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VDSC is looking good for next week..imho..eom
Low Floater with plenty patents & potential...
Volume precedes Price cj going to need a HUGE catalyst to hit 14s JMHO
SVFC Looks like it will crush the 200 day MA at .14 ahead soon and head for .20's. I know the charts and DD so I know what is ahead. The volume should begin increasing also.
Chart looks ready 2 POP!
SVFC on major breakout watch$$$
HHSE Daily Chart @ .027
Contact Info
1428 Chester Street
Springdale, AR 72764
Website: http://www.hannoverhouse.com
Phone: 479-751-4500
Email: Fred@HannoverHouse.com
HHSE Security Details
Share Structure
Market Value1 $13,547,694 a/o Jul 05, 2013
Shares Outstanding 505,510,986 a/o Mar 31, 2013
Float 373,787,474 a/o Jan 01, 2013
Authorized Shares 600,000,000 a/o Jan 28, 2013
Par Value 0.001
Shareholders
Shareholders of Record 171 a/o Jan 01, 2013
Corporate Actions Ex. Date Record Date Pay Date
Security Notes
•Capital Change=shs increased by 1.9 for 1 split. Ex-date=01/29/2001. Rec date=01/26/2001. Pay date=01/29/2001.
•Stk. Div.=20%. Ex-date=3-22-06. Rec date=3-24-06. Pay date=3-31-06
•Capital Change=shs decreased by 1 for 50 split. Pay date=10/10/2006.
VDSC Daily Chart @ .01
Company Verified Profile
Contact Info
1850 SE 17th Street
Suite 305
Ft. Lauderdale, FL 33316
Website: http://www.pventerprisesinc.com
Phone: 954-306-6242
Email: peterv2010@live.com
Share Structure
Market Value1 $4,791,800 a/o Jul 05, 2013
Shares Outstanding 494,000,000 a/o Jun 05, 2013
Float 271,222,691 a/o May 01, 2013
Authorized Shares 535,500,000 a/o Jun 05, 2013
Par Value 0.001
Shareholders
Shareholders of Record 1,210 a/o May 01, 2013
Corporate Actions Ex. Date Record Date Pay Date
Security Notes
•Par Changed=$0.001 from 10 Cents concurrent with name change and 1 for 7 reverse split, effective date=7-02
•Capital Change=shs decreased by 1 for 7 split Pay date=07/16/2002.
•Capital Change=shs decreased by 1 for 545 split. Pay date=02/16/2010.
PNCH @.0016 recent symbol change from ICPA
Contact Info
1211 Orange Avenue
Suite 300
Winter Park, FL 32789
Website: http://www.icPlaces.com
Phone: 407-442-0309
Email: info@icplaces.com
PNCH Security Details
Share Structure
Market Value1 $3,648,168 a/o Jul 05, 2013
Shares Outstanding 2,280,104,697 a/o Jun 04, 2013
Float 1,900,000 a/o Oct 04, 2010
Authorized Shares 500,000,000 a/o Oct 04, 2010
Par Value No Par Value
Shareholders
Shareholders of Record 259 a/o Apr 15, 2013
Corporate Actions Ex. Date Record Date Pay Date
Security Notes
•Capital Change=shs decreased by 1 for 10 split Pay date=05/22/2007.
•Capital Change=shs decreased by 1 for 30 split. Pay date=07/07/2010.
WEEEEEE q2b ON FIRE!
Appreciate it Bullishmover
I will be glad to help
DEADLY SIN #1: Failing to Cut Losses Short
DEADLY SIN #1: FAILING TO CUT LOSSES SHORT
"What is the most frequently committed error by aspiring traders?"
Answer: Failure to accept and take losses quickly.
The general school of thought is that a traders' most precious commodity is their original capital, and that they are doomed to utter failure if they do not do everything in their power to prevent its erosion. Taking fast, but small, losses is the only approach, the only tool, if you will that traders have to help ensure this. But not only must traders be willing to take quick but controllable losses, they must accept the fact that losses are, and will always be, a permanent part of their trading existence. This is perhaps the most singularly difficult fact to grasp. Most struggling traders spend their entire trading lives attempting to run away from losses. They perpetually move from broker to broker, service to service, newsletter to newsletter, trading system to trading system, hoping, praying, dying to find the "holy grail," that perfect pie-in-the-sky approach that will deliver juicy, unbelievable, mouth-watering profits without even a trace of a loss. In a word, that's impossible. Why? Because successful trading, like successful living, is determined by how well we manage our losses, not by how well we avoid them.
If you truly desire to become an astute trader, learning how to lose professionally, by keeping losses small, is the master key. That is the skill we need, that is the way to big bucks, and that is what will deliver longevity in the trading business. Take care of your losses by keeping them small, and rest assured that the winners will take care of themselves.
SEED OF WISDOM
Every loss is like a cancer that has the potential to spread all over your account and destroy your entire financial life. Therefore, in order to ensure longevity in the trading business, traders must quickly rid themselves of this cancer whenever it rears its ugly head. Each loss usually starts off small. That's when controlling it, or completely cutting it out, causes little or no pain. The major problem for traders arises when they allow the loss or cancer to spread. Each time a stock is allowed to make deeper inroads into negative territory, the trader and their ability to act become weaker. Just like a cancer, the growing loss robs the trader of their intellect and eats away at their mental and physical abilities, until they are completely consumed and relegated to being a slave. If you want to become successful, any disease that has the potential to rob you of your future must be kept in check.
How to Eliminate the Sin of Failing to Cut Losses Short
The following action steps will help prevent one from falling prey to the deadliest enemy of all-failure to cut losses:
1. Never place a trade without first determining where you will bail ship if things go wrong. This is the same as saying, "never place a trade without a predefined stop loss." Taking a trade without determining the price at which you will run for cover is like racing down a steep hill at top speed without any brakes.
You may wind up living, but only those who like to flirt with death would ever try such a thing.
2. Always adhere to your predetermined stop loss, this should go without being said, but so few aspiring traders are able to muster up enough discipline to do this that I feel compelled to mention it. Why is this so hard to do? Because selling your stock at the stop is clearly admitting that you are wrong. The action does not bring about warm feelings of pride, nor does it boost one's confidence. But the true master traders have learned to overcome these difficulties. They have become experts at taking their stops with blinding speed. They have done this because they've developed an intolerance for stocks that are not working for them, and kill them at the first sign of trouble. View each stock you buy as an employee who has been hired to perform only one job: to rise. If the stock even hints at failing to perform the task for which it was hired, instantly fire it, just as they would fire an employee who utterly refused to do his or her tasks. Be so intolerant of stocks that fail to live up to their expectations that, at times, one fires them before they hit their stops.
3. If you are having a tough time adhering to your stops, start off by getting into the habit of selling half of your position. Becoming disciplined enough to religiously cut losses takes time. Placing and adhering to stops perfects the art of taking a loss, which is why they are so often approached with reluctance and dealt with from a basis of pain. For those traders/investors who can't seem to bring themselves to the point of taking their stops without a second thought, practice selling half your position. This alternative action is much easier to do, as it tends to please both dueling impulses: (a) the impulse to get rid of the failing stock and (b) the impulse to give it a chance to come back. By cutting the problem in half, one often gains a greater clarity and mental focus. Psychologically, traders find their plight to be less burdensome and therefore feel better about themselves. The problem of what to do with the second half still remains, but with half the problem gone, coming up with an alternative plan becomes much easier.
http://investorshub.advfn.com/Quick-2-BaggersSS-8793/
The Seven Deadly Sins of Trading: How to Combat Them and Defeat Them
Answers to Q2B Quiz.
1. An Oscillator is a technical indicator that tell whether a market, index or equity currently trades in an "overbought" or "oversold" condition.
2. An overbought stock is trading at the upper extreme of its current price range and may soon pull back or move into a consolidation pattern. A stock that's oversold is trading at the bottom of it's current price range and is due for a bounce.
3. RSI stands for Relative Strength Index. It's an oscillator that measures a stock's current relative strength as compared to its own price history.
4. When your stock makes a higher high, but it's RSI diverges by hooking down or not making a higher high, you take profits.
5. Readings above 80 are overbought, and readings below 20 are oversold.
6. When Stochastics lines are below 20 and then hook up, and the faster %K line crosses above the slower %D line it's a "BUY" signal.
7. The MACD is a trend-following momentum indicator/oscillator that shows the relationship between the 26-day and 12-day exponential moving averages of an equity's price pattern. Also, a 9-day signal line may be used.
8. The MACD-H (histogram) gives buy and sell signals by crossing over its zero line. A buy signal is given when the MACD-H rises above its zero line. A sell signal is given when the MACD-H crosses below the zero line.
Knowledge is Power, Learning is the KEY.
http://investorshub.advfn.com/Quick-2-BaggersSS-8793/
needs volume lol
this looks about ready actually. basing
lol you use money for toilet paper? high roller gem!!!
wassup bud.
Welcome to the board Nebuchadnezzar.
No wolves here MCAmel1, just sharks working together taking down MMs, good to have you hear as part of the team.
“Teamwork is the secret that make common people achieve uncommon result.”
Appreciated Fred, nice to have you here, say Hello to Lamont for me.
Unch = ALIM, BGNN, BLLB, GVIT, KNSC, PRPM
Red Close = AXLX, DIGX, GNGR, RAYS, QASP,
Green Close = DHSM, TDEY, SNRY, STKO, MDIN, SVFC
Q2B QUIZ
1. Define an "oscillator".
2. What does "overbought" mean? What does "oversold" mean?
3. What does "RSI" stand for? What does it measure?
4. Say you're swing trading a stock and have been holding the
position for five days. The stock price makes a new high but
its RSI, which is in the overbought position, hooks down. What
action will you consider taking?
5. When you're viewing the Stochastics Oscillator on a
chart,readings ______ ___ are considered overbought, and
readings ______ ___ are considered oversold.
6. You're using Stochastics as a decision support tool for entry
into a long position. At the moment, both lines are below 20
and are hooked to the upside. The faster %K line just crossed
above the slower %D line. What does that tell you?
7. Define the MACD.
8. How does the MACD-H (histogram) give BUY & SELL signals?
Tune in tomorrow @ Q2B for the answers
You should see my bathroom
gem
wow that is a lot of money in your living room. gem is swimmin in it!
IPRU...NHOD on deck at .0014...break of .0015 then blue sky
gem
http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=ipru
PT loving POZN
we rock it gangnam style!! ;)
welcome to quick T baggers! lol. lol
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