February 29, 2008


Whacky Wheat Whipsaw

MF Global Says Unauthorized Bets Lost $141.5 Million

“Wheat rose the most ever yesterday [the 27th] to the seventh record high this month, then fell by the exchange-imposed daily limit before rising again by the maximum allowed. The 25 percent rally from the day’s low to its high was bigger than all but seven annual price increases for wheat since 1973.”

Limit up, limit down, limit up all in one day… yeah, I can see someone losing $141,500,000 in that environment.


Click to enlarge (May Wheat Futures Contract, 5-minute chart)


Click to enlarge (May Wheat Futures Contract, volume-at-price)

Final Day of Free Trading Ideas

Today is the last day of free for the daily trading ideas. Yesterday the Box was on target with its 12 short ideas and today it found seven more shorts. Hope you enjoyed the free trial while it lasted (several months), but it’s over now.

Trading Ideas for Friday, February 29

Two dozen people have taken a leap of faith and subscribed so far. That’s 2% of the original 1200 on the list — I consider that a darned impressive conversion rate given my gross ineptitude at marketing, and I thank my subscribers for taking the risk. :)

February 28, 2008


Life in China — Three Quick Examples

These three things happened in rapid succession to me today, which I thought were pretty illustrative of life in China:

1) In a plane … I had an aisle seat, but was standing at the back of the plane before take-off. A woman arrived who had the seat next to me (the middle seat). She sat in my seat where I had placed my neck rest (she sat on top of the neck rest, lol). I walked over and told her to move. Then the guy who had the window seat showed up. He said do you want to switch with me, the window seat is very comfortable! I declined.

2) In a cab … the fare was 86 kuai, I gave him a 100 kuai bill. He gave me 10 change. I said where’s the other 4. He said oh, you want that? and then grumbled “cheap $^&*@” under his breath.

3) In a restaurant … ordered some stuff to eat. The waitress came over and said they didn’t have one of the dishes I ordered, and did I want to cancel it. I said yes. The bill comes. The cancelled dish is on the bill. I say remove it. They do, grudgingly.

My point is that life in China is a struggle. :-) Practically everybody is *constantly* trying to get over on everybody else, and foreigners make especially good targets to screw because the locals believe a) you’re rich, and b) you’re clueless. It’s dog eat dog to the Nth degree. 1.3 billion people all struggling to get ahead at the same time. It’s wild.

If you’re new to living in China, here’s my advice: keep your eyes and ears open, understand that this is a culture deeply informed by scarcity, keep one hand on your wallet, stay cheerful!


Gazillion Trading Ideas for Thursday, February 28

The Box came up with 13 (yowza!) trading ideas again, except unlike last Monday this time it came up with 12 shorts and 1 long. Guess which direction things will go tomorrow? :) This is the next to the last day of free. I already have 12 subscribers out of the original list of 1200 (exactly and eerily 1%), but I’m looking for at least twice that number. :)

Prospective subscribers should be sure to read the User Guide for Trade Ideas Generated by “The Box”

Trading Ideas for Thursday, February 28


Dollar Index Hits New Low — A Look at the Monthly Chart

Here’s the monthly chart of the US Dollar Index since 1985. You can see that back in ‘85 it was at 164.72. The DXY hit a new low of 74.07 this month — that’s a 55% drop. More recently, back in early 2002, the Dollar Index traded above 120 — that’s around a 38% drop from there in only six years.


Click to enlarge (US Dollar Index, Monthly Chart)

My recent trip back to the US further strengthened my conviction that the US is in terrible secular decline — I couldn’t seem to get away from overweight, undereducated people; the divide between the rich and poor is growing even more stark; and the middle class appears to be disappearing. I also had one brush with the new “police state” which I’ll write about in a later post. I’d be very depressed if I weren’t earning CNY, didn’t own a home in China, and hadn’t diversified over half of our assets out of the dollar many years ago.


Click to enlarge (Chinese yuan, Monthly Chart)

Related:

The Wind at One’s Back: Long Crude, Short Dollars – November 22, 2007
Bundchen, Avoiding Dollars, is No Dumb Blonde – November 5, 2007
Rufiyaa Times for the US Dollar – October 29, 2007
Cancel the Trip to Europe — DXY Officially in No Man’s Land – September 29, 2007
Dollar Index Entering No Man’s Land – September 20, 2007
US Trade-Weighted Dollar Index at All-Time Lows – August 8, 2007
Checking on the Doomed Dollar – July 25, 2007
US Dollar Index – Bearish Any Way You Look At It – April 12, 2007
Slip Sliding Away – November 29, 2006
Buffett Cuts Dollar Short Just As Slide Set to Resume – August 7, 2006
Nothing Can Save the US Dollar – July 11, 2006
Trading with the Trend: US Dollar Index – May 12, 2006
The US Dollar Resumes Its Slide – April 29, 2006

February 27, 2008


User Guide for Trade Ideas Generated by "The Box"

This is a post in progress and I plan to update/improve it constantly over time to serve prospective and new subscribers.

This is an explanation of how to use the trade ideas generated by “The Box.” Every night subscribers receive a spreadsheet via email that details the trade ideas for the following day. Here’s a screenshot of a portion of the spreadsheet sent on February 20, 2008. Let’s walk through each of the rows to figure out all this information:

1) Index: this row tells you which index the stock belongs to, in this case Honeywell (HON) belongs to the S&P 100 index, or OEX.
2) Trade # in month: HON is the 29th trade idea generated in the month of February 2008.
3) Date FOR: this is the date the trade is for … each trade is good for only one day, in this case the trade is good for February 21, 2008 and no other date.
4) Symbol: the ticker symbol; in this case HON stands for Honeywell.
5) Long / Short: this tells you if the trade is a long (buy) or a short (sell short); in this case the trade is a long.
6) Entry above (long) / Below (short): this is the price level above which you should set your buy limit order or below which you should place your sell (short) limit order. I usually put my stop limit order one to five cents beyond the entry level. You should also read the post, Dealing with Gap Openings, for other thoughts on entry.
7) Initial Protective Stop: this is the all important price level below which you should set your stop order when long and above which you should set your stop order when short. Once you are filled in a trade, you must always Always ALWAYS immediately put your stop order in the market. Did I mention you should always immediately do this? :) 8) Initial Risk $: this is the approximate amount between your entry price and your initial protective stop. We use this number to size our position (more on position sizing below).
9) Initial Risk %: this is the approximate percentage amount between your entry price and initial protective stop. This is a key number because our minimum expected percentage gain (Target 1.0, see below) must be a multiple (at least two times and preferably more) of our maximum percentage loss. Before considering any trade you always Always ALWAYS think about risk versus reward.
10) 100% Initial Risk: this is the price that approximates one times our initial risk; once price closes beyond this level we move our initial protective stop to our entry price to create a breakeven trade at worst.
11) 200% Initial Risk: this is the price that approximates two times our initial risk; following the ABC Stop Method (more here), once price closes beyond this level we begin to trail the stop.
12) Target 1.0: this is the minimum expected price target
13) Expected % move: this is the minimum expected percentage move from the entry price to Target 1.0.
14) Expected R move: “R” is a fancy way to say “initial risk.” In the example, HON’s initial Risk % was 2.39% and the expected % move was 7.75%. 7.75% divided by 2.39% is approximately 3.2.
12) Target 1.1: this is the maximum expected price target
13) Expected % move: this is the minimum expected percentage move from the entry price to Target 1.1.
14) Expected R move: Again, in the example, HON’s initial risk % was 2.39% and the expected % move was 9.55%. 9.55% divided by 2.39% is approximately 4.0.

Position Size: We always risk the same dollar amount on every trade. How much you’re willing to risk depends on how much risk capital you have. I recommend that the dollar amount at risk on a single trade should be a fraction of 1% of your risk capital. Risk capital means money you can afford to lose, your “mad money,” the money you can lose and not worry about it. If you’re worried about money, you shouldn’t be trading in the first place. If you have $100,000 risk capital, then I’d recommend risking around $250 (one quarter of one percent of risk capital) to $500 (one half of one percent of risk capital) on a single trade.

Going back to HON, you can see that the initial $ risk is $1.35. Ignoring commission costs (which should be very very low), let’s assume you’re willing to risk $270 on the trade (representing 0.27% of your risk capital) so you can get long 200 shares (200 x $1.35 = $270). 200 shares of HON at 56.53 is around $11,600.

Now let’s look at the charts. Here’s the chart from Wednesday, February 20th, when the trade idea was first sent out. I’ve annotated the chart with all the key levels.

On Thursday, February 21st, you can see that price traded above the entry level which would have triggered the stop limit order to get long above 56.53. The stock closed down on the day and things looked ugly, but the initial protective stop in place below 55.18 was not hit.

On Friday, February 22nd, the stock reversed and closed up on the day, never hitting the initial protective stop order that is always in place.

The following Monday, February 25th, HON shot higher and touched 57.88, the 1x Initial risk level. Once the 1x level is hit, we can move the initial protective stop from 55.18 to our entry price around 56.53, thus assuring a breakeven trade if price reverses back down.

Finally on Tuesday, February 26th, HON moved up strongly again, coming within one cent of hitting the 2x Initial risk level of 59.23. You could choose to begin trailing the stop here if you wished, or wait down below at the breakeven stop — it’s a judgment call. I’m still studying the best way to exit these trades.

One new idea I’ve had is not to trail the stop until the Target zone is reached, with a breakeven stop in place the whole time. Dunno… I’ll continue to observe and test.

Anyway, I hope this short introduction is useful. I plan to update and improve this post over time, but I just wanted to put something up fast for my dozen new subscribers to study. :)


20 Years of Silver Prices

Here’s a look at the monthly silver chart. You can see that price has more than quadrupled since 2002 and the Sequential (eventually) nailed the low back in 1992. I’ve recently featured the charts of the other preciouses (hissed like Gollum): platinum and gold.


Click to enlarge (Silver, Spot prices, Monthly Chart)

Seven Trading Ideas for Wednesday, February 27

The Box came up with seven ideas for Wednesday: six shorts, one long. There are only two more days left in the “free trial” so enjoy the freebies while they last. Of the 11 longs suggested on Monday, seven are already at breakeven or better.

Trading Ideas for Wednesday, February 27

So far I am on track to convert about 1% of the members of the free list which is not unusual according to the article I posted about yesterday:

“A typical online site follows the 1 Percent Rule — 1 percent of users support all the rest. In the freemium model, that means for every user who pays for the premium version of the site, 99 others get the basic free version. The reason this works is that the cost of serving the 99 percent is close enough to zero to call it nothing.”

In my case, the “basic free version” is the blog and the premium version gives the short-term trading ideas. For every one reader who supports the blog through their subscription, 99 read it for free. And of course it doesn’t work (meaning the blogger can make decent money) when you have only a couple thousand regular readers. How ’bout them apples?

February 26, 2008


The Penny Gap

Free! Why $0.00 Is the Future of Business, by Chris Anderson

“The huge psychological gap between ‘almost zero’ and ‘zero’ is why micropayments failed. It’s why Google doesn’t show up on your credit card. It’s why modern Web companies don’t charge their users anything. And it’s why Yahoo gives away disk drive space. The question of infinite storage was not if but when. The winners made their stuff free first.”

But if you’re offering something like short-term trading ideas, the audience is so small that it can never work “for free.” Doesn’t Anderson’s whole “taxonomy of free” require that the service provider have a massive number of users?

Maybe if I do only get 1% (exactly 12) to pay for my short-term trading ideas when I start to charge, then I should think up another way to make money from them? Maybe the “open positions” report will cost something instead? Ideas from the gallery?


One Trading Idea for Tuesday, February 26

It was telling that the Box came up with 11 longs yesterday, the largest bunch of buy ideas ever since I started keep track of its results last December. Everything was up two or three percent and now I have to track 10 more open long positions, so it’s with some relief that the Box came up with only one idea (a short) for Tuesday. This stock will have to reverse quite violently to fill, but if it does then it’s expected to drop a bunch. We’ll see if that happens.

Trading Idea for Tuesday, February 26

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