Archive for ‘investment strategy’

The Dollar Makes a Major Low in Q4 of 2011

By , 29 September, 2009, No Comment

The dollar will hit a major low in Q4 of 2011. Watch this short video and see how I came up with this bold forecast.

The move is already underway and the lows are in place, however, it is not too late to get into this market and take advantage of what we believe will be a major move to the upside for the euro.

There is no need to register to watch this video and you can watch it with our compliments.

If you enjoy the video, which I am sure you will find eye-opening, please feel free to comment on the blog about your particular feelings regarding the US dollar.

http://www.ino.com/info/453/CD3257/&dp=0&l=0&campaignid=3

ES Emini Trading: Why we err

By , 17 August, 2009, 1 Comment

Those who trade the emini swear by the enjoyment and excitement the very act of a successful trade brings. I relate emini trading to a war, which is won by many small battles. Of course, that may be a little melodramatic, okay, maybe I love trading enough to overdramatize the act, but it just resonates with me in a way few things can rival.

Paper Trading versus Real Money Trading

By , 15 August, 2009, No Comment

Anyone who has read very much of this blog knows that I recommend extensive paper trading on a demo account before you trade a live account.  As a matter of fact, my exact advise is to be able to put together 5 days of consistent profits before you even consider tinkering with real money.  I think this is a realistic strategy for learning trading.

You will also find that I recommend some serious reading of some of the classic authors of investment techniques and theory.   I think it is important to understand the underpinnings of trading and have a well thought out philosophy on how the market functions.   On a humorous note, there are so many different perspectives on market theory that you are bound to find one that resonates with your own particular thinking.

I am a chaos theory guy.   You don’t have to be a chaos theory guy to be successful in your trading endeavor, but you ought have some philosophical underpinning to your actual trading style.

Which brings me to the point of this post, and that is the transition from paper trading a demo account to trading an account with real money.  You would think it would be the same…ah, erm…it is the same, at least the technique should stay the same.

But, it doesn’t.

Perfectly normal, intelligent people go absolutely brain dead when real money is involved.  I cannot explain this phenomena, I can’t even describe why it happens…but it does happen in an alarming number of cases and sometimes in a highly catastrophic manner.

Is it greed?

Is it fear?

Does real money make people trade different?    The answer, at least in many cases and in the early part of a traders career, is unequivocally YES.   I warn people of this and they vehemently deny that THEY could succumb to this sort of silly stupidity.    A very good friend, who I personally helped in his emini training and was absolutely gifted when we traded together, (he on paper, me with a real account) started trading and promptly lost 25,000 dollars in two days.  I had instructed, and he had always followed, the strategy of trading one of two contracts, and to use tight stops, when traded.  Boom, 25 grand disappeared as if we had never spoken.

When I asked him what went wrong, he was unable to explain his dilemma.  “I lost my mind”, he said.

And I have seem it happen so many times I felt it necessary to forewarn new traders, the transition from paper to cash is a quantum leap.  Be extra conservative, if anything.  Use the technique you perfected on paper and don’t overtrade or mismanage your money.

Okay, ‘nuf said…but don’t say I did not warn you.

ES Emini Trading and the Recent Rally

By , 4 August, 2009, No Comment

The market has shot up to extraordinary levels in recent months on news that…ah…ermm…earnings are down. Huh? It’s true, the economy as whole has stopped the free fall we experienced early in the current year, and we have had a steady stream of “it’s not as bad as it could have been” kind of economic reports. But this news is hardly the stuff of “green shoots” some economists have portrayed.

Analyzing Analysts Predictions

By , 27 July, 2009, No Comment

By in large, though, investment house analyst scare me to death because the pressure to put a “buy” on a stock can be influenced by too many external factors, most of which have nothing to do with the fundamental or technical analysis of the equity at hand.

From the Baseline Scenario Blog…

By , 27 July, 2009, No Comment

After Peak Finance: Larry Summers’ Bubble

There are three kinds of “bubbles” -  a term often used loosely when asset prices rise a great deal and then fall sharply, without an obvious corresponding shift in “fundamentals“.

  1. A short-run bubble.  Think about 17th century Dutch Tulip Mania: spectacular, probably disruptive, but not a major reason for the decline of the Netherlands as a global power.
  2. A distorting bubble.  In this case, the increase in asset prices contributes to a reallocation of resources across sectors.  Think of the Dot-com Bubble: fortunes were made and lost, the collapse was scary to many, and – at the end of the day – you’ve built the Internet and some good companies.
  3. A political bubble.  Here rising asset prices generate resources that can be fed into the political process, through bribes, building politicians’ careers, and lobbying of all kinds.  Bubbles in Emerging Markets often generate resources that impact the political process, sometimes in good ways – but most often in bad ways, which eventually contribute to a collapse.

Larry Summers seems to think we are dealing with the consequences of bubble type #1.  In his speech last week, “the bubble” is a modern deus ex machina – it explains why we have a crisis, but there is no explanation of where this bubble came from, what exactly was bubbling, and what changes this bubble brought to the real economy or to our politics.

To the extent that Summers talks about the bubble at all, it seems to be in residential real estate.  It’s hard to argue that there was an unsustainable run-up in housing prices and that the fall has real consequences.  But what model – or even story – can explain the size of the global disruption we are facing without reference to what happened specifically in the financial sector?

The overall official consensus - which Summers continues to shape – seems to be that our problems are: housing bubble plus bad management in a few big financial firms and slightly too weak regulation.  So we’ll tweak regulation, ever so gently, and let the “good” big firms gobble up the people, market share, and perhaps even assets of those that fall by the wayside.

But what if we are looking at the effects of a distorting bubble?  In previous formulations – but not last week – Summers acknowledged that when financial sector profits hit 40 percent of total corporate profits, a few years ago, we should have seen that as a “warning sign”.  But was this a warning sign of something just about houses, or more broadly about the financial process in and around securitization that was both feeding the housing price increase and also reflecting a longer-run shift of resources into the financial sector?

Even James Surowiecki, a most articulate defender of our current financial sector, implicitly concedes that as a percent of GDP, finance is likely to fall from around 8 percent to GDP back towards 6 percent of GDP (its level of the mid-1990s; see slide 19 in my recent presentation; update, this link now fixed).  Of course, there is no way to know exactly where finance is heading – except that it is likely down as a share of the economy.

If the bubble (or metaboom with a series of bubbles) was in finance and pulled resources into that sector, we face an adjustment away from Peak Finance – and perhaps this will even more overshadow the next decade than Peak Oil.

The economic adjustment will not be easy for the U.S. but it will be much more painful for smaller countries that have specialized in finance.  The U.S., however, will likely struggle with the political adjustment – the financiers will not easily give up their licence to extract resources from citizens, either directly or through newly found rents channeled through the state (and coming ultimately out of your pocket, of course).

The political consequences of Peak Finance greatly complicate our economic recovery.

By Simon Johnson

“Bailout” by Merle Hazard…This too funny

By , 27 July, 2009, No Comment

Helpful Analysis for Stocks, Futures, and Forex pairs

By , 26 July, 2009, No Comment

But staying on top of the changes and momentum shifts often becomes overwhelming, especially if you’re watching a large number of symbols and open positions, like me. One free tool that I utilize to help me keep on top of my portfolio is called Trend Analysis, from the team that runs MarketClub. Trend Analysis is a daily email analysis tool that gives me insight into exactly what my portfolio is doing.

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