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Re: Motba post# 24002

Monday, 03/17/2014 10:52:31 PM

Monday, March 17, 2014 10:52:31 PM

Post# of 39962
Just make sure it's something you can buy and never look at, and still be able to invest in other places.

I ranked top 15% in a Canadian math competition designed by IBM and a University I'll not name, but it's as high as you can get on one of the top out there. I specialize in trouble shooting and designing based on predicting the future use of things. I was dumb and water my talent in engineering. Luckily, timing was perfect, and nothing like this MJ trend has been around where things spike thousands of percent. Anyways, I may be vague in explaining, but I'm not completely careless. I can justify to myself why. And in OTC, if you're reading company history and company value, then you just gave yourself a reason like the rest not to invest in OTC. But think outside the box, and you will see pattern in behaviour, fear, excitements, and even when the big boys from NASDAQ NYSE HK London etc come in from the regulated markets.

I don't use a software to buy and sell. I just watch a basic chart. The hardest thing I found to deal with was not to freak out and dump my shares on a massive spike drop. When you learn that, you learn to take advantage of it.

OTC is about positioning yourself and repositioning yourself as fast as the trends. It drives me insane when people become so negative. There is also no reason to be positive either. Stay in the moment and that's it.

Every second is a new second. The pissed off people here are the ones who think they figured it out. Big mistake. The only answer is to buy as cheap as possible and mainly low enough to the point it's close to bottom price and wait. Because, when they fluctuate, it's a deviation that won't scare you. For example, ever bought a stock on the rise, and though it was going to go higher and held on longer and ended up in a nose dive. Then wished you were those who bought it early or bought it at the bottom of the nose dive. Same thing, you're still on the same ride, but can't handle the drop. Well, then don't ride this roller coaster. Every stock goes up and down, and will eventually return to what you bought it at or close. Unless of course it gets delisted then your FD. Until then, you just got your money locked, and you need to make sure you can live without it. Being cool headed is a sign you made a good decision and you're in a good spot to make more solid decisions.

This is not an ATM, you gain, someone lost. You lost someone gain. Balance exists in everything.

OTC is more about building a philosophy in my opinion, which makes untrained investors who have a good head on their shoulders, more in a position to succeed.

Good luck, Because, it's all variable probability based on mass psychology. Hence PR is the game and the game changers.


Excuse any poor grammar or spelling but this is too long for me to proof read my own writing.

Food for thought!