Monday, February 19, 2018

Inilah 9 Pabrik Uang Milik Raffi Ahmad Yang Selama Ini Jarang di Publikasi



1. Clothing Line RA Jeans

Raffi Ahmad hingga saat ini dikenal sebagai artis dengan bayaran mahal dan jam manggung padat. Meskipun begitu, sejak beberapa tahun terakhir, ia terus mengembangkan bisnisnya. Hal itu sebagai kesadaran dirinya jika karier di dunia entertainment tak selalu berjalan mulus.
Berbagai bisnis telah dibuka Raffi bersama sang istri Nagita Slavina. Gak heran jika keduanya disebut sebagai salah satu artis paling kaya di Indonesia. Apa saja bisnis Raffi dan Gigi? berikut daftarnya.

Bisnis clothing line memang menjadi pilihan banyak selebritis. Salah satu yang sukses berbisnis clothing line adalah Raffi Ahmad dan Nagita Slavina. Bisnis yang diberi nama RA Jeans ini sudah dirintis sejak pertengahan 2015 silam dan terus berjalan hingga sekarang. Dengan desain yang simpel dan elegan, RA Jeans laris di pasaran.

2. Raden Food

Raffi juga membuka bisnis bareng sahabatnya Denni yang diberi nama Raden Food sejak 2015. Raden Food menyediakan nasi lidah sapi yang bakal menggoyang lidah. Raden Food kini sudah punya beberapa outlet di Jabodetabek dan sekitarnya.



3. Bakmi RN

Tak berselang lama setelahnya, Raffi dan Nagita melaunching bisnis kuliner Bakmi RN. Dipilihnya bakmi karena keduanya ternyata sama-sama menyukai bakmi. Bakmi RN sudah punya sekitar 14 outlet di Jabodetabek dan sudah ada di kota besar seperti Medan, Bandung, Palembang, Makassar, Bogor, dan Surabaya.

4. RANS Probiotics Mask.

Raffi Ahmad pada 2016 meluncurkan bisnis masker yang diberi nama RANS Probiotics Mask. Harganya dibanderol antara Rp 200 ribu sampai Rp 560 ribu.

5. Rans Living

Setelah sukses berbisnis properti dan apartemen sebelum menikah dengan Nagita, Raffi akhirnya mengokohkan bisnisnya dengan melaunching bisnis furniture yang diberi nama Rans Living. Rans Living menyediakan berbagai perabotan, mulai dari sofa, meja, lemari, dan berbagai aksesori rumah lainnya.

6. Rans Card

Maret 2016, Raffi Ahmad dan Nagita bekerjasama dengan salah satu bank meluncurkan Rans Card, kartu debit untuk para fans Raffi-Gigi. RANS Card merupakan kartu member artis pertama di Indonesia yang memberikan banyak kemudahan. Dengan menggunakan kartu tersebut para fans bisa mendapatkan diskon lebih besar untuk berbagai produk dan makanan bisnis orangtua Rafathar ini.


7. Makanan Ringan

Selama 2016, Raffi Ahmad secara bertahap meluncurkan produk makanan ringan berbentuk keripik. Ada keripik talas dengan nama Chipstaro, keripik singkong dengan label King Kong, dan keripik dari bahan jagung bernama Kriptos. Mereka juga melaunching produk snack Makaroni Menjerit alias Mamen lho.
Berbagai makanan ringan tersebut sering banget dipromosikan di Instagram dan dibawa ke manapun mereka pergi.

8. Body Spray Raffi Nagita.

Maret 2016, Raffi Ahmad meluncurkan body spray dengan label Raffi Nagita BodySpray. Body spray ini dibuat untuk pria maupun wanita.

9. Show Room Motor Gede

Punya hobi motor gede, Raffi juga membuka show room moge. Bisnis ini sudah ia jalani sejak tahun 2009 sebelum menikah dengan Nagita Slavina. Nggak banyak yang tahu kalau sejak 2015 Raffi didaulat menjadi Ketua Umum komunitas moge Ridiss Bikerzz lho.



























Monday, November 10, 2008

Day Light Saving Time (DST) VS Eastern Standard Time (EST atau ET) VS WIB

Penguasaan konversi waktu Day Light Saving Time (DST), Eastern Standard Time (EST atau ET) dan WIB adalah sangat penting. Sebab berkaitan dengan penentuan jadwal buka dan tutup pasar forex dunia. Apalagi jika dikaitkan dengan strategi trading anda.

Berikut tabel konversi DST, EST, GMT dan WIB

Monday, October 13, 2008

Interview with a forex champion

Tony Marso from the USA participates in the Championship under the nickname of 'amelabs'. Before starting to trade forex, he was interested in equity and index options. His experience in the forex market started in 2004. In 2006 Tony learned about the automated trading. For Tony who by that time had been a software developer for over 24 years it was not so hard to start programming his own trading robots. Currently Tony is working on a forex strategy ebook.


You can be called our regular Participant. Last year your result was not a very good one. What lessons have you drawn from the ATC 2007?

I think if there's anything to learn from the previous contest it is that you can't predict what the market will be like when the contest starts. I designed my EA expecting the market to trend a certain way from the very beginning, but instead the trend reversed early on. My EA at the time was not designed to handle consolidation periods and failed terribly. Another thing I learned is that if you think your EA is aggressive and you enter a contest, you'll soon discover there are many people whose EA's are much more aggressive.

Can you call one or two names of last year Participants who had more aggressive EAs in your opinion?

Honestly, I thought I could win the contest with an ending equity over $30,000. So I designed my EA to try and capture steady profits that would cause it to end with a balance of just over $30,000. Clearly, anyone who ended with more equity than that was thinking much bigger than I was. Just about anyone who ended in the top 10 beat my projections for the contest. Most especially was "Better", who had over $100,000 at the end. I couldn't even imagine increasing my account ten-fold or more. In my mind it just wasn't possible without a tremendous amount of luck. By the end of the contest in 2007 I realized my thinking was faulty.

Please tell us a little about yourself, about your acquaintance with the Forex market.

I learned about forex one night while watching TV when I saw a commercial for a product that helps you trade forex. That was around 2004 I think. Before that I was trading equity options and index options. The idea of 24-hour trading was very appealing to me, so I attended some forex seminars, signed up for a demo account on FXCM and immediately started playing around with forex. After a few months I was convinced I could make it work, then proceeded to start trading live and drained my first 4 live accounts, each in a matter of days. However, that was not enough to stop me. I could see the potential and knew it was just a matter of trial-and-error until I could make it work for me.

Along the way, I came across some successful forex traders, but had no idea about automated trading. It wasn't until about 2006 that I learned about MetaTrader. At that point (being a software developer for over 24 years) I knew that I could make this work but it would take time. I tried several people's EAs with no success. I tried to write my own and had some success but they stopped working if the market conditions changed. It wasn't until a few months before the 2008 contest that I finally had an EA that I thought was worthy of trading a live account. After a few months of successful trading, I thought I'd enter the EA into the contest and see how long it would last.

What is your general trading strategy?

I do not like indicators. Most indicators just tell you what already happened. I use two moving averages to determine the overall trend and I use recent price action to determine when to enter and exit a trade. Although I consider myself somewhat of a scientist, I try never to apply a lot of complex math, indicators or oscillators to my strategy. In my mind I should be able to look at a naked chart: the 4 hr and the daily ones, with no indicators, and have an idea of where the market is going. I can look at the last complete bar on both charts and almost be able to decide if it's a good time to trade or not.

You are using the same Expert Advisor on a live account, though with lower risks. What results does it show now?

Actually, I'm not doing so well on my live account recently. Just today I took a big loss, even though the contest EA is doing very well. It will recover so I'm not worried. One thing I need to mention is that my EA (the Cross Trader) is not quite perfected. It cannot work for long term without human intervention. If left unattended for an extended time, it will die a horrible death unfortunately.

However, I did not design it for long term growth. Instead I designed it for what I call "explosive short term growth". If I use it and do not regularly make withdrawals from the account, then I will lose all of my money in a matter of months. But, for regular cashflow it is wonderful. As you can see, at the most aggressive settings it can quadruple your account in a matter of days. However, it can also drain your account just as quickly. My hope for the contest is that the downtrend on GBPJPY persists long enough for the Cross Trader to survive the entire contest.

How much do risks of your EA on a live account differ from those of a competing one?

In the contest I trade approximately 1 mini lot for every $500 equity I have in the account. In my live account I trade 1 mini-lot for every $2000 I have in my account. It is a factor of four increase in the contest.

As for now you haven't had any loss trade. Is result the same on a live account?

I have had losses on my live account. In fact, I drained the account one time right after making a withdrawal. Basically what I do is start out with a small amount of money, then let the EA double my account. Once the account is doubled, I take out my original deposit and now I'm trading with zero risk. I let the EA run until it looks like a reversal in the trend is coming, then I make a big withdrawal and let the EA continue. Recently, when I made the first withdrawal to eliminate my risk, the trend changed and the remainder of my account was drained. I lost nothing in actuality but I still consider it a loss.

You have written that your EA "places trades only when the probability of price reaching a specific target is very high". Could you please specify what targets you are talking about?

Unfortunately, I can't talk about it at this time because I am working on a forex strategy ebook that goes into that in detail. I can tell you, though, that I use a candlestick pattern to decide where to set my stop-loss and take-profit, and my take-profit is hit about 85% of the time under normal conditions. In times of extreme volatility such as this last week, my trades tend to hit the stop-loss with a profit instead of hitting my take-profit.

Why have you chosen trailing stops instead of fixed StopLoss and TakeProfit levels?

In my experience, setting a fixed stop-loss is a recipe for disaster. Instead, what I do is set an initial stop-loss so far out that it's not likely to ever be reached. Then I can withstand some very large drawdowns immediately after the trade is placed. Once the trade goes in my favor and I realize a specific candlestick pattern, I know it's time to start a trailing stop. As far as take-profit goes, I generally set that before stop-loss. The procession is this...

I place the trade at open of a new bar.
At the next open bar I set take-profit if I recognize a certain candlestick pattern.
If my trade is in profit at the 3rd bar but my take-profit isn't hit yet, then I start looking for opportunity to start a trailing stop. Again, this only happens if a specific candlestick pattern is recognized.
When is the "panic mode" activated? What conditions should be fulfilled for this? Has it ever triggered on your live account?

I have 2 panic modes that determine if it's time to close a trade. The first one says "close all trades if a bar closes inside of the two moving averages". The next one is riskier and says "close all trades if a bar is completely encapsulated within the two moving averages". This prevents what I call the suicide trade or trade-of-death from occurring, where I place a trade with a stop-loss of, say, 900 pips away and the price immediately goes against me all the way to hit that stop-loss or drain my account completely. As I mentioned before, if I don't intervene occasionally with my EA, that suicide trade will occur eventually.

Why were all your orders opened with the same initial StopLoss level equal to 197.42?

It is the price of the highest bar within a certain number of bars. I can't remember exactly what number of bars it is, but it is a fairly high number. Possibly over 100. This was just a function of the optimization to get the ideal parameters for trading live. Possibly if I ran the optimizer today it would produce a smaller number.

Why is it based on the Bid price, not Ask? Sell orders should be closed by Ask price, which is higher than Bid by the spread size.

Good question. This might have been an oversight on my part. I thought I was using Ask price for sell orders.

The TakeProfit level was not set at the moment of order opening. But then at a favorable price movement fixing levels were placed and 4 positions were closed by them. It is a rather rare method of order closing. How did it appear in the system? What do such TakeProfit levels mean and how are they calculated?

I believe that most traders know their exit point before they enter a trade. For an autotrader, this is not practical and definitely not necessary. The Cross Trader actually enters a trade at open of a new bar and sleeps for the duration of that bar, just to make sure I'm not setting take-profit prematurely. After at least one bar has completed, I can look at what happened and determine what is the most likely place to set my take-profit. Under ideal conditions, the Cross Trader will enter a trade at the beginning of a bar, set the take-profit at the start of the next bar, and be out of the trade before the third bar is completed. This is under ideal conditions.

Why have you chosen the GBPJPY pair?

I ran the optimizer with about 10 different pairs, mostly the majors and the most volatile. When all the results were available, GBPJPY stood out as the clear choice for the Cross Trader. There were other pairs such as GBPCHF and EURJPY that worked very well, but none came close to the results and consistency I had with GBPJPY.

Have you ever used multicurrency Expert Advisors?


I have not yet done so. However, I have been considering a version of Cross Trader that monitors several pairs at once. I might be working on that after the contest is over.

Thank you, Tony, wish you the best!
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SOURCE = http://championship.mql4.com/2008/news/401

Forex Broker Daily Chart Changeover Times

You might find that your chart data does not match some other users. This is caused by each broker having their own personal time to start/end each DAILY time frame chart candle.

Alpari: GMT +2
CFGTrader: GMT +2
CoesFX: GMT +3
Fibo Group: GMT +2
Forex LTD: GMT +2
FXCM GMT -4
FXDD: GMT +3
IBFX: GMT
Marketiva GMT
MetaQuotes: GMT +2
MoneyTec: GMT +3
Netdania Charts GMT -8
North Finance: GMT +2
Oanda GMT -5
Orion: GMT +4
Real Trade: GMT +2

Monday, September 15, 2008

Avoiding Failure in the Forex Market

Forex trading can be an incredibly profitable way to make a living. The combination of margin leverage and a low minimum amount required for trading make forex trading ideal for small investors.

However, despite the opportunities for profit, the majority of forex traders lose all of their money within a year.

Why? Well I have found six root causes that can explain why so many new forex traders fail:

1. Unrealistic Expectations. Too many novice traders read about how easy it is to make money trading forex and they just jump in and lose everything before they even know what hit them.

Forex trading is not a get rich quick scheme. It requires hard work and research to be successful. And even then, you cannot expect every trade to be a winner. Even the best traders lose on trades. The key is knowing when to cut your losses and focus on the winners.

2. Not doing enough research. Forex trading is easy to learn, but difficult to master. Experienced traders make it seem so easy, but predicting currency prices is a complex endeavor. And as a small investor you are at a disadvantage. Large financial institutions have resources that you don't. They may have an entire staff analyzing the most recent economic indicators while you just have yourself. You must be prepared to spend some solid time learning before you can expect to win big.

3. Gambling instead of investing. If you think you can beat the market without doing research and just picking currency trades based on a hunch, good luck. I've seen people do this and they usually pick a few winners and make some short-term profits, but in the end they just get slaughtered.

4. Lack of focus. Depending on which broker you use, there are likely dozens of currencies you can trade. But when you are just starting out, think small. Pick a few of the most popular currencies, such as the US Dollar, the Japanese Yen, and the Euro, and focus exclusively on them. The more currencies you trade, the more data you will have to analyze in order to spot trends. Better to know a few currencies really well than to know just a little about each.

5. Not having a trading system. There are literally hundreds, if not thousands, of different trading systems available. Some you will have to pay for, but many are free. Choose a system that is right for you based on your capital, your goals, and your personality. Without a system, you might as well be throwing darts.

6. Not sticking to your system. Having a trading system is not enough, you have to follow it through good times and bad. This is easier said than done. Its easy to get greedy and go for the big score or get nervous and get out too soon. You must follow your system to determine both entry and exit points. If you ignore them you risk missing out on a big upswing or being stuck in a trade as it goes sour.

The best forex traders know that knowing when to get out of a trade is even more important than knowing when to get in.

Sunday, August 31, 2008

A Successful Currency Trader

Your success as a Forex trader is measured primarily by your commitment to studying the markets, learning trading signals, being patient, and waiting until good trades make themselves known. It is also important to manage your money by the amount of lots you trade and where you place the stop losses.

Avoid comparing yourself to other currency traders and measuring the outward results of your efforts against theirs. Remember that traders have different styles and will make money at different paces in different times. Your responsibility is to develop your trading skills so you can make correct trading decisions. As you are learning you will have losses. You should not, however, become discouraged; discouragement will weaken your trading ability and cloud your judgment. You want to keep your expectations high. If you lower your expectations, your effectiveness will decrease, your desire will weaken, and you will have greater difficulty making good trades.

You can know you have become a successful Forex trader when you:

Feel in tune with the market.
Love to trade and take the profits the market wants to give.
Obey trading rules with exactness.
Live so your body and mind are rested and healthy.
Trade effectively every day, do your best to seek knowledge, learn, and improve.
Help to build up other traders wherever you go.
Warn people of the consequences of poor trading and money management practices.
Teach and serve other traders.
Help other traders at every opportunity, whether or not you will be paid for helping.

Types of Exits

When exiting a trade, you can do so under four different assumptions. In the best of worlds, exit technique number one is the profit target. Exit technique number two is the trailing stop, which comes into play when the market is starting to move against you after you have accumulated an open profit. Number three is the stop loss for the occurrences when the trade goes against you right off the bat. Finally, you also can exit with a time-based stop, possibly in combination with any of exit techniques one to three. The time based stop is setting a time like at end of the day or when you leave for work etc.

Just a note:

A “margin call” in not an exit strategy.