What Car Insurance Is The Right Type For You?

What Car Insurance Is The Right Type For You?

When it comes to deciding what car insurance is the right type for you, you will have to take certain factors into consideration. Of course whether your car is a brand new one will play a huge part in whether you have any choice in the matter, a car over £5,000 will mean that you dint have an option. However if you have bought an older car or a second hand one then you do have options, these are usually third party and third party fire and theft.

The internet can help you in many ways when it comes to helping you to decide which type of car insurance would be the most suitable for your needs, one of the biggest advantages it offers is the vast amount of information that can be gained on the different types of insurance. Once you have decided which type of car insurance is most suited to your needs then again the internet is the easiest and cheapest way to purchase your insurance.

Online insurance companies can and do offer you the cheapest deals on your car insurance, the most popular types of car insurance include fully comprehensive, which is the dearest, third party only and third party fire and theft. There are a lot of factors that have to be given consideration and these include the age and size of your car, your age and gender, younger people will have the highest premiums and how many years no claims bonus you have.

When deciding what type of car insurance you need all these and more have to be researched, it is imperative that you understand the policy you are taking out and what is and is not covered in it, even if you take out fully comp this doesn’t mean you are covered for all eventualities.

Jason Hulott is Business Development Director of Protection Insurance, an internet based insurance business dedicated to getting consumers the best rates and the best products. Visit our Car Insurance Directory.

When it comes to deciding what car insurance is the right type for you, you will have to take certain factors into consideration. Of course whether your car is a brand new one will play a huge part in whether you have any choice in the matter, a car over £5,000 will mean that you dint have an option. However if you have bought an older car or a second hand one then you do have options, these are usually third party and third party fire and theft.

The internet can help you …

Tag: Car Insurance, Motor Insurance

Online Trading: 7 Success Secrets

Online Trading: 7 Success Secrets

Getting ready to do some online trading? Get the facts on options and arbitrage trading before deciding on your trading technique. Join a live teleseminar at www.surefireonlinetradingsuccess.com. Here are some things to consider in preparing to trade: 1. What technique/vehicle will you use? A. Options B. Futures C. Forex D. Arbitrage E. Mutual Funds F. Stocks G. Penny Stocks H. Bonds 2. What is your required level of security?

A. Almost guaranteed success B. Minimal amount of loss when there is one C. High risk with high possible returns D. Moderate risk with moderate rewards 3. Determine your current goals. A. Steady immediate income stream B. Find the big up and coming stocks C. Stable Long term/future growth D. Instant big profits E. Slow but consistent increase 4. Determine how much time you will commit. A.

A couple of hours daily. B. A couple of hours weekly C. Have someone else manage your trades D. A combination of your time and someone else managing a portion of your portfolio. 5. How much money will you apply to your online trading? A. 10% of your gross income B. 10% of your net income C. 10% of your investment funds D. Other 6. How much money will you place in any trade? A. 2% of your total account B. 10% of your total account C. $1,000 D. $10,000 E. $25,000 F. Other 7. How will you manage your profits? A. Allow all of it to compound? B. Compound 10% of the profit and use the rest for living? C. Compound 50% of the profit and use the rest for living? D. Use all of it for living? E.

Other? Defining your plan before you begin online trading will make a huge difference in your results. Once you have defined your plan, stick with it. Discipline yourself to do exactly as you said. Set a certain date when you may revise the plan and then stick with the revised version. It’s best not to randomly vary your activity off the set plan. If you want the least risk, learn about options and arbitrage trading. There is fabulous software available these days to make arbitrage trading a cinch. It’s a great way to get your feet wet so to speak with the safest form of online trading.

About the Author

Juanita Bellavance coaches entrepreneurs on “How To Condition Yourself For Success.” Get the facts on options and arbitrage trading before deciding on your trading technique. Register for a current live teleseminar here: http://www.surefireonlinetradingsuccess.com Contact Juanita at Juanita@surefireonlinetradingsuccess.com

Online Trading: 7 Success Secrets   by Juanita Bellavance

Turtle Trading Explained

Turtle Trading Explained

One popular trading style that keeps on coming back from the dead with the regularity of the baddie in a horror flick is ‘Turtle Trading’. A swing trading style, the Turtle Trading system was devised by legendary trader Richard Dennis in order to show that great traders weren’t born, they could be ‘grown’, just like turtles in a Far East Turtle farm.

There are many websites offering courses in how to turtle trade, sometimes for thousands of dollars, some of them even run by people who are allegedly ‘ex-turtles’. This is frankly hilarious – the entire turtle system is available for free as a PDF download from www.originalTurtles.org and we here at www.traders101.com STRONGLY advise you to grab it and read it before you lash out any cash on a ‘course’. As far as we know, there is NOTHING to be learned from these expensive ‘courses’ that you can’t find for free in the excellent download, written by real Turtle traders who were trained by the great man himself.

There are also other systems just as good as turtle trading, such as the excellent dowstomper from free insight.net clone and dowstomper.com that don’t cost a cent. In order to help you decide whether turtle trading is for you, here’s a quick overview. First off, in 1983 when Dennis tried the scheme, it worked. It worked BIG TIME in fact, producing an AVERAGE 80% compounded over the four years of the trial. The turtle trading rules themselves were simple – the secret was the ability to STICK TO THE RULES!. This made it a mechanical trading system par excellence, and a good mechanical trading system, as you should know, is the key to consistency.

The turtle trading rules specified in detail what markets to trade, how to size a position properly, when to enter and exit, how to use stops to exit a losing position, how to exit a winning position, and some ancillary tactics on the buying and selling of large positions without alerting the market.

What to trade. The turtles traded futures (commodities, as they were known at the time). They traded all liquid futures markets except grains and meats. That included T Bonds, coffee, sugar, cotton, currencies, precious metals and oils. An individual trader could decide what he wanted to trade.

Position Sizing. The turtles liked to normalize their positions based on the underlying dollar volatility of the market – a common trick nowadays, but advanced for the 80s. This made the effective risk across markets similar, and allowed them to trade many markets in a similar way. Key to this is ‘N’ – the underlying volatility of a market. To calculate N, find the 20 day exponential MA of the ATR (true range). There’s a lot on Moving Averages over at www.traders101.com if you need a refresher. Having found N, the ‘Dollar Volatility’ is N x Dollars Per point. The S&P, for example, moves 50 bucks a point on the emini contract.

To create a turtle trading ‘unit’, you work out 1% of your equity, and divide by the dollar volatility. As you might have guessed, its a low risk strategy, as you need to be able to withstand extended drawdown periods to ‘stay in the game’. The ‘unit’ tells you how many contracts to trade, and still stay relatively safe. To further de-risk the system, each market had limits. No more than 4 units could be traded in a single market, for example.

After losing trades, turtles would reduce the effective equity, in order to scale back risk even further. Expand when you are winning, pull back when you are losing. But how did they know when to trade???

Entries. There were 2 breakout systems used by the turtles. The first used a 20 day breakout. The second used a 55 day breakout. A 20 day breakout is where the high or low exceeds the high or low of the preceding 20 days. They took the trade when it was offered – i.e. this was not an ‘end of day’ system. If an opening gap caused the breakout, the turtles would still take the trade, as the idea was they would be in it for some days, and a couple of points at the start didn’t matter. Personally, (and everyone at www.traders101.com agrees!) we never chase the gap. Obviously, the turtles traded both long and short. There were a couple of extra rules, such as ignoring a signal if the LAST breakout (whether the turtle took it or not) would have led to a winner. The 55 day breakout would then become the initiation point as a fail-safe on major moves. Full rules, are of course, available in the free download.

Stops. Turtle traders ALWAYS used stops. They defined the exit point BEFORE initiating a trade. Their positions could be so large that in order NOT to alert the market, ‘mental’ stops were used. No trade could carry more than 2% risk. This means a stop would be 2 x N away from the position.

Exits. Most breakouts do NOT result in trends. Most turtle trades, therefore, ended in losses. The winners therefore had to be BIG to cover the losers, and they were. The first exit rule was to exit on a 10 day low or high against your position. The second method was an exit against a 20 day high or low. Simple, yes. But at the time it worked. The HARD part for most traders is hanging on grimly as profits evaporate over 10 or 20 days! The cultivation of THAT discipline was the real secret!

Does it still work? Sometimes. The market is well aware of the legions of would-be turtles avidly watching for 20 day breakouts. ‘Turtle Soup’ is a common maneuver whereby a big player ‘fakes’ a move up or down to trigger the turtle signals, then reverses it, stopping them out. Mean, ain’t it? Bottom line, if you want to turtle trade, you need to adapt the rules for your own personal style and hide your ‘footprint’ in the market.

About the Author

Trader Jack writes stock trading artices for www.traders101.com the free site helping traders get into profit fast
 
Turtle Trading Explained by Trader Jack

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