DAY TRADING CAREER : DAY TRADING

DAY TRADING CAREER : FOREX MINI DEMO ACCOUNT.

Day Trading Career


day trading career
    day trading
  • Day trading refers to the practice of buying and selling financial instruments within the same trading day such that all positions are usually closed before the market close for the trading day. Traders that participate in day trading are called active traders or day traders.
  • (Day traders) come to market each day flat (no position) and leave the day flat. Their behavior is very short-term and often emotional.
  • (Day traders) hold stocks for minutes to hours making numerous trades each day usually with a cursory understanding of the companies they trade.  These investors rely on timing and minimize risk by buying and then immediately selling.
  • The buying and selling of securities on the same day, often online, on the basis of small, short-term price fluctuations
    career
  • Move swiftly and in an uncontrolled way in a specified direction
  • move headlong at high speed; "The cars careered down the road"; "The mob careered through the streets"
  • the particular occupation for which you are trained
  • the general progression of your working or professional life; "the general had had a distinguished career"; "he had a long career in the law"

J.D. Drew
J.D. Drew
David Jonathan Drew (born November 20, 1975 in Valdosta, Georgia) is a Major League Baseball right fielder for the Boston Red Sox. He is a left-handed hitter, and began his major league career in 1998 with the St. Louis Cardinals. College Drew attended Florida State University, where he played under head coach Mike Martin. At Florida State, he was the winner of the 1997 Dick Howser Trophy, the 1997 Golden Spikes Award, and was named the 1997 Collegiate Baseball Player of the Year, the 1997 Sporting News Player of the Year, and was a consensus All-American (1997). He also was named the 1997 ACC Player of the Year. He was a 1996 member of Team USA. Drew was First Team in 1996, Freshman All-American in 1995 and was named to the College World Series All Tournament Team in 1995. He was the first player in college baseball history to hit 30 home runs and steal 30 bases in the same season. He set a Florida State record by batting .455 in 1997 while managing to become one of only three players in college baseball history to have 100 hits, 100 runs and 100 RBI. During his college career, Drew broke 17 school and conference records. [edit] Professional career [edit] 1997: Drafted by the Philadelphia Phillies Drew was the second overall pick in the 1997 Major League Baseball Draft by the Philadelphia Phillies. Drew and his agent Scott Boras elected not to sign with the Phillies, sticking to their guarantee that they would not sign for less than $10 million. The Phillies had no plan to pay an unproven player this amount of money, and despite Boras' warnings, drafted Drew nonetheless. Consequently, Drew ended up playing for the St. Paul Saints of the independent Northern League. [edit] 1998-2003: St. Louis Cardinals After playing for St. Paul in the 1997 season, Drew was selected fifth overall in 1998 by the St. Louis Cardinals. He signed a contract and blew through the minor leagues, hitting .316 through 26 games with the Triple-A Memphis Redbirds. He was called to the big club with the rest of the 40-man roster and made his debut on September 8, 1998, the night Mark McGwire broke Roger Maris's single-season home run record. His first at bat, in the 6th inning, ended in a strikeout, and he finished the night 0-for-2. He would heat up, however, going 15-for-36 (.417) during 1998 with five home runs. On August 10, 1999, in Drew's first appearance at Veterans Stadium in Philadelphia, he was booed loudly, and even had "D" batteries thrown at him by two fans.[1] Drew struggled to stay healthy, landing on the disabled list every season he played in St. Louis. Also, St. Louis manager Tony La Russa apparently had concerns about Drew's effort. In his book Three Nights in August, Buzz Bissinger mentions La Russa's frustration with Drew's lack of passion. La Russa tells Bissinger that it seems Drew has decided to "settle for 75%" of his talent, in large part because of his enormous contract.[2] [edit] 2004: Atlanta Braves Drew was traded to the Atlanta Braves in December 2003, where he had the best season of his career while finally managing to stay healthy. In 2004, he displayed excellent power, patience, and defense hitting .305 with 31 home runs, 118 walks, and 96 RBI, finishing 6th in the MVP voting. [edit] 2005-2006: Los Angeles Dodgers In December 2004, Drew signed a five-year, $55 million dollar contract with the Los Angeles Dodgers, which included an escape clause after the second year. Roughly halfway through the 2005 season, Drew's season was again cut short after being hit on the wrist by a pitch from Arizona Diamondbacks' pitcher Brad Halsey. On September 18, 2006, Drew was part of only the fourth ever set of back-to-back-to-back-to-back home runs with fellow Dodgers Jeff Kent, Russell Martin, and Marlon Anderson. In 2006, Drew exercised his contract option clause, forgoing $33 million over the next 3 years to become a free agent. The Dodgers' General Manager Ned Colletti said in a teleconference that he was "surprised how it came down. Everything we had heard, everything that had been written led us to believe the player loved being here."[3] This was especially a surprise since a few days before, Drew had told an LA Times columnist on how happy he was in LA and that he was looking forward to the upcoming 2007 season. [edit] 2007-2008: Boston Red Sox On January 25, 2007, Drew officially signed a five-year contract with the Red Sox worth $70 million. Drew's revised contract has a clause that allows the Red Sox to opt out of Drew's five year contract after three or four years if Drew has extensive injuries due to a previously existing problem in his right shoulder. For most of the 2007 season, Drew struggled offensively and spent time on the DL (due to a hamstring injury) as well as taking time off from the team to attend to his son's health. Many questioned the value of his large salary due to his mediocre numbers and ordinary defense, but results began to come late into
Trade Card -- George Curtis Beverly, Jeweler
Trade Card -- George Curtis Beverly, Jeweler
@ Fort Edward, New York. It's not clear what the logic was behind this vintage business advertisement. How does an image of a black cleaning lady (or so it appears to me) promote the selling of jewelry? I don't get it. The Aunt Jemima look isn't politically correct these days, but I guess that it was par for the course way back when. The Beverly in the advertisement is George C. Beverly -- a watch maker and jeweler. Born in Massachusetts in 1861, he was only nineteen years old and was supporting his widowed mother and unmarried thirty-four year old sister. George lost his first wife, Francis, in 1907. She was a mere forty years old at the time of her death and left behind a thirteen year old son, Dayton. He remarried. George (age 69) and his wife, May, were both still alive in the 1930 census. George, once the mayor of the Village of Fort Edward, outlasted everyone. At age 92, living in the Masonic Home and being visited by friends, he was described in the local paper as one of the town's best known citizens. This trade card was from early in George's career given the East Street address. He later moved his store to Broadway Street.

day trading career
Similar posts:
ac market forex
agora forex trading course
252 trading days
draft day trade
best forex trading companies
forex trading software
forex ira
dollar forex news
currency trading pairs