Image not available

1536x2048

GbjDf9jacAA-jjB.jpg

🧵 $5,000.00 Mathematical Hack for Japan's Stock Market

Hedon epicurea No. 16494419

I uncovered a glitch in Japan’s stock market and designed a financial model exploiting price velocity patterns.

The formula is based on data from Japanese actresses, singers, and neuroscience, yielding $5,000.00 USD so far. Though I’m keeping the formula secret, I’m excited to let bots handle trading while I focus on enjoying life.
https://youtu.be/T7kSma5J5rw

The picture is an actresse I used as source data in my neuroscience sociological data.

Image not available

1668x929

6445995334500.jpg

Anonymous No. 16494466

All these people are probably devised by rich people in order to get you to gamble on the stock market. Remember, in order for someone to win there must be someone that must lose.

https://youtu.be/kI4qhULFG2o

Image not available

299x168

images (4).jpg

Hedon epicurea No. 16494484

>>16494466
I thought so. That’s why I developed velocity-based triggers. The model sells when the market drops and buys when it rises. If you check the video, you’ll notice both types of trades in action.

To simplify, my models make money regardless of market conditions by harnessing neuroscience and sociological influences, expressed as velocity.

Picture is an example of avoiding possible market manipulation.

bodhi No. 16494617

>>16494419
I am an actual profitable trader and what you just said is nonsnse. If you are using a gap scanner to trade on momentum that has nothing to do with any particular market and damn sure doesnt have anything to do with actresses. There is no such thing as a market wide exploit, companies stocks do not move unison unless you are referring to some kind of index of like stocks from a market sector.

bodhi No. 16494621

ok I just watched the video, top kek.

Hedon epicurea No. 16494671

>>16494617
No, I don't use indicators for the models. I developed my own. Try to imagine thinking outside the box then, engineering models that are based on other factors.

In laymans, just because your brain can't process unconventional methods doesn't mean it's nonsense.

Anonymous No. 16495189

>>16494419
>I uncovered a glitch in Japan’s stock market and designed a financial model exploiting price velocity patterns.
Oh, are you the reason the financial market in Japan was kill, like a couple months ago?

Image not available

1024x1501

Innerfire.png

Anonymous No. 16495200

>>16494484
>The model sells when the market drops and buys when it rises. If you check the video, you’ll notice both types of trades in action.
Kek, you think you're the first one to think of this "top secret strategy"?
I am the master of buy high sell low just so you know. I was probably running that hustle while you were learning how to walk.


>>16494617
>I am an actual profitable trader
I bet you don't even smoke crack or roll blackjack, and it shows.

Image not available

183x275

images (5).jpg

Hedon epicurea No. 16496090

>>16495200
I'm the only one to be drunk 24/7 while doing it. Beat that!

Image not available

480x270

vnB6WQ.gif

Sociologist No. 16496553

>>16495189
No. My financial models operate on human neuroscience not policy. If policy is bad, I stil mae profit and vice versa.

Anonymous No. 16496969

>>16496553
Do your financial models only consist of passive if/then's?
Or does it involve a more "hands on" approach requiring the employment of other models/methods to help the system achieve the model's passive if/then conditions?


>Own company(or just buy X shares of said company)
>If share.price > 100, then sell X% of owned shares, else
>If share.price < 10, then sell X% of owned shares
If a company's shares consistently traded shares with enough price volatility on a reasonable timeframe,
then yeah, you could probably just do that with a passive model and could just forget about it.
If that isn't producing the level of success you're looking for due to things like slow trading volume,
too much predictable stability with very little price fluctuations, or having to compete against others' passive models,
then it might be advatangeous to "encourage" a desired price direction through subtle/blatant "interactions";
the type of 'interactions' which extend beyond observing the graphs on an exchange. ifuknowutimean

Anonymous No. 16496970

>>16496090
Let me know when you reach 24/7/12/XX

Image not available

500x720

202406040000123-w....jpg

Sociologist No. 16497082

>>16496969
No. It's using phenom that most can't perceive then, translating to 3D. I'm actually a publicly recorded esp; not a psychic. Basically, I'm very good at quantum patterns. My first business at 17 made profit by manipulating photons.


It's complex. Imagine 4th dimensional math translated to 3 dimensional math. So, it's extra dimensional factors that have to be converted to 3D logic protocols. I've avoided using trading bots because of this but, for the past period, I've found ways to convert my math. It's still less profitable and efficient but 7/10 isn't that bad vs me manually doing it at 9/10. So a picture of Ayame Tsutsui to you is just a pretty girl. To me, I can identify patterns correlated with the Japanese Stock market.

My newest glitch is Tesla, Diney and Amd. So far 8/10 win rate for all 3. New video coming soon. I believe I should be able. To trade drunk if I'm right.

Anonymous No. 16497407

>>16494419
I want to lick her tummy and p*****

Then passionately, lovingly, paint her face with my sperm

Sociologist No. 16497918

>>16497407
She's beautiful.

Google image search Arisa Komiya Gravure. Trust, you'll be satisfied.