'Trading is a process of observing the market's action until such a time you can find and form trading ideas and get involved.'**

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

The market almost finish where it came from in today's trading.

It drops from the high open after an hour or so and just recover late in the close.

It formed the classic cup with a handle pattern.

Trading today's market was a little bit tricky if you are not particular with the pattern formation that are developing.

From the first hour, it formed a head and shoulder pattern, a sign that a bearish signal is on the way - and it did.

And from between 11:00 am. to 12:00 noon ET., the cup with handle formation is developing - and it did.

Those are the two setups that should have taken into account in trading today.

The market drops today from the positive open.

The Greek problem was the culprit today from the market reversal.

Also some profit taking opportunity was the added factor in reversing the market upside momentum.

Careful trading should be taken into account while trading and also pattern recognition should always be observed.

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Well Funded Traders vs. Underfunded Traders

In this piece, I will post something regarding the above. I am referring to the regular retail traders who do trades in their own places/home offices, in the Starbucks cafe, (and not the institutions).

Comparing the two traders above, the following are my observations:

Well Funded Traders:

They have funds enough within their capacity to deal with the margin and have confidence on how much they can allocate with the number of contracts/shares they can trade.

You don't feel much about the volatility movement because you can put a wide stop, thus minimizing your number of stops that are getting hit or getting triggered.

Have much leeway on how much you can allow from your buy price to your stop price - and this is a great help on the part of the traders since this is about confidence and the emotional impact it develops while in the trade.

Underfunded Traders:

For the underfunded traders, there lots of disadvantages.

First, you cannot trade that much because of limited funds and are afraid of the loses especially when volatility is at high range.

You are prone to putting tight stops, thus you are always subject to getting hit often - one cause that depletes your (minimal) account (and more commission costs).

Your emotional part is prone to your trading concentration because of uneasiness - you have no confidence to trade even though your parameters or edge are on your side.

These are just few observations, but there are advantages and disadvantages on both sides too (vice versa). That all depends on how you treat trading.

There are some underfunded traders who are discipline and have plans. They use their time in learning while building their capital.

It would be better that way to trade first on a few amount that you can afford to lose while learning.

Build first your knowledge on how the market works, and when you are ready to trade, you have already the idea in trading.

But the important thing is you should be in the market - develop your skills.

Actual trading is more important than theory.

You can read all the expensive books ever written by great authors/traders but if you don't practice trading - you will end up losing your capital, time, and your mind too (if your are not paying attention).

Developing traders should be in the market action, and you must sleep and breath the market all the time!


 

Puplava: listen to what the markets are saying

While catching up with Chris Puplava's latest market update last night, I had to stop and share some of his words with our followers on Twitter.

Read the opening of Chris' article, "Stop Talking and Start Listening!". You'll find some worthwhile comments on interpreting data and the importance of maintaining accountability in one's market calls.

"...Far too often investment managers and economists spend more time espousing their views and then defending them until eventually proven right (“I was just early”), rather than spending more time analyzing their assumptions and being honest enough to say, “I WAS WRONG!” and then moving forward.

Part of the problem is that they create a view and then find evidence to support their views rather than starting from the bottom up by collecting an exhaustive amount of data and then summarizing the collective message rather than their views.

Basically, listen to the message of the markets and then interpret those messages rather than telling the markets what they should be doing. What the market IS doing is far more important than what you think the market SHOULD be doing..."

This is an excellent summary of one of the biggest problems I see in the 24/7 cycle of market commentary and trading. People have become too enamored of their own market view/"thesis" and too concerned about the risk to their reputations to come out and admit they're wrong.

Of course, if you are tied to a certain view or position and can't admit you are wrong, it could have an adverse effect on your trading or investing returns. Some people may hesitate to cut their losses on a bad trade or reverse their position (say, by going from short to long on a certain security or asset) if they've anchored themselves to a privately held or publicly expressed view.

Now that blogs and real-time social networks have allowed us all to become "mini-pundits", the risk of spouting off in public and ignoring the message of the markets has shifted down from media stars and big-name fund managers to the rest of us.

But guess what? That also provides us with an opportunity to face the music and occasionally admit we were wrong about something, which may actually help build trust with our audience (and in ourselves) in the long-term.

Because let's face it: no one wants to listen to someone who is never wrong and is always (magically) right. Why? Simple. Such people don't exist, oracles and sages of mythology aside.

Now back to the macro view. Despite some well-known recent calls for recession from ECRI and others, Puplava feels the markets and economy are in "bullish harmony" and are sending us a message that there is no bear market or recession ahead. Take a look at the article and examine the arguments for yourself.

And remember, hold yourself accountable for your own market actions and judgements. Try not to impose your views on the market, and try to be flexible in your trading, especially when it comes to admitting you are wrong about something. Your thinking and your results might improve!
The market made a nice move when it opened below from its previous close.

It maintained its momentum from thereon and the bears are not that quite happy.

Might be a sideways move come tomorrow's trading?

If it is, scalping is the way to make a trade!

The market open below from its previous close due to some concern from the Greeks debt problem but the participants overcome that concern and turn around the market trend.

A sign that the market is now resilient from any negative problem?

I guess the market might break again before the close.

Let's see!

Stock index futures signal dip in early trade

NEW YORK | Tue Feb 7, 2012 6:02am EST

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Stock index futures pointed to a dip at the open on Wall Street on Tuesday, with futures for the S&P 500 down 0.06 percent, Dow Jones futures down 0.05 percent and Nasdaq 100 futures down 0.05 percent at 5:30 a.m. ET.

Greek leaders faced crunch talks on Tuesday to secure a new bailout and avoid a chaotic debt default, caught between European Union demands Greece accepts painful reforms now and a national strike against more austerity. Prime Minister Lucas Papademos negotiated through most of the night with Greece's EU and IMF lenders.