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Thursday, September 28, 2006

Nov Spread Trade

I am currently consider playing this Nov spread

OS Bear Call
Sell Nov 55.00 call
$1.05

Buy Nov 60.00 call
$0.45
Net credit $0.60 -13.64%

Technicals: The month of May is the last time that we really witnessed any strength in this stock. Since then, prices have more or less consolidated into a sideways trend much like its industry. The stock trades in the basic/iron & steel industry which is trending sideways to down. Recently, the stock broke out of a long forming Top Triangle. This chart pattern is considered to be a bearish signal as it indicates a possible reversal of the current uptrend to a new downtrend. Currently, the MACD’s are providing a sell signal while the Stochastics are yielding a buy.

So, you want to be an option trader?

Came across this articles as follow:

So, you still want to be an option trader? Great. Thats encouraging. When you think about it, there arent a lot of people who follow through and are willing to make the effort to learn a skill let alone to learn it right. So many people are spoiled. They have little, if any, patience. We live in a society in which people want it NOW!! We have fast cars, fast food, and even Fast Times At Ridgemont High. People look for shortcuts everywhere, sacrificing quality for the sake of speed.Well, you can take shortcuts in learning about options, but I guarantee itll cost you. Its not One Minute Rice. It will take time and perseverance.

Well....

Wednesday, September 27, 2006

Thought of the day

Business are like buses that come along , there are opportunities everyday.

This phrase seems to match to the stock market as there are big movement up or down everyday of the year . You do not need to beat yourselve up if you miss an opportunity as there are the next one that comes along , it depend on whether you can catch it and apply the right strategy and profit out of it.

Any comments on this one?

Monday, September 25, 2006

My Market Outlook

Economic Reports – There were seem many traders out there looking for additional signs of economic weakness. The weakness that may appear in the housing sector which may flow thru to the rest of the economy.

Interest Rates – We had a Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) announcement on interest rates last week, Other than watching to see if the FOMC made any new earth-shattering comments the market is not focused on interest rates right now. The rate hikes are in the past, and any change to lowering or starting to raise rates again is likely far in the future. This is currently a neutral factor.

Energy Prices – Other than the question of just how far down oil prices will go, this has ceased to be a major market concern.

Earnings – Not a big factor just yet, but looking forward to the following week, the market will be watching earnings reports to see if there are any signs of economic weakness. If earnings reports surprise to the upside, then the bulls could be out in full force.

Trading with no discipline-Part 2

As I am writing now, oil futures dipped beneath $60 a barrel, Stock symbol DRQ gapped down from opening bell by $2.50 to $60 per share.

The only consolation is that I have only 1 postion on DRQ Bull Put Spread. Since the demage has been done , I will just monitor the postion and may hold it until the last Friday week of October and reverse the position entirely if there are no improvement on this stock.

Sunday, September 24, 2006

Trading with no discipline

A few days ago, I posted an article on developing a trading system just to remind myself of the lessons taught in there.

I did a Bull Put Spread on some oil drillers a week ago and price of crude oil wasn't doing great during those past few weeks as it dropped almost close to $60 per barrel and this directly affected many oil drillers stock. Eg -I did a Oct 65/70 bull put spread on ticker symbol DRQ and the stock price fall thru to $63 and I did nothing to save this trade which is losing at the moment and I hope that the stock price would recover.

The lesson here is that I did not have the discipline enough to follow thru my pre-determine exit like the above trade by buying back the $70 sold leg and hope that price of the stock would recover and this is in fact a mistake to be learnt as a trading system once adopted is to be follow through strictly.

Developing Your Trading System

The real "secret" to making money in the market has to do with developing an edge in the market by using probabilities and proper money management. Unfortunately, people have trouble distinguishing between luck and skill when it comes to market predictions. We are unable to comprehend the many factors influencing an event as complex as the movement of a market. For example, if we had access to the number of buyers and sellers in the market at a given time plus information about the conviction and capital behind each trade, we would probably find the markets to be very predictable. Thus, any uncertainty you may have about how the market is going to behave at any given time is in you, not in the market. When you accept the fact that uncertainty is in you, rather than in the market, you will suddenly find you have much greater control over your own behavior towards the market. More importantly, you will have much greater control over the process of designing a trading system and greater understanding of how that trading system works.When you develop a trading system, you are essentially deciding upon a set of judgmental shortcuts to help you make a decision. Yet people are completely unaware of how we make most of our predictions and judgments, let alone any biases in the way we make them. Thus, the process of designing a trading system is replete with error and becomes a very difficult process. In order to simplify the process, traders need to understand the following major factors: randomness, sampling variability, and data reliability.Randomness. People want to treat the world as if they could predict and understand everything. As a result, one of the most significant biases people have is to seek patterns where none exist and to invent the existence of unjustified causal relationships. Traders don’t want to trade probabilities. They want consistency. For example, people fail to understand that a random sequence can include a long string or what would be called a trend. Instead, they try to understand the "trend" as something that it isn’t, instead of accepting that such phenomena occur.Understanding and trading well are not necessarily the same thing. People don’t understand randomness, yet they expect to be able to understand the market. They then build trading systems out of their attempts to understand the market by identifying unjustified causal relationships without ever realizing they are doing it. It is this expectation to understand markets that leads traders to search for "Holy Grail" trading systems that explain the "underlying order" of the markets. There is nothing wrong with building a trading system based on microcosmic glimpses into how the market might work; but you need to know what you’re doing when you’re doing it. You are not trying to understand some mysterious underlying order in the markets. You are developing a set of rules whose long term expectancy gives you an edge in the market, while allowing you to withstand the worst possible catastrophe that could occur in the short term.For example, many people observe a relationship in the market and assume it explains how the market works.Jack noticed when a particular pattern occurred in the market, it frequently moved 50 to 100 points higher. He assumed the pattern meant that strong hands were moving into the market. And, when the market didn’t follow the pattern, he became very confused. I said, "How often, when you observe this pattern, does the market move like that?" He responded, "About 35% of the time!" Thus, Jack had simply observed a pattern that was quite profitable 35% of the time. The rest of the time it had no meaning.A relationship may occur only 35% of the time, and that may be something you can make money with, but it has nothing to do with being right or trying to explain something. What you must learn is that most trading systems come out of observations that have a certain probability of being correct. Those observations do not explain anything. Remember, a trading system is just a set of rules to guide behavior, nothing less or nothing more. Apparent random fluctuations in the market are caused by many more factors than you can possibly monitor in your system.Develop the attitude of following rulesbecause they give you an edge in the market.Avoid the need to understand or explain the market.Because people attempt to understand and make order out of the market, they assume that the longer a trend continues, the more likely it will suddenly turn around. More importantly, traders are usually willing to bet larger amounts of money on that assumption. Thus, traders want to pick tops and bottoms in a trend—a behavior that tends to be as dangerous as stepping in front of a moving freight train, hoping it will stop and turn around just for you. These biases are usually referred to as the gambler’s fallacy. They have resulted in the ruin of millions of traders over the ages. The gambler’s fallacy is one of those biases, which make trading difficult without a system and proper money management. However, traders frequently develop counter-trend following systems because of this bias—usually with disastrous results.