is most of all a mastery of one's self. This is not the get rich quick easy road to riches that some people think it is. It requires a commitment of time, money, and a willingness to work very hard.
Desire and working hard is not enough. You are going to need working capital. This is like any other business it takes money to make money. I suggest you have a minimum of $50,000 to $100,000. Many novice traders attempt to trade without being properly capitalized. Once you have the capital and begin to trade, never forget once you enter a trade you are no longer a day trader. Instead you are a risk manager. Trade only high probability trades and remember, every day is not a high probability trading day.
Probability of Market Going Up TommorowWant to trade successfully? Just choose the good positions and avoid the bad ones. Poor trade selection takes a heavy toll as it bleeds your confidence and wallet. You face many crossroads during each market day. Without a system of discipline for your decision-making, impulse and emotion will undermine skills as you chase the wrong stocks at the worst times.
Many short-term players view trading as a form of gambling. Without planning or discipline, they throw money at the market. The occasional big score reinforces this easy money attitude but sets them up for ultimate failure. Without defensive rules, insiders easily feed off these losers and send them off to other hobbies.
Technical Analysis teaches traders to execute positions based on numbers, time and volume. This discipline forces traders to distance themselves from reckless gambling behavior. Through detached execution and solid risk management, short-term trading finally "works".
Markets echo similar patterns over and over again. The science of trend allows you to build systematic rules to play these repeating formations and avoid the chase:
1. Forget the news, remember the chart. You're not smart enough to know how news will affect price. The chart already knows the news is coming.
2. Buy the first pullback from a new high. Sell the first pullback from a new low. There's always a crowd that missed the first boat. [This rule will save you a lot of money - very rare for new highs/lows not to be tested; don't buy at the peak or sell at the floor.]
3. Buy at support, sell at resistance. Everyone sees the same thing and they're all just waiting to jump in the pool.
4. Short rallies not selloffs. When markets drop, shorts finally turn a profit and get ready to cover. [This is key in Penny Land - short the promo just before the dump; it is too late after the dump hits.]
5. Don't buy up into a major moving average or sell down into one. See #3.
6. Don't chase momentum if you can't find the exit. Assume the market will reverse the minute you get in. If it's a long way to the door, you're in big trouble.
7. Exhaustion gaps get filled. Breakaway and continuation gaps don't. The old traders' wisdom is a lie. Trade in the direction of gap support whenever you can. [Also don't sell a gap that does not fill too early; use a trailing stop instead.]
8. Trends test the point of last support/resistance. Enter here even if it hurts. [Some of these are reptative aren't they - probably only need 10 "golden rules".]
9. Trade with the TICK not against it. Don't be a hero. Go with the money flow. [i.e., the trend is your friend.]
10. If you have to look, it isn't there. Forget your college degree and trust your instincts. [My graduate degree never helped me learn to trade the OTC. As i recall, my corporate finance professors always did crap in the markets by their own accounts.]
11. Sell the second high, buy the second low. After sharp pullsbacks, the first test of any high or low always runs into resistance. Look for the break on the third or fourth try.
12. The trend is your friend in the last hour. As volume cranks up at 3:00pm don't expect anyone to change the channel. [I also love morning power hour; I have always said I only need 2 hours of trading to make money, and they are at open and close - this is especially true on the OTC..]
13. Avoid the open. They see YOU coming sucker
14. 1-2-3-Drop-Up. Look for downtrends to reverse after a top, two lower highs and a double bottom.
15. Bulls live above the 200 day, bears live below. Sellers eat up rallies below this key moving average line and buyers to come to the rescue above it.
16. Price has memory. What did price do the last time it hit a certain level? Chances are it will do it again.
17. Big volume kills moves. Climax blow-offs take both buyers and sellers out of the market and lead to sideways action. [One of the reasons I focus on the power hours.]
18. Trends never turn on a dime. Reversals build slowly. The first sharp dip always finds buyers and the first sharp rise always finds sellers.
19. Bottoms take longer to form than tops. Greed acts more quickly than fear and causes stocks to drop from their own weight.
20. Beat the crowd in and out the door. You have to take their money before they take yours, period. [i.e. don't be greedy, but be early.]
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