Archive for ‘futures trading’

Do you trade the Emini Using Stops

By , 25 June, 2009, No Comment

I hope so.

I think it is important for traders to use specific targets that address their loss tolerance and profit targets.  There is a temptation to ride losses too long in hopes that the market will come back to a break even.  This can be a tragic strategy and result in unacceptable losses when trading the emini contracts.

Why would people ride their losses?

Emotional involvement in trades is generally the culprit in any kind of trading, and especially for scalpers, as the markets swings in intraday trading, sometimes violently.   It’s is this emotional involvement in a trade that accounts for a tremendous number of trading losses.  It’s more than difficult to accept a trade as a loser and move on.  Say,  for example, you get what you consider to be a perfect setup and take a trade, and most perfect setups (whatever they may be) have resulted in handsome profits.  The assumption, then, is that every trade where that setup is utilized will result in a winner, sooner or later.  Bad strategy.   There is no foolproof trade, and every trade (no matter how nice the setup) results in a loss.

It’s difficult for me, and most traders, to accept that a certain trade has resulted in a loss.  After all, the 5 identical trades before it produced sizable gains.  Learning to cut your losses and move on to another trade is one of the most difficult exercises a trader must execute.  Set your loss tolerance and if you blow out of a trade, move on.

This is much easier said and done, and even with stops in place there is a temptation to drag a stop a couple of points lower to salvage a trade that is not working out.  I’ve been there, I’ve done it, and I’ll probably do it again.  It is always wrong to do, though.  My experience has taught me that I enter bad trades when I try to pick a counter trend trade.  These trades can be very tempting, but price exhaustion is one of the most difficult trades to execute successfully.  For that reason, I like to strike an 89 point SMA and when the market is significantly below the 89 point SMA I stick with short trades, and visa versa for price action above the SMA.   This should keep you nicely in the trend.  It also weeds out those disasterous countertrend trades.

In volatile markets I detest trailing stops, and I generally don’t use them.  I am not against moving a stop loss up, but the normal market action often gets you out of a good trade before completion.  Be careful using trailing stops, while they sound great in theory, they often have to be very wide to be of any real value.  For myself, I prefer to bracket trade, using 3 point (12 tick) stops for my loss and profit targets.  I have found this to be fairly flexible for trading in normal markets, and in volatile markets, which we saw early this year, I allow 4 point stops (16 ticks).  These numbers are for trading the ES contract.  For the YM contract, I like to use 25 points bracketing long and short positions.

But remember, don’t attempt any trade without preset stop loss and profit targets established.  Good luck trading and come back.

Emini Trading for 06-23-09

By , 23 June, 2009, No Comment

Emini tradin for the posted date, and some observations on futures trading.

Should you use Tick Charts or Time Charts

By , 23 June, 2009, 3 Comments

In heavily traded and trending markets I like tick charts, and in more stagnant, choppy or consolidating markets I use time charts. The best idea is to use the charts to practice and flip back and forth with your charting software. You will be amazed at how the greatest set-up with a 233 tick chart looks when you see the same information graphed in a 3 minute sequence.

Is Inflation Looming On the Horizon?

By , 15 June, 2009, No Comment

The chatter in the financial columns has turned from trumpeting the economic collapse of the developed world to predictions of Zimbabwe-style hyper-inflation.  I suppose there is a certain logic to these predictions, after all, we have flooded the economy with dollar bills in unprecedented fashion.  Of course, there is the usual blather from the conspiracy theorists who are convinced that our recent problems are self-inflicted at the hands of the Federal Reserve Board.

But the world has not ended yet, and there are tentative signs some sort of recovery is developing, though I think it is premature to embrace any sort of “green shoots” view of our economy.  I think it is safe to say that things have stabilized some, and leave it at that.  The folks at CNBC are upbeat and gushing good news, as usual, and the market has recovered a significant amount of ground from the bloodbath of late last year and earlier this year.

But therein lies the rub, economists are a bi-polar bunch(at best) and have stratified in their predictions of either dire consequences in the economy or a view that envisions a healthy but gradual recovery is under way.  Since the eventual outcome probably lies somewhere between these two choices, ones finds himself scratching his head.

Are we in for a raft of hyperinflation?

In a perfect constellation of horrible circumstances, it is possible.  But my gut feeling is we will get some inflation and the Fed will begin the process of raising rates to combat the problem.  It is a ticklish paradigm, though, as it requires perfect timing, something the Fed has never been adept at pulling off…not that anyone can know until “after the fact” whether a rate adjustment is properly timed, and hindsight is always 20/20.

Todays Charts and some observations

By , 11 June, 2009, No Comment
ESU9

ESU9

I am sure everyone remembered to roll to the Sept. contract today. The market roller coastered around the chart and various economic entities debated the validity of the economic data the government has released of late.

Over at Financial Armageddon, there is an interesting article from a fellow who claims the nation’s books are grossly understating the current unemployment figures, money supply…just about everything, once you get reading the article. His claim goes something like…”the country would be flat on it’s belly if we weren’t using doctored numbers…”

I’ve never been much of a conspiracy theory kind of guy, so I find his declaration of “all things government” to be a bit hard to swallow. On the other hand, another study showed the government subsequent revisions to economic data were usually negative, that is, the revisions usually put the economy in a less positive position than the initial release. Of course, you could argue coincidence. But I’ve never been too big on consistent coincidences, either.

So I suppose the truth lies somewhere between these extreme views. The government has changed the methodology it uses to measure the countries unemployment and GDP, and by in large, the new formulations tend to understate the seriousness of the current problems.

Sheesh, sometimes the entire business wears me out.

As an aside, I have been wondering what the difference in Bernie Madoff’s Ponzi scheme and the credit default Ponzi scheme AIG has saddled us with. Think about it….AIG did not have the assets to repay, nor was it even close, the entirety of the credit default swaps it issued….kinda of like Madoff, when you think about it. Only we gave AIG billions of dollars to straighten things out, we gonna give Madoff lots of years to straighten things out…in the pokey.

Where in the Hell are we in this ongoing mess?

By , 10 June, 2009, No Comment

I was listening to Dr. Roubini on a PBS clip last night and he believes we have averted the possibility of a depression. Hmmm….I decided that was some good news, I think.

As of late, though, I have felt manipulated by the powers-that-be (and you can decide just who the powers-that-be actually might be) as we have had this tremendous run-up in stock prices while unemployment has continued to march straight upward. Good Grief…the government’s official number is 9.45%, and some economists are squabbling that the calculation is artificially low, and if we used a non-manipulated formula for unemployment, say the one we used in 1982, the number would be much higher. And then there is the foreclosure issue…

The rate of foreclosures has also marched steadily upward, which would indicate that people do not have the money to pay for their homes. Or perhaps, they do not find it financially expedient to pay their homes and are diverting their funds to savings or some other investment vehicle, which I find highly unlikely.

The credit markets are broken, with the government guaranteeing everything from car manufacturer loans to bank accounts, to….well, you name it.

My point is simple: The stock market is disconnected from the economic health of the country. Granted, the VIX has stopped oscillating like a seismograph needle in 8.4 earthquake, but the markets, of late, would have you believing that everything is honky-dory.

I don’t feel honky-dory. No, the footing on the path I am walking feels loose and very sketchy.

With the amount of money we have pumped into the economy, a great deal of the looming disaster has been put off, but has it been put off forever, or have just put it off for another ten years?

In the past, countries that have inflated their M1 and pumped the kind of stimulus money into their economies have had a nasty dust-up with inflation, and that worries me. Where are we headed with inflation? I have this niggling that there is inflation out there waiting…at least it ought to be waiting.

No, none of the current economic data makes sense to me, there are too many asymmetric variables to account for to let me breath deep and comfortably.

An interesting day, to say the least

By , 8 June, 2009, No Comment
emini trading dow trading

emini trading dow trading

What a day we had, the market fell out of bed from the onset, as economists squabbled over what the “real” unemployment numbers should be. No matter how you look at it, they ain’t good, so to speak. And at the end of the day the financials staged what I would call a miracle rally and drove the Dow into positive territory. There any number of theories being floated as the the nature of this late rise in price, and they range from conspiratorial to fundamental. Heck, I’m just a scalper, I want to stay in the trend.

The late day rallyy was a hard one to stay in as it made no sense, so there was a constant compulsion to pull out with a large gain, but the thing just kept going up, and up, and up. One of the oddest last minute moves I’ve seen. Then again, these are odd times…so what should I expect?

Another easy set up today

By , 4 June, 2009, No Comment
YM trade

YM trade

This was an interesting trade, as the price bounced a third time off the bottom of a short support line, all the indicators, which I have circled, turned to indicate executing a long position. It turned out to be a good trade. The DecisionBar software, which is not shown, all indicated a long trade one bar later. Also notice how I took my profits one bar too soon, the indicators were beginning to flatten out and I felt I was somewhere near the top. This was a fun trade to watch play out.

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