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Showing posts with label Stocks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stocks. Show all posts

Monday, 4 August 2014

Binary Options Trading

The Leading Binary Investment Platform

It’s simple:

·         Select your investment
Facebook stock, gold price, NASDAQ, etc.
·         Choose
Will the price go up (Call) or down (Put)?
·         Correct?
Earn up to *80% profit!


6 Benefits of investing in binary options

·         Fastest profits withdrawal - get your profits in less than 3 days & with minimum hassle.
·         Simplicity - super user-friendly platform, 24 hours live support.
·         No commissions, no hidden fees.
·         No experience is needed - easy to learn, easy to trade.
·         Beat the market trends - you can profit from your investment whether markets go up or down.

Learn More About Binary Options Trading

Binary options are an exciting way of investing in the financial markets. Rather than purchasing the asset itself, investors can speculate on which direction they estimate an asset will move in. To make profit you should predict the direction the asset’s price will go: up or down! When an option expires, you can be “in the money” or “out of the money”. Being “In the money” means that the trend moved in your favor and you've gained a profit. Being “out of the money” means it moved against your favor, and you've lost on this trade.
When you trade in plain options (not binary options), gains or losses vary according to how far the asset’s price had moved. However, in binary options, gains and losses are fixed regardless of how “deep” the option is in or out of the money. If the option is in the money, your profit will be 65-80% of your investment. If the option is out of the money at the expiry date, you will always get a fixed return of 15%. That means your risks are controlled, and you always know your potential profits and losses prior to making your investment.
For instance, if I invest $300 on a Call option on gold that had expired “in the money” I earn 80% of my investment – i.e. an additional $213. If the option expired “out of the money”, meaning its price did not go up by the expiry date, I remain with 15% of my investment - $45.
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Wednesday, 6 November 2013

Twitter’s IPO goes live in the USA this Wednesday, Normal Trading starts tomorrow, Thursday 7th, 2013

The San Francisco social media company has raised its debut price per share from an initial $17 to $20 to between $23 and $25.

The increase doesn't come as a big surprise. Many observers considered the previous pricing to be relatively conservative, given that Twitter's market value was appraised at $20.62 per share in an assessment done by Duff & Phelps Corp. in early August. Twitter's earlier decision to begin the IPO pricing below its recently appraised value was seen as a way to contain expectations while leaving room to raise the target and build more buzz about its stock market debut planned for later this week.
Inside Twitter Headquarters in San Francisco

With this, Twitter intends to raise between $1.6 billion and $1.8 billion when its stocks starts trading on Thursday.

The number of shares the company intends to sell is 70 million. At the new price, the company will be valued at between $12.8 billion to $13.9 billion.

Twitter co-founder Evan Williams is the company's largest individual shareholder with a 10.4% stake, which would be worth between $1.3 billion to $1.4 billion. CEO Dick Costolo's stake would be worth as much as $191.9 million.
The second largest individual shareholder is Peter Fenton -- a Twitter board director and an early investor in the company -- whose stake would be worth as much as $789 million.

Twitter's IPO is being underwritten by Goldman Sach (GS, Fortune 500) and Morgan Stanley (MS, Fortune 500) and is expected to be priced on Wednesday.
Regular investors will get their first chance to buy Twitter the day after, when shares will begin trading on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker "TWTR."

Meanwhile the company disclosed that International Business Machines Corp. (IBM) sent a letter  alleging that they infringed on at least three U.S. patents held by IBM. The patents relate to a networking technique based on common contacts, a way to show advertisements without interfering with an interactive site, and using interconnected computers to reduce Web traffic.

Well, just log in to your favourite trading platform and start trading. 

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Monday, 4 November 2013

Economic events of this week

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Monday: The Purchasing Manager’s Index for the Manufacturing sector will be published in Italy, France, Germany and the Eurozone. Factory orders will be published in the U.S. 

Tuesday: The annual growth of the Japanese Monetary Base will be published, while the last figure indicated no less than a 46.1% annual growth since last year. The BoJ Governor Kuroda will hold a speech in Osaka in a Business Leaders meeting. The Royal Bank of Australia will announce its rate decision. Net change in Unemployment will also be published in Spain, with analysts expecting no less than 82K employees entering the economy. The Troika is scheduled to return to Greece for a bailout review. Halifax House Price indices will be published and shed further light on the magnitude of the suspected U.K. housing bubble.

Wednesday: A lot of second-third tier data will be published, including European PMI indices for the service sectors, Industrial and Manufacturing Production in the U.K., Retail Sales across the Eurozone and German Factory Orders. The Leading Index will also be published in the U.S.

Thursday: Iran is set to convene with the P5+1 and discuss the former's nuclear program. Industrial Production will be published in Germany. The Bank of England will announce its official rate, and the ECB is set to do the same for the Eurozone, followed with Draghi holding a post rate decision press conference. Initial Jobless Claims will be published in the U.S., with analysts expecting further decreases towards pre-shutdown levels. Additionally in the U.S., advanced GDP levels will be published, and in the equity front, the Initial Public Offering of Twitter will take place.

Friday: French Industrial Production data will be published, as well as U.S. change in Nonfarm payrolls and Canadian and U.S. Unemployment. U.S. consumer statistics will conclude the week, namely U.S. Personal Income and Spending, and the University of Michigan’s Consumer Confidence. 

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Assessing the wind’s direction

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The U.S. economy showed mixed signs at the beginning of last week. Industrial Production data for September presented an impressive 0.6% increase. Manufacturing Production, on the other hand, presented only a negligible 0.1% increase, versus expectations for 0.3%. This was the result of increases in carmakers' output withheld by declines in furniture, appliances and computers.

Wednesday presented growing anticipation to the publishing of Fed’s rate decision. As expected, the announcement did not suggest tapering is imminent by any means, yet noted that the U.S. economy is expanding at a moderate pace. As monthly purchases were kept at the usual 85 billion Dollars a month, the statement did suggest that the Government shutdown did not cause major damage to the economy. While in the September announcement the Fed was concerned that the higher market rates could lead to slower improvement in the economy, the same was not mentioned in Wednesday’s announcement.

Thursday was probably the surprise of the week. In Chicago, it seems that no bad impact was recorded from the government shutdown, as the Chicago Purchasing Managers’ Index surged to a 31-month high. However, it was interpreted as bad news by equity markets, which saw the good figure as something that could induce a sooner QE3 tapering by the Fed. Whether Chicago is the prophet for an emerging U.S. economy or whether we are just going to see a surge of inventories next month, is yet to be seen.

The hectic week concluded on Friday with the publishing of the ISM manufacturing survey. Similar to the Fed’s announcement, survey participants did not identify impact on their business from the Government’s shutdown as the survey presented an impressive figure of 56.4, beating expectations for a 55.0 print, with exports surging 5 points to 57. However, unlike Thursday’s equity pessimism due to concerns of resulting tapering, Friday marked quite a positive day for equities with the Dow presenting a 0.45% daily increase, and the S&P 500 index with a 0.29% increase.

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Wednesday, 30 October 2013

Facebook’s 3rd quarter earnings will be released on October 30th ...TODAY!

Last time, Facebook shot up 26% after the release.
Traders who bought Facebook before the release,
using 10x leverage, made more than 260% in just a day!

Don’t miss your chance to profit from Facebook stock!

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Or login to your favourite trading platform and trade before its too late.

Monday, 28 October 2013

Economic events of this week



Monday: Business Confidence data will be presented in Italy, following a 3.5 point deterioration in Consumer Confidence that was published last week. September’s Industrial Production will be published in the U.S., with analyst consensus predicting a moderate 0.4% monthly increase. 

Tuesday: Japan’s Jobless Rate data will be published. Analyst consensus predicts that the aforementioned affords by Abe will lead unemployment back to the 4.0% figure. September’s Producer Price Index will be published in the U.S., following a healthy 0.3% monthly increase presented for August. Adjusted Retail Sales will be published in the U.S. The official U.S. Consumer Confidence Index is also due, following the aforementioned decline at the University of Michigan’s figure.

Wednesday: Japanese Industrial Production will be published. Due to the weakening Yen, analysts expect it to present a 1.8% monthly increase. Both the Gross Domestic Product, as well as Consumer Price Index, will be published in Spain. Germany is due to publish its Unemployment rate, which is currently at a rather low level of 6.9%, certainly compared with the rest of the continent. MBA Mortgage Applications are due to published in the U.S. ADP Employment Change will also be published, as well as the U.S. Consumer Price Index. Lastly, the FOMC will publish its rate decision and perhaps a few words on when tapering is due.

Thursday: U.K. Housing Prices will be published, following growing concerns that a bubble is inflating in that sector. Initial Jobless Claims will be published in the U.S. The Bank of Japan will also issue its Target Rate, alongside its Monetary Policy Statement.

Friday: Purchasing Managers Indices for the manufacturing sector will be published in China and in the U.S. 


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Weekly Market Review - Abe needs to cash the check

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Last week presented some significant data in the Japanese economy. This yielded a natural opportunity to examine where the economic policy, advocated by Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, led the country so far. The week kicked off with the Japanese Ministry of Finance publishing the country’s trade balance statistics. At -¥918.6 billion, September’s Trade Balance appeared as an improvement over the previous month’s -¥962.8. However, the Japanese exports presented only a 11.5% increase during the trailing 12 months, much lower than an expected 15.6% predicted by analysts.

On Friday, the hope that the inflow of cash to Japan would help boost prices dispersed, with the publishing of the Consumer Price Index. The Index’s headline figure presented a relatively high 1.1% annual increase of prices. This was likely the result of the weakening Yen and volatiles such as food, as the Consumer Price Index, (excluding Energy and Fresh Food) presented a more moderate 0.7% annual increase. The 0.7% core increase figure is high compared to the negative figures the index suffered since 2008, should no accompanying wage hike take place, increasing prices could lead to a decrease of the Japanese consumer’s purchasing power and a resultant decrease of GDP. Indeed, the Japanese Monthly Cash Earnings, measuring mostly wages, presented a -0.9% annual decline in August. Moreover, analyst consensus predicts September’s figure to present -0.4%, which is not much better. 

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Weekly Market Review - Post shutdown

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The post-shutdown week provided an opportunity to review the fiscal feud’s result on the American economy, or rather the anticipation for it as expressed in September’s data. September’s Existing Home Sales, published Monday, presented a slight blow to U.S. real-estate activity, with an approximate 2% decrease from the previous month’s figure, to 5.29 million units changing hands. Tuesday’s labor data was quite a different story. With only a 148K increase in Nonfarm Payrolls, it seems that the shutdown’s blow to the U.S. labor market was harsher compared to August’s figure, which presented a higher number of jobs created, 193K. In September 2012, when the U.S. economy was deeper in the great recession, Nonfarm payrolls presented only a slightly lower 138K Nonfarm jobs created. The unemployment rate dropped down to 7.2%.

Additional slightly negative data on the U.S. market were presented Wednesday, as MBA Mortgage Applications decreased by -0.6%. Continuing its negative sentiment since the beginning of the Shutdown, Initial Jobless Claims was still high and revealed on Thursday that no less than 350K of those were made during last week. The University of Michigan’s Consumer Confidence presenting a decrease from a level of 75.2 to 73.2.

The U.S. investor sentiment was not affected much by all these, as that data could be considered as temporary responses to a unique situation. The Nasdaq index presented a mild, yet notable, 0.7% increase during the previous week. Similarly, a 0.9% increase was recorded at the S&P 500 index. 

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Wednesday, 23 October 2013

Economic events of this week

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The resolution of the U.S. shutdown is expected to bring about a slew of market shifting economic reports that have been postponed due to it.

Monday: Chinese consumer and producer price indices will be published. 

Tuesday: Japan’s final Industrial Production data for August will be published, following a preliminary figure indicating an annual decrease of -0.2%, released last month. CPIs (consumer price indices) will be published in France and the U.K., to complete the European price puzzle.

Wednesday: Jobless claims change will be published in the U.K., as well as the Eurozone’s aggregated Consumer Price Index. MBA Mortgage Applications will be published in the U.S. 

Thursday: This is the current deadline for the U.S. debt ceiling, so this is the main event of the day. Additionally, Retail Sales data will be published in the U.K. Initial Jobless Claims are also due for the U.S., after those surged last week due to the Government shutdown.

Friday: Official Chinese GDP data for Q3 will be published, expected to present an impressive 7.8% annual increase. 


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Monday, 21 October 2013

Other economic events of this week


With the U.S. Shutdown finally over, some postponed economic figures will finally be published. The release of some was already rescheduled; others are still to be determined.

Monday: September’s Trade Balance data will be published in Japan, alongside the All Industry Activity Index for August. Existing Home Sales in the U.S. are also due. 

Tuesday: The unemployment rate will be published in the U.S., alongside Change in Non-farm Payrolls.

Wednesday: The French Manufacturing Industry’s Confidence Index is due, as well as MBA Mortgage Applications for the U.S. The Eurozone’s Consumer Confidence Index will be published, with economists predicting more of the moderate improvement which the index has enjoyed since the beginning of the year. 

Thursday: A two-day summit on the State of the Economy will be held in Brussels by European Union Leaders. Purchasing Managers’ Indices will be published across the Eurozone, as well as the quarterly Spanish Unemployment report, which presented an alarming 26.3% figure during the previous quarter. U.S. Initial Jobless Claims will also be published after surging recently due to the Shutdown.

Friday: Consumer Price Indices will be published in Japan. A Slew of data from the old continent is also due, including German IFO Surveys. Italian Retail sales data, Eurozone Aggregate Money supply and advanced indications for the U.K.’s third quarter’s Gross Domestic Product. The U.S. will see publications of Durable Goods New Orders and the University of Michigan’s Consumer Confidence Index. 


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Better news from China

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Encouraging data from China became more evident as the dust of the U.S. fiscal crisis settled. It became clearer that Chinese production for local demand is more profitable with the Consumer price Index exhibiting a 3.1% annual rise, while producers pay less to support their production process with the Producer Price Index decreasing by an annual 1.3%. Thursday marked a very positive point for the Chinese economy as the Year over Year Gross Domestic Product showed a 7.8% annual increase, quite the positive note from the concerns raised by the previous quarter’s 7.5%. Additional positive data was the Industrial Production exhibiting a 9.6% annual increase. The hypothesis derived from the increasing wedge between Consumer and Producer Prices was also evident at retail sales, which showed a 13.3% increase.


The improvement in China could be regarded as somewhat predictable, given the stimulus program unveiled in July. However, the revised data certainly put smiles on a few faces in Beijing, as it will be much easier for china to reach its 7.5% annual GDP growth goal. Evidently, the positive data sent Hong Kong’s Hang Seng up 1.1%, while the Shanghai Composite index gained another 0.2%. 


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Shutdown results

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Last Thursday, the U.S. Government finally ended its 16-day shutdown. The shutdown’s resolution came following Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell reaching an agreement for funding the Government and suspending the debit limit, for the time being. Evidently, the shutdown left U.S. President Obama wounded, but not broken. A Gallup poll on Thursday showed that the negative U.S. citizen sentiment sent approval rates of Obama’s work down to 42%, however, it seems like the real loss was of the Republican Party. 

The party failed to meet its goals of halting the affordable healthcare act, while causing much of a hassle to everyone involved. In an interview to Cincinnati radio station WLW, the Republican speaker John Boehner was quoted saying: “We fought the good fight. We just didn’t win”, as lawmakers readied to pass the historical bill.
The compromise achieved only buys time, as it merely reopens the government until January 15th, and suspends the debt ceiling until Feb 7th. This does seem like a good opportunity to examine intermediate results, but surprisingly, equity markets are generally better off now than they were at the start of the Shutdown. Following the slight equity rally, right after the end of the shutdown, the Nasdaq Composite Index closed Thursday’s trading at around 3,863 points, concluding to a 1.8% increase since the beginning of the Shutdown. The S&P 500 presented an even more impressive 2.8% increase since the beginning of the month, as it rose to an all-time high on Thursday. Crude Oil, on the other hand, did not express the same bullish enthusiasm as the lowered demand due to the Shutdown led its trading to $100.7 a barrel, $1.6 lower than the start of the month.

On a nation-wide scope, the Shutdown definitely left its toll on the U.S. national accounts. JP Morgan has cut the U.S. Q4 GDP forecast to 2% from 2.5% last week, while Morgan Stanley expected that 0.4% will be skimmed off the headline figure. Meanwhile, with the debt ceiling off the table, speculator activity in the U.S. market can return to discuss the Fed’s tapering. 

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Tuesday, 15 October 2013

Economic events of this week

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The resolution of the U.S. shutdown is expected to bring about a slew of market shifting economic reports that have been postponed due to it.

Monday: Chinese consumer and producer price indices will be published. 

Tuesday: Japan’s final Industrial Production data for August will be published, following a preliminary figure indicating an annual decrease of -0.2%, released last month. CPIs (consumer price indices) will be published in France and the U.K., to complete the European price puzzle.

Wednesday: Jobless claims change will be published in the U.K., as well as the Eurozone’s aggregated Consumer Price Index. MBA Mortgage Applications will be published in the U.S. 

Thursday: This is the current deadline for the U.S. debt ceiling, so this is the main event of the day. Additionally, Retail Sales data will be published in the U.K. Initial Jobless Claims are also due for the U.S., after those surged last week due to the Government shutdown.

Friday: Official Chinese GDP data for Q3 will be published, expected to present an impressive 7.8% annual increase. 

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