Hello @Iwamoto then I'll add my "trader mustard" as well 😁
I find $DLO and other players in the sector very interesting and it's also on my watchlist. But as a trader, I always look at the order flow, and that is currently preventing me from buying, even though I see long-term potential.
The price is currently at the upper edge of the volume (VA area), I ask myself the question, what is currently new, why should the volume on the market suddenly be higher? In the short term, I would rather take a short bet (as I said, this is the trader view).
https://www.tradingview.com/x/SwaZbOCM/
I continue to wait patiently on the sidelines
I find $DLO and other players in the sector very interesting and it's also on my watchlist. But as a trader, I always look at the order flow, and that is currently preventing me from buying, even though I see long-term potential.
The price is currently at the upper edge of the volume (VA area), I ask myself the question, what is currently new, why should the volume on the market suddenly be higher? In the short term, I would rather take a short bet (as I said, this is the trader view).
https://www.tradingview.com/x/SwaZbOCM/
I continue to wait patiently on the sidelines
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11
•2Semana
@TomTurboInvest at what price in $ would you buy? So long?
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@Multibagger For a first tranche, I would wait for the VWAP, which is currently in the $12.50 range.
If you have no pressure to buy, then you can also wait and see whether the price falls back into the 10-9$ range.
As I said, these are all probabilities based on the past order flow; things can turn out quite differently, such stocks are often news-driven, and DLO has often experienced swings in this respect. The next figures will be published in March, until then DLO will remain on my WL.
A short-term run-up to $16 is also possible, which for me would then be an entry on a short bet - I recently got involved in shorting, but as usual only with short sales of shares - IKBR is doing well.
If you have no pressure to buy, then you can also wait and see whether the price falls back into the 10-9$ range.
As I said, these are all probabilities based on the past order flow; things can turn out quite differently, such stocks are often news-driven, and DLO has often experienced swings in this respect. The next figures will be published in March, until then DLO will remain on my WL.
A short-term run-up to $16 is also possible, which for me would then be an entry on a short bet - I recently got involved in shorting, but as usual only with short sales of shares - IKBR is doing well.
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22
•2Semana
@TomTurboInvest Thank you for your assessment. Very interesting as always. One question about short selling, if the price falls below a certain level, do you have to buy the stock at that price and/or can you probably still sell the option at a loss? This is probably only possible in blocks of hundreds?
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•@Iwamoto I do not buy options but sell borrowed shares (real short selling). In principle, it doesn't matter whether I go long or short, I buy or sell as much of a share as I want.
This means that as long as the share price falls, I continue to make profits, which I then hedge in the same way as with long trades, only in reverse with a fixed take profit, or I "trailer".
When short selling, hedging against rising prices is essential, i.e. with every sale (short sale) I simultaneously place a stop buy order (via bracket order), which closes the position again if the share rises above a certain value.
Theoretically, I could trade without hedging until the margin call comes. But I avoid this by setting my stop buy from the outset. This is the difference between short and long trades. With long trades the loss is limited by the position size, with short trades the loss can theoretically be infinite, so you MUST hedge with a stop buy.
This means that as long as the share price falls, I continue to make profits, which I then hedge in the same way as with long trades, only in reverse with a fixed take profit, or I "trailer".
When short selling, hedging against rising prices is essential, i.e. with every sale (short sale) I simultaneously place a stop buy order (via bracket order), which closes the position again if the share rises above a certain value.
Theoretically, I could trade without hedging until the margin call comes. But I avoid this by setting my stop buy from the outset. This is the difference between short and long trades. With long trades the loss is limited by the position size, with short trades the loss can theoretically be infinite, so you MUST hedge with a stop buy.
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33
•2Semana
@TomTurboInvest I have a question about short selling. There were a lot of short sales at $INT. What actually happens to the short sales now that the price has been suspended? They can no longer cover the shares that they sold short, can they?
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@Multibagger Good question, I don't have an answer. Could I ask IKBR support what happens in such a case 🧐
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11
•2Semana
Where do you trade the share? 🫣
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11
•2Semana
@BBob this purchase was processed via Flatex
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11
•@BBob I trade my day trades via Interactive Brokers, ideal for trading and thanks to the margin account you can trade in both directions
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11
•@Multibagger one more good $, then I'll be there with a first installment too
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