Posts tagged ‘investing’

ES Emini Day Trading: Pivot-Fed Announcements-Commentary

By trader7757, 6 December, 2009, No Comment

As would be expected, much better-than-expected numbers for the November employment situation sent equities up sharply early in the day on Friday. But by close, stocks had come down significantly as many traders simply worried that equities have gotten too far ahead of economic conditions. Also, the dollar jumped on the release of the jobs report and weighed on materials and energy sectors. Still, for the day and week, most indexes posted moderate to sizeable gains.

ES Emini Day Trading: Another Bubble?

By trader7757, 9 November, 2009, No Comment

The market continues to post impressive gains of late, which has made for some nice day trading opportunities. Just looking at the chat boards, it’s my guess that John Q. Public has sat this one out, though.

And that would be typical.

Individual investors tend to exit the market during a prolonged downturn toward the end of the cycle, especially the one last year. That is baffling to me, too. Once you have lost 50% of your money, really, what do you have to lose? Selling only locks in the loss. But that is a typical investing pattern when small investors are run out of the market, and, they fail to jump in when the market trends upward.

If I were a long term investor, this market is a little scary, and Nouriel Roubini is once again issuing warnings about our economy.

The latest run up has made me grateful I am a day trader and scalper, because being in this market more than 15 minutes just plain scares me. The government has, as usual, pursued a policy of accommodation for the big investment banks, including giving them all billions of dollars to stay afloat. Whenever Wall Street bankers get their firms in trouble, be it junk bonds, credit default swaps, the leaders of our country are quick to dole out cash to bail them out. It’s always been that way, and keeping the Fed Funds interest rate at zero has been a boon to the investment banks community. I would also note that it has done absolutely nothing for Main Street citizens of our country.

Okay, I’ll get off the soap box. Here is the problem, though…

The market has gone up 50%+ since March, and the primary reason for this run up has been a policy of economic accommodation for Wall Street. I see nothing in the economy that is noticeably better since the most recent recession started. Unemployment is at an all time high, foreclosure rates continue to sky-rocket and the consumer has, by most measures, kept his credit card in his/her wallet.

The stock market, though, has continued it’s climb while Main Street suffers through the doldrums of the recession. Now you could argue that the market is pre-cursor of better times, that the market is a leading indicator, so to speak. Then again, you can also make a cogent argument that this run up is nothing more than a bubble of artificial origin. Unfortunately, Nouriel Roubini has made the latter argument, and he had a handle on the original problems last year. I hope he is wrong.

I would feel much better, though, if our government gave up it’s love affair with the banking community and investment bankers in general. These buffoons have a penchant for loading risk on their dinner plate and then come asking for an antacid when they get a stomach ache. If, or when this market collapses, at least the smaller investor won’t be effected so directly. There is some comfort in that.

I would point out that collapse is not imminent, but at some juncture the disconnect between Wall Street and Main St. will bear noxious fruit.

New Video: RIMM’s Big Buyback Bet

By trader7757, 6 November, 2009, No Comment

“Research In Motion Ltd. (RIMM) will spend up to $1.2 billion to buy back about 21 million of its shares, or 3.6% of its total shares outstanding. The buyback will start Nov. 9 and last for up to one year.”

That was the headline news today on Research in Motion symbol RIMM so I decided to look at the chart to see what was going on in the “real world”. When I got to the chart, one thing immediately jumped out at me and that was the negative action that this market has shown in the past several weeks. Looking at this market a little closer I was able to see that our “Trade Triangle” technology was 100% negative and that our monthly “Trade Triangle” indicator had turned negative on October 28th at $63.38. This is a major negative in my mind for this market.

In this short video I show you exactly what we expect to see for RIMM in the future. I also share with you some downside targets that we are looking at which may surprise you.

Click here for this informative investment video on RIMM

As always our videos are free to watch and there is no need to register. I hope you enjoy the video and comment about it on our blog.

New Video-5 ETFs That You Need to Look at Right Now

By trader7757, 30 October, 2009, No Comment

I really don’t dabble in Exchange Traded Funds, but I thought this new video had some merit.  You can clearly see the bias Adam Hewitt has in several market sectors.

The five ETFs that we are referring to are going to play a major role in the future and you need to know about them today.

In this short video I show you the overriding trend and potential for each of these markets in the future.

As always our videos are free to watch and there is no need for registration.

CLICK HERE- Watch the ETF Video from INO

ES Emini Trading and the Recent Rally

By trader7757, 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.

From the Baseline Scenario Blog…

By trader7757, 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

Steep Slowdown in Stock Trading this Summer: Will the current rally flop?

By trader7757, 26 July, 2009, 1 Comment

The number of shares traded on the major exchanges has begun to slow to a trickle, when compared with past years. It is not unusual for trading to slow in the summer. In fact, the volume and number of shares traded generally is less in the summer, as opposed to the beginning of the year. But this year the trading has been especially slow.

A New Twist Today: ETF UNG (United Natural Gas)

By trader7757, 21 July, 2009, No Comment

I am not much of a swing trader, so I usually rely on information I get from third party sources for my swing trading advice. Since Natural Gas started a wild move early last year I got interested so I traded it using INO TV and their trading triangle system. I think you will find this video fascinating, and give you some insight into what is going on in the natural gas market. I have profited nicely without having to think to much

Oil Glut? Oil Shortage? Or just plain manipulation?

By trader7757, 19 July, 2009, 2 Comments

I wish there were some mechanism to thwart the obvious manipulation of oil prices in the US, short of nationalization (which is, in my opinion, unthinkable). But trusting our oil supply to the likes of Exxon Mobil, Saudi Arabia and the cabal at OPEC is akin to trusting organized pirates, which they are.

Top Fund Manager Goes to Cash: Are the Bears Getting the Upper Hand?

By trader7757, 13 July, 2009, No Comment

Dan Sullivan has decided to go 100% cash… and that’s bad news, since Sullivan is not just any adviser.

According to Mark Hurlburt, Sullivan’s newsletter, The Chartist is in first place for stock market timing over the last three decades among those newsletters the Hulbert Financial Digest has tracked over this period. And though his mutual-fund newsletter — The Chartist Mutual Fund Letter — hasn’t been published for all three of those decades, it also is one of the top performers over the years it has existed.

Looks like the bull rally of the last four months is running out of gas.  As a scalper, it means little to me, but I would really like to see the economy improve for the sake of our country.  There have been far to many layoffs and jobs continue to be outsourced to cheaper foreign labor as companies struggle to eek out profits, or minimize loses.

So the bull market has lost a formidable ally.