The global economy is accelerating according to Asian
Development Bank/Watch out of FOMC rate decision
tomorrow
Top Day Rec
09.22.09
Not much today, just the housing price index at 10.
Overnight, a forecast from the Asian Development Bank
suggested that the global economy is accelerating. ADB said
that Asia excluding Japan will grow at 3.9% against a previous
forecast of 3.4%. (This forecast may not have quantified the
flu variable).
Of course, tomorrow’s big event is the FOMC rate decision.
Current
views, speculations and suggestions
(good
till close of business today). These are technical in nature
only.
Dec Yen: neg with res at 110.20
Dec Swiss: positive with support
at 96.42
Dec EC: positive with support at
146.60.
Dec Canadian: pos with support
at 92.05
Dec BP: neg with res at 163.40
Dec ES: pos with support at
1054.00
Dec NQ: pos with support at
1711.00
Dec Mini Dow: pos with support
at 9670
Dec Gold: neg but above daily
res at 1015.50
Dec Silver: neg with res at
17.25
Dec Copper: neg with res at
287.50
Nov Crude: res at 71.90
Nov Soybeans: neg with res at
9.32
Dec Wheat: neg with res at 4.67
Dec Ten Year: neg with res at
117.07
**************
International Markets
Dec Bund: neg with res at 120.50
Dec Dax: neg with res at 5765
Dec NKD pos with support at
103.80
***********
N.B.: if you initiate a trade
using ANY of these numbers use a STOP at least equivalent to 2
½%. Repeat: use Stops. Don’t think about using Stops. Use
Stops. Some find it appropriate to look at the margin
requirement and use that as a stop or if it’s a steep initial
requirement, use half.
Please feel free to visit
www.vfmarkets.com. For those without accts use 999999
and 1318 as a pin for access. (pin changes monthly)
********************************************
Futures trading entails
considerable risk and is not for everyone. An account can lose
more than its initial investment. Stops are not necessarily
filled at the stop level. Past performance is not a guarantee
of future results.
The Tractatus of Trade
Or
Aphorisms from a Trading Life
Copyright 2008 Charles Kespert
Trading isn’t about winning or
losing, it’s about self discovery.
You only learn from losing
trades.
Along with the probability that
your trade will be profitable, there's probably a greater
probability that it won't be. Think about the trade you'll
make if things don't work out.
Don’t be afraid to go where the
market wants to take you.
Moving averages are very
important. The steeper the slope, the better the trade.
Markets tend to overshoot.
Never meet a margin call.
Liquidate. The margin clerk is your best friend.
In trading, he who has the best
rules wins. Your innate, intuitive brilliance only talks to
you occasionally.
To panic is human.
The market will all too soon
locate, expose and exploit your weaknesses. All strategies
have a weakness. Know yours, Achilles.
When you put a trade on, it
should work almost immediately. If it doesn’t, seriously
consider bagging the idea and look for a new setup.
At the same time, take trades.
The only way you are going to make money is by taking trades.
Don’t worry about winning or
losing on a particular trade. There’s only one concern: does
the trade help to grow your bottom line.
Hope is not an action.
The more efficient a market is,
the more random it is. If a market is inefficient, the more
that market will trend. The efficiency of a market is
inversely correlated to its liquidity.
Do you look at your positions as
assets or liabilities? Liquidate the liabilities with extreme
prejudice.
If you are in a position and you
are losing more in that position than you can reasonably
expect to make, get out.
It is far easier to lose money
trading than to make it. It is far easier to make money
trading than to keep it.
A margin call argues for your
continuing status as an amateur.
If the market prints your price
and doesn’t fill you, go to the market.
If your trading begins to
resemble an exercise in madness, at least take a break for a
day.
A market trades to try and fill
all orders: limits, buy stops, sell stops, everything. If
there aren’t any orders, there’s no reason for the market to
move.
If your indicators are lagging
but your data is high frequency, you should be okay.
If your data is low frequency,
your indicators are useless.
Your ability to discriminate, to
successfully think critically, is inversely proportionate to
the profitability of your positions.
You can go broke taking profits,
very small profits. This type of trading behavior will also
convince you that you're performing better at the buy/sell
game than you really are.
When the pundits start talking
about a barrel of crude oil and a bushel of wheat as not
really a barrel of oil or a bushel of wheat but an asset class
and you are long, get nervous.
Your next trade could be your
last trade for a very long time. Be aware of this and don’t
let it happen. Use stops.
Markets are challenging: when
illiquidity meets volatility parallel lines converge,
divergences converge, convergences diverge and mathematical
certainty is forced to embrace new theorems.
If you are down a certain,
predetermined percentage of your equity (for some this could
be as little as 2.5 and for others this could be as much as
15%) and you have open positions, liquidate and go to cash.
You and the market aren’t on the same schedule. (No one ever
does this). Hitting the reset button is a psychological
palliative.
When all your trades are going
incredibly well, when you’re seeing the market as if you’ve
already read tomorrow’s papers and you’re just about ready to
thicken the callous that resides just below your left shoulder
with your right hand, get out Webster’s and reread the
definition of coincidence.
Markets are thematic. In fact,
those flashing numbers are always trying to tell or sell a
story. Become a better reader.
Don’t think of the market as an
opponent to be bulled, bloodied, battered and beaten. Its
resources are far greater than yours. It’s better to concede
the conceit of market as ocean in all its obvious metaphoric
diversity.
The Myth of Sisyphus resonates
in the experience of trading.
Remember that irony is alive,
well and constantly at work in the universe; irony, the
cornerstone to the construct of the divine comedy.
Trading isn’t about winning or
losing, it’s about building equity. Taking strategic losses is
a key to building equity.
Winning or losing on any one
particular trade is meaningless.
A market is a market. It can do
anything it wants. It doesn’t have to make sense. A market is
only obliged to itself. In fact, exploiting this fact will
lead to your best profits.
Just as persistence allows
mediocrity to soar, a persistent, rule driven trading approach
seasoned with just the right touch of intuition can turn your
sow’s ear into a silk purse.
What you want to have happen in
a market often prevents you from doing what you should be
doing in a market.
That which is true, never
changes. A market, a dynamic revaluating, discounting
mechanism, always changes. There’s very little that’s true
about a market.
Beware of the new paradigm; it
may not be wearing any clothes.
If you don’t crave profit,
profit may be attracted to you. If you don’t fear loss, loss
may not be attracted to you.
If you want to be condemned,
keep doing what you’ve always done.
Worst positions leave last.
Trading is like procreation;
if you’re nervous it just isn’t going to work that well.
The market is an imperfect game.
Chess is a perfect game. All information is transparent.
Either you are a smart player and can see the board or you are
a challenged player. There is no luck. Poker is an imperfect
game. You don’t know all variables and bluff by itself can win
the day.
You only learn from losing
trades. A winning trade is simply a confirmation of your
current infallibility.
Do everything you can to keep a
losing trade an annoyance rather than a memorable event.
If you are in a winning
position, remain aware that just as the sea reclaims land, the
market wants its money back.
Never disrespect the possible
(especially option expirations).
A trade is a trade. It is a
financial event. It is not a justification or repudiation of
your geopolitical or eco-political model.
Don’t convince yourself that
you’ve figured out the puzzle. The puzzle keeps changing.
Eventually the puzzle just disappears.
You have to be willing to give
back, to fold, to square your position to cash. If you don’t
give something back they will end up taking it back.
Markets spend as much time going
up as they do going down, the only difference is amplitude.
As the futures market is a zero
sum game and the instruments of trade expire continually,
regression to the mean should be a frequent event. The stock
market is totally different; for every buyer there doesn’t
have to be a seller and the life of a stock is theoretically,
potentially, infinite. Regression to the mean should be a
“less frequent” event at Wall and Broad.
Good trades are often counter
intuitive.
There’s far greater skill in
trading well when you’re behind than in trading well when
you’re ahead.
Ascertaining the correct value
for 6 variables before making a trading decision is not better
than ascertaining the correct value for 3 variables. When it
comes to heuristics, kiss.
All your answers have
questions.
Markets are mechanisms that
foster irrational behavior.
Don’t let your trading be held
hostage to the need for discernment.
As soon as market action can be
explained and generally understood, expect the market to
change.
Before entering a trade,
mentally understand and accept all potential loses.
If you have to win you’ll lose.
If you have to lose, you will.
The seeds of doubt are self
sown.
On initial order placement,
never be impetuous. Wait for your price.
Look for ways to take action.
Idle brilliance addles.
Good trades usually set up with
a sense of inevitability and unfold in slow motion.
Remembrance may be the
inability to let go.
In trading, feeling comfortable
should be an uncomfortable feeling.
You can’t continue to court
disaster without eventually landing a date.
You’re only as young as your
last winning trade.
People feel more comfortable
with losing positions and more nervous with winning positions.
If you have a position in a
market and the average true range of that market is 128 points
and the market has only had a range of 28 points so far, start
figuring out which side of the market is going to deliver the
next 100 points.
When asked to play a game, then
stopped mid game and asked how they are doing, people
invariably state that they are performing at better levels
than they actually are.
Work on four things: fear,
anger, frustration and judgment; it’s all derived from fear.
Anger is the clash of
desires.
Whatever you believe is
undoubtedly correct until the passage of time offers another
suggestion.
Simplify. If you are using 4
indicators to trade, use three. If you are trading 5 markets,
trade 4, then reexamine the number of indicators you’re using.
Markets generally lack
conviction, especially post 9/11. That’s why trend traders
have a low incidence of winning. Take advantage of that.
What funds buy, they sell. No
fund is ever going to take delivery of a barrel of oil or a
bag of coffee. Take advantage of that.
You manifest the world through
interpretation.
Life is, at least, the
non-annihilating coexistence of opposites.
Ultimate sorrow is to love as gravity is to mass.
Charles Kespert
***********************
HYPOTHETICAL PERFORMANCE RESULTS
HAVE MANY INHERENT LIMITATIONS, SOME OF WHICH ARE DESCRIBED
BELOW. NO REPRESENTATION IS BEING MADE THAT ANY ACCOUNT WILL
OR IS LIKELY TO ACHIEVE PROFITS OR LOSSES SIMILAR TO THOSE
SHOWN. IN FACT, THERE ARE FREQUENTLY SHARP DIFFERENCES BETWEEN
HYPOTHETICAL PERFORMANCE RESULTS AND THE ACTUAL RESULTS
SUBSEQUENTLY ACHIEVED BY ANY PARTICULAR TRADING PROGRAM.
ONE OF THE LIMITATIONS OF
HYPOTHETICAL PERFORMANCE RESULTS IS THAT THEY ARE GENERALLY
PREPARED WITH THE BENEFIT OF HINDSIGHT. IN ADDITION, AL
TRADING DOES NOT INVOLVE FINANCIAL RISK, AND NO
HYPOTHETIOTHETICAL TRADING RECORD CAN COMPLETELY ACCOUNT FOR
THE IMPACT OF FINANCIAL RISK IN ACTUAL TRADING. FOR EXAMPLE,
THE ABILITY TO WITHSTAND LOSSES OR TO ADHERE TO A PARTICULAR
TRADING PROGRAM IN SPITE OF TRADING LOSSES ARE MATERIAL POINTS
WHICH CAN ALSO ADVERSELY AFFECT ACTUAL TRADING RESULTS. THERE
ARE NUMEROUS OTHER FACTORS RELATED TO THE MARKETS IN GENERAL
OR TO THE IMPLEMENTATION OF ANY SPECIFIC TRADING PROGRAM WHICH
CANNOT BE FULLY ACCOUNTED FOR IN THE PREPARATION OF
HYPOTHETICAL PERFORMANCE RESULTS AND ALL OF WHICH CAN
ADVERSELY AFFECT ACTUAL TRADING RESULTS.