HDFC- how is it going now. Updated chart. Pure Price Action https://t.co/t8kbB7ExWF

HDFC - might pull back till 2620. A good risk-reward setup with a SL below 2560. I have entered with 2.5% capital only as large caps have a tendency of slow moves. pic.twitter.com/wpdGLPPLGe
— The_Chartist \U0001f4c8 (@nison_steve) August 5, 2021
More from The_Chartist 📈
although a must-have portfolio stock. Faced resistance right at the upper channel boundary. Volumes high. Any retracement back to the lower boundary will be an opportunity to accumulate. https://t.co/5uDsUXsbPP

IEX - the resistance turning support. Kindly review, please. @nishkumar1977 @suru27 @rohanshah619 @indian_stockss @sanstocktrader @BissaGauravB @RajarshitaS @PAVLeader @Rishikesh_ADX @VijayThk @Investor_Mohit @TrendTrader85 pic.twitter.com/7CCzmee5If
— Steve Nison (@nison_steve) December 18, 2020
This exercise will tell you about your inherent strengths & weaknesses. 👇👇
How to record a trading journal (TJ) & what to analyze?
— The_Chartist \U0001f4c8 (@charts_zone) December 14, 2021
What is in a TJ?
Buy Date
Stock Name
The time frame you analyzed (D/W/M)
Long/Short?
Buy Price
SL
Sell Price
Risk took (% of capital)
Sell date
No. of days held
P/L
P/L as % of capital
Buy Reason?
Invested capital/trade pic.twitter.com/WnrvmYuOV0
More from Hdfc
#Hdfc (3190++)
#Hdfcbank (1724++)
#Reliance (2834++)
#ITC (274++) these are "just min. targets"
& many more would move up significantly
@rlnarayanan https://t.co/iVYE1F7l6v

#Nifty 3rd is sub-dividing as in chart:
— Van Ilango (JustNifty) (@JustNifty) October 13, 2021
[1]st: 16396 - 17793 = 1397
[2]nd: 17793-17948-17453 - Irregular flat
[3]rd: 17453+1397=18850 OR
: 17453+1928=19381 OR
: 17453+2096=19549 OR
: 17453+2260=19713 OR
Nothing wrong in projecting till holds "17990"
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Why is this the most powerful question you can ask when attempting to reach an agreement with another human being or organization?
A thread, co-written by @deanmbrody:
Next level tactic when closing a sale, candidate, or investment:
— Erik Torenberg (@eriktorenberg) February 27, 2018
Ask: \u201cWhat needs to be true for you to be all in?\u201d
You'll usually get an explicit answer that you might not get otherwise. It also holds them accountable once the thing they need becomes true.
2/ First, “X” could be lots of things. Examples: What would need to be true for you to
- “Feel it's in our best interest for me to be CMO"
- “Feel that we’re in a good place as a company”
- “Feel that we’re on the same page”
- “Feel that we both got what we wanted from this deal
3/ Normally, we aren’t that direct. Example from startup/VC land:
Founders leave VC meetings thinking that every VC will invest, but they rarely do.
Worse over, the founders don’t know what they need to do in order to be fundable.
4/ So why should you ask the magic Q?
To get clarity.
You want to know where you stand, and what it takes to get what you want in a way that also gets them what they want.
It also holds them (mentally) accountable once the thing they need becomes true.
5/ Staying in the context of soliciting investors, the question is “what would need to be true for you to want to invest (or partner with us on this journey, etc)?”
Multiple responses to this question are likely to deliver a positive result.