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Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.
anyone with a free site for insider trades
biko---don't give up on that one----remember---volume of shares is where it is at----enough volume all it has to go up is a penny----amjy they fooled me on that one---i won't go back into that one--maybe wrong who knows--
some i watch who also hit some bottoms[or is that close to bottoms]
QPRC
ABRG
NSKY
ARET
ADGI
PLRP
CLSI
AREE --yes me too
ARYN--ditto
etc
biko is my first stock i ever bought-----played it different times--it'll play again
iftp--i could have got in on it at the beginning--paid attention to wrong person---another OH WELL
sold dryd at .038--it went to teens then more this time last year--30,000 shares--A BIG OH WELL
sold qprc last year .22---bought at .045---had hoped to pick it up at .025--didn't want to go down that far THAT time
i could give you a lot of missed ops--or jumped out too soons---or of course WHY DID I BUY THAT!!!
talk later
javalin
i don't know float--always played it as a bottom picker--now they're making me dig in the mud---but it will show it's head again- have made money on it different times---january affect will probably help it--subs maybe who knows today--pickup some now-average down if you get lucky enough to get it in subs--goodluck-----i will check into insider selling first though-but i still think it's just mm's games
javalin
javalin here--ttrif have you heard of shafted by mm's---i watched it dive on buys--they took advantage of presidential mess--it won't go anyplace the mm's won't take it--should have turned back up a long time ago
comments on aryn--anyone??shareholders meeting thurs--a lot of renewed interest
ICOM lately it has bounced off of bid 1.00 ask 1.03125 --headed there again --might be different in this market--but keep a watch anyway
i would still consider buying rthm at 1.781--what do you think
PATSY -also thanks for link--goodluck in your next endeavor--i'll check into it--wish i had had a mentor --someday hope to be doing this for a living--been a dog groomer for 30 years --getting burned out[hands and shoulders too]still love the little creatures but i can see my retirement can be financed better by the market--have always loved numbers -this is right up my alley-thanks again for finally starting a site of your own
--- by the way cupid may post on here too BUT SHE DOESN'T KNOW NUMBERS AT ALL--she just has a knack for picking winners--she has a feeling lol
javalin
MURREY MATH 2
http://www.murreymathtrading.com/mmath/testimonial.html
http://www.tradersworld.com/tradersworld/murrey1.htm
http://tradersworld.com/tradersworld/newpage67.htm
http://www.egroups.com/search?query=murrey-math&submit=Search
http://www.egroups.com/docvault/mmxapp/
this one has the down load of a program from tim kruzel --you'll use it all the time even if you don't use murreymath
punch in the high and low range of your stock and it will show you fast the percentage of the run--murrey uses the high and lowest candle bodies of the close only--8 days he uses 17 days,,16 days he uses 33 past days,etc
amm.exe ----click and download that one for sure----once you read other info you'll really appreciate this little [dos] program
this ought to fill up your weekend
javalin-----remember i'm just learning it too--how about learning with me
MURREYMATH LINKS
http://home.flash.net/~blhill/pages/murrey.html
go there to begin with and read all the old posts on user group-you don't have to join to read--murrey now has a private room where people pay to get his predictions and charts[someday i may see reason for it-but not right now for me]
he has software for sale but there is a site that now has free software i'll give that to you too-he also has seminars-i bought the book for $78.00[worth every penny/also it is really 2 books-one text the other crammed with example charts]murrey seems to be a character if you read old emails-but a genius too
on this same sight also read all the other things like hints--tim kruzel explains murrey's system alot there-i read all this before i got the book, thank god -book is a hard read even without early knowledge of subject--but i will say again well worth the effort
http://www.egroups.com/group/mmxapp
this is where you get link for software/free---all you need is an end of day price feeder like primate,etc
http://tradersworld.com/tradersworld/newpage67.htm
javalin
patsy and b-b i'll be back later after i compile the links on murrey math------bb after murreymath you'll drop all the other tools---he includes techniques of Gann ,fibonacci,and candlesticks -later
javalin
bernard i've been found out--i'm corey though not clark--roommates father's name[he's gone now but phone still in his name/internet also] alot of murrey reading to do but well worth it
javalin
rthm running on without me
didn't have enough shares--murrey still right i was suppose to sell half then decide where it was going--needless to say my other half would have still been collecting profit--oh well patsy when i get as rich as you i won't have this problem anymore lol --i'll be able to buy enough the first time
i've got links for anyone interested in murrey math
javalin
thanks for invitation from bobz---watch your post all the time--have learned alot --been in market wee 3 years now--some good trades some bad learn from every one--am studying murrey math -have you heard of it--already it's made a better trader of me--played icom lately picked up at 1.03125---sold too early of course---today bought second bottom on rthm coming off of 1.75 had been waiting for it a day or two --missed 1.78125--got it at 1.8125 -sold about 40 minutes later 1.9375--murrey thank you---murrey math seems to work on pennies too[but not as good-at least i don't think so]
icom seeming to base higher at 1.25 we'll see
javalin
ttrif---getting into buying range--what do you think bernard--looking sweet to me
i'm back in DAVL
davl --of course my name of game got out too early too--have you heard of intq--birdie told me to start watching it
OTCBB TO CHANGE????
===========ARTICLE (great read)======================
On the Street Cleaning Up the Bulletin Board
By Matthew Goldsetin
October 26, 2000
EARLIER THIS YEAR, during those halcyon days when the Nasdaq Composite was
hovering at the 5000 mark, one of the hottest stock markets was - believe
it or not - the OTC Bulletin Board. Trading in obscure "penny stocks" got
so feverish that for a time more shares changed hands each day on the
Bulletin Board than were traded on the esteemed New York Stock Exchange.
And in the midst of all this frenzied stock trading by millions of
investors, the antiquated system for handling Bulletin Board trades almost
came to a screeching halt. That's because most of the behind-the-scenes
activity on the Bulletin Board still involves traders executing orders
over the telephone rather than communicating with computers - as is done
on the Nasdaq Stock Market.
Having to rely on a system that's the stock-trading equivalent of the old
Pony Express, market-maker firms and small brokerages found they simply
didn't have enough people to staff the phones during the deluge. The
result: Many trades never got executed, or some got completed at prices
far different from the quotes investors saw on their computer screens.
Angry investors cried foul and complained to regulators. Meanwhile,
conspiracy theorists began spinning some far-fetched tales on online
message boards about evil market makers and trading firms secretly
manipulating the prices of Bulletin Board stocks.
"We got a lot of calls from investors saying, 'I was putting in a market
order to buy for 60 cents and it got executed at $1.20,'" says Adena
Friedman, a vice president at Nasdaq, which oversees the Bulletin Board in
conjunction with the National Association of Securities Dealers, Nasdaq's
parent company. "There really was no one to blame. The volume was just so
heavy. The phones were flooded."
The big sell-off in technology stocks this spring had at least one
salutary effect - it eliminated, at least temporarily, most of those
trading problems by dampening the investing public's appetite for risky
penny stocks. But in an attempt to bring the Bulletin Board into the 21st
century before the next wave of investor speculation swamps the markets,
the NASD wants to develop a computer network for trading Bulletin Board
stocks. On Oct. 12, it announced plans for a new system that'll enable
trading firms to quickly process buy-and-sell orders in pretty much the
same manner as they do on the Nasdaq.
The plan to automate Bulletin Board trading must be approved by the
Securities and Exchange Commission. But most market watchers expect that
will happen. Lee Korins, president of the Security Traders Association, a
group that represents brokerages and trading firms, says he "can think of
no reason why anyone would be against it." Lisa Ulshafer, a founder of an
online investment club for penny stocks, says the members of her Copper
Club Investments view the proposal as a "step in the right direction."
Actually, the proposal is just the latest in a series of steps taken by
the NASD to polish the image of the Bulletin Board, which historically has
been something of a market backwater and a breeding ground for stock
scams. For a long time, it wasn't uncommon to find stocks of bankrupt or
defunct companies still trading on the Bulletin Board. But just over a
year ago, the NASD began cleaning house, bouncing from the market
thousands of companies that failed to file annual reports with the SEC.
Pennies From Heaven? * Data through Sept 30 Source: Nasdaq
Today, there are 3,578 stocks trading on the Bulletin Board - nearly 3,000
fewer stocks than at this time last year. But even though the Bulletin
Board is much smaller now, it's more popular than ever with ordinary
investors - in particular those who trade online. While trading in
Bulletin Board stocks is down substantially in the latter half of this
year, the 5.12 billion shares traded this September was 12% higher than
the number traded the same time last year. And the longer-term boom in
Bulletin Board trading is striking: In 1995, total trading volume on the
Bulletin Board was just 10 billion shares. During just the first nine
months of this year, it was 100.5 billion shares.
In recognition that small investors - rightly or wrongly - are putting
more of their money into Bulletin Board stocks, the NASD appears bent on
moving forward with even more reforms. In a speech this month at the
Security Traders Association annual convention, Mary Schapiro, president
of NASD Regulation, noted that growing "investor interest demands market
structure and regulatory attention." One of the things regulators are
considering is converting the Bulletin Board into a "listed" market - just
like the Nasdaq and NYSE. In a listed market, companies must comply with a
series of requirements before their stocks are permitted to trade. Some of
these include maintaining a minimum stock price, issuing periodic reports
to shareholders and appointing a designated number of independent
corporate directors. Regulators also would have greater authority to halt
trading in a Bulletin Board stock and investigate trading irregularities.
There's certainly plenty of room for improvement in the operations of the
Bulletin Board. The explosion in trading there has occurred in something
of an information vacuum. Besides the scanty disclosure requirements that
pertain to these stocks, the financial media spends little time on penny
stocks - except to report on scams - and many Wall Street analysts won't
follow a stock that trades below $5. The main sources of information for
penny-stock investors often tend to be online message boards and so-called
pay-for-hire newsletters, television shows and Web sites, which are
usually nothing more than stock-touting operations.
Still, for many investors, the Bulletin Board offers a seemingly cheap way
to enter the market. Investors think they're potentially getting more bang
for their buck when they buy 100 shares of a $1 stock rather than spending
$100 to buy a single share of some big technology stock. "For a lot of
people who don't have a lot of money, it's a way to move up faster," says
Ulshafer. "It's almost got a gambling fever to it. It's risky, but the
payoffs are huge."
Regulators may not be able to stop investors from putting money into risky
penny stocks that many of them know little about. But it's certainly about
time that the NASD flash its tin badge around this Wild Wild West of the
markets.
OTC BB TO CHANGE ??
===========ARTICLE (great read)======================
On the Street Cleaning Up the Bulletin Board
By Matthew Goldsetin
October 26, 2000
EARLIER THIS YEAR, during those halcyon days when the Nasdaq Composite was
hovering at the 5000 mark, one of the hottest stock markets was - believe
it or not - the OTC Bulletin Board. Trading in obscure "penny stocks" got
so feverish that for a time more shares changed hands each day on the
Bulletin Board than were traded on the esteemed New York Stock Exchange.
And in the midst of all this frenzied stock trading by millions of
investors, the antiquated system for handling Bulletin Board trades almost
came to a screeching halt. That's because most of the behind-the-scenes
activity on the Bulletin Board still involves traders executing orders
over the telephone rather than communicating with computers - as is done
on the Nasdaq Stock Market.
Having to rely on a system that's the stock-trading equivalent of the old
Pony Express, market-maker firms and small brokerages found they simply
didn't have enough people to staff the phones during the deluge. The
result: Many trades never got executed, or some got completed at prices
far different from the quotes investors saw on their computer screens.
Angry investors cried foul and complained to regulators. Meanwhile,
conspiracy theorists began spinning some far-fetched tales on online
message boards about evil market makers and trading firms secretly
manipulating the prices of Bulletin Board stocks.
"We got a lot of calls from investors saying, 'I was putting in a market
order to buy for 60 cents and it got executed at $1.20,'" says Adena
Friedman, a vice president at Nasdaq, which oversees the Bulletin Board in
conjunction with the National Association of Securities Dealers, Nasdaq's
parent company. "There really was no one to blame. The volume was just so
heavy. The phones were flooded."
The big sell-off in technology stocks this spring had at least one
salutary effect - it eliminated, at least temporarily, most of those
trading problems by dampening the investing public's appetite for risky
penny stocks. But in an attempt to bring the Bulletin Board into the 21st
century before the next wave of investor speculation swamps the markets,
the NASD wants to develop a computer network for trading Bulletin Board
stocks. On Oct. 12, it announced plans for a new system that'll enable
trading firms to quickly process buy-and-sell orders in pretty much the
same manner as they do on the Nasdaq.
The plan to automate Bulletin Board trading must be approved by the
Securities and Exchange Commission. But most market watchers expect that
will happen. Lee Korins, president of the Security Traders Association, a
group that represents brokerages and trading firms, says he "can think of
no reason why anyone would be against it." Lisa Ulshafer, a founder of an
online investment club for penny stocks, says the members of her Copper
Club Investments view the proposal as a "step in the right direction."
Actually, the proposal is just the latest in a series of steps taken by
the NASD to polish the image of the Bulletin Board, which historically has
been something of a market backwater and a breeding ground for stock
scams. For a long time, it wasn't uncommon to find stocks of bankrupt or
defunct companies still trading on the Bulletin Board. But just over a
year ago, the NASD began cleaning house, bouncing from the market
thousands of companies that failed to file annual reports with the SEC.
Pennies From Heaven? * Data through Sept 30 Source: Nasdaq
Today, there are 3,578 stocks trading on the Bulletin Board - nearly 3,000
fewer stocks than at this time last year. But even though the Bulletin
Board is much smaller now, it's more popular than ever with ordinary
investors - in particular those who trade online. While trading in
Bulletin Board stocks is down substantially in the latter half of this
year, the 5.12 billion shares traded this September was 12% higher than
the number traded the same time last year. And the longer-term boom in
Bulletin Board trading is striking: In 1995, total trading volume on the
Bulletin Board was just 10 billion shares. During just the first nine
months of this year, it was 100.5 billion shares.
In recognition that small investors - rightly or wrongly - are putting
more of their money into Bulletin Board stocks, the NASD appears bent on
moving forward with even more reforms. In a speech this month at the
Security Traders Association annual convention, Mary Schapiro, president
of NASD Regulation, noted that growing "investor interest demands market
structure and regulatory attention." One of the things regulators are
considering is converting the Bulletin Board into a "listed" market - just
like the Nasdaq and NYSE. In a listed market, companies must comply with a
series of requirements before their stocks are permitted to trade. Some of
these include maintaining a minimum stock price, issuing periodic reports
to shareholders and appointing a designated number of independent
corporate directors. Regulators also would have greater authority to halt
trading in a Bulletin Board stock and investigate trading irregularities.
There's certainly plenty of room for improvement in the operations of the
Bulletin Board. The explosion in trading there has occurred in something
of an information vacuum. Besides the scanty disclosure requirements that
pertain to these stocks, the financial media spends little time on penny
stocks - except to report on scams - and many Wall Street analysts won't
follow a stock that trades below $5. The main sources of information for
penny-stock investors often tend to be online message boards and so-called
pay-for-hire newsletters, television shows and Web sites, which are
usually nothing more than stock-touting operations.
Still, for many investors, the Bulletin Board offers a seemingly cheap way
to enter the market. Investors think they're potentially getting more bang
for their buck when they buy 100 shares of a $1 stock rather than spending
$100 to buy a single share of some big technology stock. "For a lot of
people who don't have a lot of money, it's a way to move up faster," says
Ulshafer. "It's almost got a gambling fever to it. It's risky, but the
payoffs are huge."
Regulators may not be able to stop investors from putting money into risky
penny stocks that many of them know little about. But it's certainly about
time that the NASD flash its tin badge around this Wild Wild West of the
markets.
______________________________________________________________________
last time i picked ttrif at .035--friday seemed alot of buying support at .0395 --when bid and ask moved i picked up some at .0402-just in case-.043 and .044 got some big buys--if it hadn't been a friday i'd say the next trading day would have gapped up--but mondays seem to lose the bounce-people lose interest over the weekend---but then i remember GGNC for me ended 1.25[on a friday] up from my buying at .08 about 4 days before[i think i'm completely remembering right]then it opened on the next monday at 6.00--miracles do happen!! but that was about 2 years ago--beginners luck i had just been in market a couple months--oh well back to the real world again---if triff dips lower i'll just average down-ready for the move
ttrif making a turn around right now imho
bernard thanks for info on front loading-kinda figured that was what it was--also undy is 'Cupid's" post-sorry forgot to tell you there is 2 of us on same computer--she doesn't watch numbers at all-will try to sign my next post--we are cupidandjavalin on Bobz--i'm javalin
might want to take a look at this one too
UNDY
October 18, 2000 09:25
EquityAlert.com Announces
Investment Opinion, No. 4
VANCOUVER, B.C.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Oct. 18,
2000--EquityAlert.com (OTCBB:EINC)
UniDyn Gains 11.82% On News Of Results
EquityAlert.com, Inc. (www.EquityAlert.com), one of the
largest re-distributors of public company and mutual fund
news alerts, today forwarded free real time news alerts on a
wide range of OTCBB stocks.
Among the active issues available to our real time news
alert subscribers on Tuesday, October 17th, were UniDyn
Corp. (OTCBB: UNDY) and CAS Medical Systems Inc.
(OTCBB: CAMY).
UniDyn Corp. gained 11.82% after it announced results for
the quarter ended Sept. 30, 2000. The Company reported
quarterly sales of $1,408,619, as compared to sales of
$446,480 for the same quarter in 1999, resulting in operating
profits of $317,239 for the three months ending Sept. 30,
2000, as compared to $87,170 for the same quarter in 1999.
CAS Medical Systems Inc. issued a press release
announcing the results of operations for the first nine
months of 2000. Total revenues for the nine-month period
ended September 30, 2000 were approximately $8,845,000,
exceeding the results of $5,831,000 for the comparable
period in 1999.
Additional recent real time news alerts available to
EquityAlert.com subscribers included Wallstreet Racing
Stables Inc. (OTCBB: WRSB), Environmental Solutions
Worldwide Inc. (OTCBB: ESWW) and Globus Wireless Ltd.
(OTCBB: GBWL).
EquityAlert.com's real time public company news alerts is a
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issues on all major US markets, please visit our Web site
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EquityAlert.com, a wholly owned online asset of
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receive real time news alerts on US and Canadian stocks,
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EquityAlert.com's real time public company news alerts are
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Don't want to seem dumb but what is frontloading ?? thanks
What do you think of DAVL??? Looks to be in a very oversold area being accumulated
and a small float??
thanks