Radico Khaitan - inching up for a fresh breakout with promising volumes. The character of the chart is base formations and relaxing for a long before flying again.
A great formation in making.
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We still haven't got any signal of negation in the private banks' index & if the bearish H&S top has to be negated, the index has to move past 19950. Till then, it will be considered a minor pullback
Nifty Private Bank https://t.co/BwG1DKhhLc
Nifty Private Bank https://t.co/BwG1DKhhLc
I am watching a big bearish H&S top building up in Nifty Private Bank Index. Any breakdown will result in increased volatility in respective charts. For traders - definitely not a spot to be in. The index has to move beyond 19900 to negate the pattern. pic.twitter.com/IGFeyNrtQV
— The_Chartist \U0001f4c8 (@charts_zone) June 19, 2022
These high-volume selloff candles right before any -ve news always intrigue me. the same thing happened with Infosys before the whistleblower complaint was out & the stock gapped down. TV 18 & VTL were other examples.
Fresh case - RUPA https://t.co/nqq5nI1wLU
Fresh case - RUPA https://t.co/nqq5nI1wLU
Respect your stop losses in the stocks that have gone down today with heavy volumes even on a strong day.
— The_Chartist \U0001f4c8 (@charts_zone) March 17, 2022
VTL pic.twitter.com/3pJ9XngCDL
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I’m torn on how to approach the idea of luck. I’m the first to admit that I am one of the luckiest people on the planet. To be born into a prosperous American family in 1960 with smart parents is to start life on third base. The odds against my very existence are astronomical.
I’ve always felt that the luckiest people I know had a talent for recognizing circumstances, not of their own making, that were conducive to a favorable outcome and their ability to quickly take advantage of them.
In other words, dumb luck was just that, it required no awareness on the person’s part, whereas “smart” luck involved awareness followed by action before the circumstances changed.
So, was I “lucky” to be born when I was—nothing I had any control over—and that I came of age just as huge databases and computers were advancing to the point where I could use those tools to write “What Works on Wall Street?” Absolutely.
Was I lucky to start my stock market investments near the peak of interest rates which allowed me to spend the majority of my adult life in a falling rate environment? Yup.
Ironies of Luck https://t.co/5BPWGbAxFi
— Morgan Housel (@morganhousel) March 14, 2018
"Luck is the flip side of risk. They are mirrored cousins, driven by the same thing: You are one person in a 7 billion player game, and the accidental impact of other people\u2019s actions can be more consequential than your own."
I’ve always felt that the luckiest people I know had a talent for recognizing circumstances, not of their own making, that were conducive to a favorable outcome and their ability to quickly take advantage of them.
In other words, dumb luck was just that, it required no awareness on the person’s part, whereas “smart” luck involved awareness followed by action before the circumstances changed.
So, was I “lucky” to be born when I was—nothing I had any control over—and that I came of age just as huge databases and computers were advancing to the point where I could use those tools to write “What Works on Wall Street?” Absolutely.
Was I lucky to start my stock market investments near the peak of interest rates which allowed me to spend the majority of my adult life in a falling rate environment? Yup.