While I enjoy your videos, and have learnt a lot over the years, the swirly thing between segments is really unpleasant on the eyes. Perhaps its my age, but your videos would be much easier to watch without them.
Death and taxes they say you can be certain about but there is also one other big one that we all have and that is loss. Whether it be loved ones, pets (which could come under death whichever way you look at it) or things you own.
Loss, the one thing in life that doesn't discriminate. It doesn't care if you're a millionaire or a struggling artist, it can hit you just the same. So, let's all raise a glass to the unpredictable nature of life and try to make the most of every moment we have.
The thing is by that graph if you buy in straight after a goal the graph goes back down slower for 5 minutes and then starts dropping faster after that. Wouldn’t it be wiser to get in 5 minutes after the goal was scored as you will pick up the bit where the price drop speeds up?
There are an almost infinite number of ways to trading in this manner. So how you do so is pretty much a personal preference. But look at each match and scenario has it’s benefits and disadvantages.
How do you gauge "whether its realistic" to hold your position to get to profit? Plus the match you traded the goal rating was 3.35. I would've thought you would trade the first 10 mins under 2.5 goals if the rating was below 2.5 goals.
When the match is underway you look at how the match is being played and the statistics behind it to determine if the position is madness, or sensible. Matches with higher forecasted goals, decay quicker.
Is there function to cash out If the odds go up by a certain amount of ticks? I realise the odds go down as time ticks away, but they do fluctuate up sometimes, especially when the market thinks a goal is coming, so it'd be good to have a function to automatically cash out if the odds go up by however many ticks we choose as a safety feature?
There is, but it’s not something I’d recommend. People tend to pull orders quickly if they think something could happen and that may actually accidentally trigger a stop loss.