Eve online station trading bot guide german
At the top of the market window, there are four tabs, called 'Details', 'Groups', 'My Orders' and 'Corporation Orders'.
When selecting a group of items, the Groups tab will show a list of the different items in that group. Along with a description of the item, this tab will show the best price for which the item is available in this region, the quantity of that item available in this region, if you have the prerequisite skills trained, what the fitting requirements are if it concerns modules, what the bonuses are if it concerns ships, as well as other details depending on the type of item.
The Orders tab is an overview of the different buy orders and sell orders you have currently outstanding. It will also show you the amount of orders you have up, next to the total amount of active orders you can have available. This window, which is a identical copy of the 'My Orders' window in your wallet, is mainly used to keep track of orders that you might have forgotten you had outstanding, to check how many orders you can still set up, to quickly view the value of your orders, the amount of ISK in escrow and to roughly calculate your net worth.
Orders that have been made using the funds from a corporate wallet can be found in the Corporation Orders tab. You will only see orders here if you have the correct roles in a corporation that allow you to set up orders using the corporate wallets. With the right permission settings, you can also see corporate orders belonging to other members of your corporation. The Details tab shows the different orders that other pilots and traders have set up.
When station trading, this will be your most used tab. In this window, there are two separate tabs, called 'Market Data' and 'Price History'. In the Market Data tab, you can see the orders that have been set up by other pilots, traders and corporations, as well as your own.
For each sell order and buy order, you can view the price, the quantity, its exact location, the range of the market order as well as the expiration time. In order to easily distinguish between orders belonging to you and orders belonging to someone else, it is recommended that you enable highlighting of your orders right away, by clicking 'Mark my orders' in the option menu that can be opened by clicking on the little cog in the upper right corner of the details tab.
You will always want to have the Sellers and Buyers windows sorted by price. This way, the Sellers window shows the lowest sell order the top, whilst the Buyers window shows the highest buy order on top.
This way, you have the most relevant data sorted properly for when it comes to station trading, as you will be competing with the highest buy order and the lowest sell order in these lists. The expiration time is quite important as well. This indicates when the order was last updated. All sell orders and buy orders have a set expiration. Modifying and updating an order will reset it's expiration time, which gives you a good indication of the competition you're facing when it comes to this item.
Orders are set up with expiration times of 1 day, 3 days, 1 week, 2 weeks, 1 month or usually 3 months. This means that when an item was updated an hour ago, it will have an expiration time of of one the of set times, minus one hour. In practice, this means that any order with an expiration time of more than 89 days was last updated today.
These can be considered actively competing orders. When searching for items that you would want to trade in, the Price History tab is a very important source of information. This tab consists of historical information either in the format of a table, or visualized in a graph. Both the graph and the table have information that can help you in deciding if the item you're looking at is worth investing in.
Show Table gives you an historical overview of the item's highest, lowest and average price on every single day. It also gives you the amount of trades that have been made that day, in the 'Orders' column, as well as the amount of items that have been traded, in the 'Quantity' column.
The quantity is an interesting statistic as it translates into trade volume. For station trading, it is important to know what the trade volume of your item is, as it gives you a hint of how quickly you may expect to have your buy order filled, or your sell order completed. It gives no information on how many items are being bought from sell orders or sold to buy orders, it is simply a sum of both.
The 'Low', 'High' and 'Avg. For most items that are suitable for trading in, the low price column will indicate the highest price at which someone has sold the item to a buy order, giving a good indication of the buy order value for that particular day.
The high price column gives the value of the highest price that has been paid for the item on that day, which is usually a sell order. When these two values are exactly the same, it usually means that items were only sold. Assuming this information, the median average column can give us an insight into the balance of items being sold to buy orders and bought from sell orders. If the average price is very close to the high price, likely more items are being bought off sell orders.
When the average price is very close to the low price, more items are being sold to buy orders. For station trading, an average price that is balanced between these two values is an indication of an item that's being sold to buy orders after often as being bought from sell orders. In addition to the price history table, there is also the price history graph, which can be opened by clicking the Show Graph button on the lower part of the market window.
It contains much of the same information as is displayed in the table, but visualized in a way that makes it easier to judge the price developments over time. On the left vertical axis, you can see the price range of the item, in ISK. This is what the line graphs are based on. The right vertical bar display the trade volume in units of items, used to draw the light green bar graph below.
The horizontal axis displays time, which you can change to values ranging between 5 days and 1 year. The line graph itself consists of two lines, one dark red bar, a set of yellow dots and thin dark yellow vertical bars. Each of these different indicators can be enabled and disabled by right clicking the graph window. The red line is called the 5 day moving average. This line displays the average trading price of the item, calculated over a period of 5 days. The green line is called the 20 day moving average.
This line displays the average trading price of the item, calculated over a period of 20 days. The dark red bar is called the Donchian channel. This indicator is formed by taking the highest price of the daily maximums and the lowest price of the daily minimums of the last n days, then marking the area between those values on the graph.
It is a useful indication of the volatility of a market price. If a price is stable the Donchian channel will be relatively narrow. If the price fluctuates a lot the Donchian channel will be wider. The yellow dots in the graph represent the median price of an item, for that day.
This means that it takes all the prices at which the item has been traded at, and takes the middle one. This is not the average mean price. The dark yellow bars indicate the daily minimum and maximum prices. Short bars indicate a small difference in price, whereas long bars indicate a large margin between the highest and the lowest price at which the item was traded on that day. After having studied and becoming familiar with the the market window, and queuing up skills, even whilst you're still training, you can start investing your ISK into items.
Browsing for items and picking the right ones is where an experienced station trader differentiates themselves from newcomers. Experience in trading and knowledge about different mechanics in EVE Online means profit, when it comes to this stage. If you understand the market and how activities of other players influence the market, you will have an easier time to browse and pick out the items you want to invest in.
Alternatively, you can use the browse menu in the market window to check every single item available, though this will take a considerable amount of time. There are thousands to tens of thousands of items available on the market, and going through all of them is a lot of work. Either way, when you look at an item, there are certain criteria you have to keep in mind when judging whether or not the item is profitable enough for you trade in. Likely the most important criteria for choosing an item is the profit margin.
Your profit margin can be estimated by checking the difference between the lowest sell order and the highest buy order that are currently already up. The true profit margin is dependent on the price you end up paying for the item when it is sold to your buy order, and the actual amount of ISK you get when your sell order is completed. Since you are are likely going to be updating your orders because of competition, your buy order's value will be higher than the current highest buy order.
The same goes for your future sell order. The true profit margin also takes taes and fees into account. Once you get at the point where your taxes and fees are lowered by skills and standings, you have more ISK to invest, and you have more experience in trading, you can rely on your own estimations about initial margins. Whilst an item's initial profit margin might seem very attractive, you should not invest in the item until you have taken a look at the trade volume.
The trade volume is the amount of items that have been traded, meaning bought as well as sold, for a particular time frame. The easiest way of getting an indication of an item's trade volume is having a look at the price history table. The exact number of units that has been traded during a single day is listed in that column.
In the graph view, the quantity is displayed as a bar graph, giving you an easier insight in the historical development of the trade volume. For a lucrative item the trade volume is high, but always relative to the price of the item and in balance with your capital and number of market orders available to you. All else equal, an item with a decent profit margin but with a rather good trade volume is better to invest in than an item with double the profit margin, but only a quarter of its trade volume.
When looking deeper into the market behavior of a particular item, the trade balance is another indicator that can help you make your investments more profitable. A well balanced item is one that is being sold to buy orders in the same quantity as its being bought from sell orders. As the quantity column gives us the trade volume, it does not distinguish between buy orders and sell orders being fulfilled. You can get a good indication of this when looking at the average price, in the price history table.
This median value is the middle price of all trades from that day, separating the higher half of the values from the lower half of the values. When choosing items that have a lower trade volume, historical price development starts becoming something that you need to take into account.
You have to verify that the current price is not too inflated. This can be done most easily by checking the price history graph, and having a look at the price developments over the last 7 days to a month, depending on trade volume.
What you want to avoid is setting up a buy order for an item when the price is at its peak. This could result in you being stuck with an item that might have had a good margin at the time, but you can't sell if the price drops dramatically. Predicting future prices in the market is tough, but in general, highly valued items with low trade volumes have a cyclical price development. When the profit margin is high, a lot of new traders enter the market.
All those traders updating their orders often results in a lower profit margin and falling prices. Once the margin is so low that new competitors are no longer interested in entering the market, the prices will slowly rise again.
A key criteria for picking items is to see how many other traders are already competing in a particular market. Whilst an item with a great profit margin might seem appealing, having to deal with dozens of other traders who are after the same profit margin could make it not viable for you to enter this market. The easiest way to determine how many competitors there are is to have a look at the market data window.
If you are trying to enter a market, have a look at the currently active buy orders for the item. At the basic level, you can simply have a look at how many buy orders are already there, which gives a rough estimate of how many other traders are in the market. More specifically, you can have a look at how many buy orders have had their prices updated in a specific time frame.
This can be done by having a look at the expiration time. Modifying and updating an order will reset it's expiration time. If the trade volume of an item is low, but there are many different buy orders that have been updated in the last 4 hours, there chances are very low that your buy order will be fulfilled, unless you update it very regularly throughout the day.
Looking at how other traders operate may give you information about the state of a market. Whilst the average trader would keep their secrets to themselves, some information is available for all to see, as long as you know what to look for. One way of trying to gauge if a market is safe to enter, or very risky to enter, is to see the balance between buy orders and sell orders.
In a volatile or cyclical market, the balance between competitors putting up sell orders and competitors putting up buy orders can give you a clue as to how the price may develop in the future. If an item has a significantly higher number of buy orders than sell orders, this indicates that many other traders consider the market conditions to be favorable enough for them to enter this market.
If you can handle the amount of competition, you could consider entering the market as well. On the other hand, if there are significantly more sell orders than buy orders, this indicates that there are already a good number of traders in this market, and fewer new ones are entering this market.
As traders would like to get their profit as soon as possible in order to invest it again, they are likely eager to get rid of their sell order. This puts pressure on the sell prices, often causing them to fall over time. This is an indication of an unhealthy market and investing in the item would be considered risky. Whilst competition may influence the price in the shorter term, non-trading pilots can have an influence on the price of an item in the longer term.
If an item gains popularity, it is likely set to increase in price until the supply of this item catches up. If the supply is static, the price may steadily increase over time.
Having a look at the price history graph, set to medium to longer term, can give you an idea how the price may develop over longer periods of time. If you plan on investing in a particular item, you can choose to sell it off for more, simply by waiting for the price to increase over time. If an item falls out of favor, for whatever reason, it's likely a good idea to get out of that market as quickly as possible.
Whilst the theory might be more clear to you now, it is important to put these into practice. Here are some examples that outline the process of going judging an item based on the information are now able to extract from the market window. At the writing of this guide, this was the market information as available in game. It will have been outdated by the time you read this.
This is a very appealing margin and would give a great return on your investment, assuming you are able to buy the item at the current buy order price, and sell it at the current sell order price. This item is not traded that often.
On a bad day, this item may change hands 3 to 4 times. On a good day, it is traded 12 times. For an item of this value, that's not a whole lot. Going by the values in the table and the median day price in the graph, there is a fair balance between the amount of items sold to buy orders and the amount of items being bought from sell orders. As this is a looted module that can't be produced this is usually, but not always, the case.
The item's price seems to have stabilized in the last month. While its current appearing to be rising and the profit margin having increased recently, the item seems safe to invest into. With the buy order price so low, the item's sell price would have to drop to a low that hasn't been reached in the last three months.
At present, this seems unlikely to happen. Going by just the last four hours, 89 days and 20 hours or more, we see that 9 different buy orders have been updated. For an item that doesn't even sell trade 9 a day on average, this is a lot of competition. Whole days might go by, even when you update regularly, where you will not be successful in getting your buy order fulfilled.
Compared to the amount of buy orders, there are very few sell orders. This means that the price is likely to continue rising in the future. If you do you manage to fill a buy order, you will not have too much competition selling the item off again. One could even invest in buying up existing sell orders and relisting them for more. The item's steady price as well as the steady quantity traded indicate that this item's popularity is neither rising or falling.
There is no real risk from this indicator. Let's look at the 'Augmented' Warrior as an example and go by the previously listed criteria. The margin of this item looks phenomenal, as you would double your investment if you are able to buy the item at the current highest buy order price, and sell it at the current lowest sell order price.
The trade volume is a bit on the low side, for an item of this value. It's suffered a lot in the last few weeks. The balance is solidly in favor of pilots purchasing this item, rather than selling it to buy orders. With a margin this high, more people would try to get it sold through a sell orders, rather than selling to the existing buy orders. Once you have one of these, getting rid of it won't be much of an issue. However, getting one in the first place will be tougher.
The price as been significantly inflated in recent days, going from an average of about 12 - 13 million ISK to well over 20 million since about a week. This means that investing in a lot of these items will be a risk, as prices may fall again. Considering the trade balance and the trade volume, the competition for this item is quite harsh.
There's only a few traders with sell orders up, meaning that the price will probably not crash very soon. There is a lot of competition for buy orders though, this will push the buy order price well above the historical sell order price. It is recommended to just buy one and sell it off again, before putting up a new buy order.
The inflated prices are driving customers away from the item, having them seek out alternatives. Kampf, Handel und Unterhaltung in einem persistenten Universum. I hope you like dying. This guide is intended to assist you in getting yourself acclimated to life in Test Alliance Please Ignore, and to Eve Online in general. EVE Online is a massively multiplayer online roleplaying game that offers limitless potential to discover, explore and conquer an amazing science fiction universe.
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