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Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Wall Street Insider Reveals Stock Market Trick That Spits Out Money!

By Lance Jepsen

The closing price is not equal to the opening price when it comes to trading in the stock market. You need to know that the closing price is much more important than the opening price. You are about to discover a little known truth that will have the stock market shooting out money like a broken ATM!

Let's begin.

The final consensus of value in a stock is reflected in its closing price. When people get off work, this is the price they look at. When they print their daily charts after market close, this is the price they see. The closing price is really important when it comes to the futures market. The settlement of trading accounts in the futures market depends on the closing price.

Professional traders trade throughout the day. Early in the day they take advantage of opening prices, selling high openings and buying low openings, and then unwinding those positions as the day goes on. Their normal mode of operations is to fade"trade against"market extremes and for the return to normalcy. When prices reach a new high and stall, professionals sell, nudging the market down. When prices stabilize after a fall, they buy, helping the market rally.

Amateur traders like you and I behave very differently. Amateurs like us usually trade at market open and then drop off as the day progresses. Most amateurs have to go to work and so they trade on the west coast at market open before work. They don't check the trade again until after work when they get home. Even traders on the east coast will sneak in a buy or sell at market open while at work and then not check their trading account again until the end of the day. At market close, the participants who are still trading are mostly professional traders.

Knowing this is a huge advantage! Why? Because it means that closing prices reflect the opinions of professionals. Look at any chart, and you will see how often the opening and closing ticks are at the opposite ends of a price bar. This is because amateurs and professionals tend to be on the opposite sides of trades. You want to trade with the professionals, not against them.

Let's say a stock you are long in goes up to its day's high at market open and then drops the rest of the day and finally closes near its day's low. You need to close out of your short term position. Why? Because this gives you a signal that professional traders are fading against your long position. - 23208

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