Posts Tagged ‘futures’

Sentiment numbers stronger than expected

Sunday, March 8th, 2009

This is for Friday’s market March 6th, and the sentiment numbers are out.

I had talked about the investment newsletter writer’s poll out for this week, expecting them to be a bit weaker than last week was, adding to a more negative environment, which would set the stage for a bigger rally. It did not work out that way.

We may still get a rally but when is the big question? The numbers changed in the positive direction, which is a little bit of a surprise. They were 28.6 bullish last week and they moved up to 29.7 bullish this week. A reading below 35 is typically a bullish sign, with a rally potentially at hand. With this sell off, extremes are difficult to time and it can take longer for the signals to have their usual counter effect. The reading only went up by 1.1%.  That may help in prolonging the coming rally. We will have a rally, that is for sure, but we don’t know if it is going to be from 1,ooo dow points lower. These numbers are just something to watch and keep in the back of your mind.

Most people who write investment newsletters have their opinion taken each week and some of them became a little more bullish this last week as of  the Tuesday reading. The point is they are usually wrong when polled as a group. It is just like so many other investors, they follow the trend and as the trend continues in the initial direction for some time more and more of them become bullish or bearish, whichever the direction.

Basically, they are late to the party and become bullish at the top of the market, when it is only then apparent to them The herd mentality. The same is true during a market sell off, they then think it is going to continue down, since that is the direction of the current trend. Last week 45 percent of them thought the market was going down. This week only 44 percent had those same feelings. That lets up the pressure a bit for the market to continue down possibly, but I would say, not by much. It is not a science. I have posted and explained this before, but for the benefit of those who are not aware of it, there you have it.

There is another point to all of this. Learn how to read the markets for yourself and you won’t be victimized by other people’s opinions. There is a way to do that. It is kind of like a language. If you don’t know it, you will be lost, wandering from place to place, looking for your way. I am not the only person who knows how to read the markets, for sure.  But I would say, there are very few who can do it effectively and consistently. I will be talking more in the future about just reading the charts themselves, with no indicators at all, just the price action.

This is a great way to start understanding what is happening on the screen. There is a struggle going on, constantly. A change in ownership, from weak hands to strong hands. Those that want to sell to others who want to buy – but at what price. It is their price, the price that they are willing to pay. In the case of a sell off, it is people who cannot handle the heat (weak hands) who sell to those who can assume the risk and are at that moment strong (hands). It usually takes only a short while of seeing lower prices until those strong hands soon become the new weak hands and begin to offer their shares and/or contracts to other stronger hands, but at their price (the new strong hands). This is how a sell off is carried on and how we get continued lower prices.

There is always someone buying, all day long, but again at their price, which often times does not hold and then the selling continues. This process stops when there are no longer a majority of sellers left to sell to and the buyers are taking the upper hand, taking all of the available supply the market has to offer and the struggle continues. There is always someone selling and there is always someone buying – but at adjusted prices. That is how and why the price changes.

We step in now and then and help them out. We create liquidity for the market place. When a mutual fund manager is faced with selling a large portion of his portfolio to meet redemption requests, but feels the drop is only short term, he can sell futures contracts by the thousands and give himself the insurance that he needs from a large market drop. If he had to sell all of the shares in the open market, he may be pushing the market down with his large size and thus adding fuel to a down market. If the drop comes, he is protecting his portfolio ( a kind of insurance ) from a market decline. When the market comes back up, the original value comes back into his portfolio but he has made a big profit from the decline. If the market does not come back, his portfolio has taken a big loss in the drop in value, but he has large gains in selling the futures contracts so he has offset his portfolio and has not lost money for his clients. If there was no one to take the other side of the trade, when he wanted to sell thousands of contracts over time, he would not be able to do what he did in the example above.

Traders and yes, day-traders, provide an essential part to the process. We make it possible for so many to buy the insurance they need to protect themselves. The market would have so much more volatility to it if we traders were not there to help smooth out the process. So there is a purpose being served here.

It is the same for the farmer growing corn or the company selling orange juice or coffee beans. By them selling futures contracts in the future, they are agreeing on a price they can live with, a set price in the future. If at that time the current price is much higher, they do not get to enjoy that higher price. Their contract says they agreed on xyz price and that is the price they will get 2 or 3 months from now when the crop come to harvest. By same token, if the current price at the time of harvest is 20% lower, they will still get the agreed price of xyz at the day the contract was agreed on.

Traders take the other sides of those trades and speculate that the price will be higher or lower in the future. The farmer is guaranteed on his price and he is happy to get it. If he came to market in the future and received  30% lower than current price, he may get financially destroyed and he can’t afford to take on that risk. But others are able to.

Those are just a couple of examples in the financial and commodity markets of the functionality of the instruments that we trade and why. On a personal note, most traders trade for personnel profit and that is understandable. They are taking a risk, and for that risk they can be rewarded when they are right.

The trading day was good today, picking up 1 & 1/2 times daily goal. I have some of those trades in a small recording from the session. I think it may be helpful for some to see the market trade in a live environment. I have had technical problems in posting my equity chart so this is the next best thing and probably better for most. As soon as I can get it fixed, I will post them again.

http://www.screencast.com/t/m8FOo2HQwNj       some live trades from Friday’s session

Day three of sample training & Posting steady profits

Thursday, February 12th, 2009

Today is day three of my small training video series started on Monday this week.

There are nine parts to this in total and I will continue to post them until finished. The idea is to give you some insight into how a person can take money out of the market each day. I have not had any problem posting positive results every day I am trading the S&P 500 E-Mini futures. It is possible for you to do this as well.

If anyone is interested in learning more and wants to be mentored through this process all you need to do is send me an email message and I will be ready to show you more closely how this process can work for you. I now have more time to devoted to this process and will be able to respond to your emails more timely. My plan is to continue posting my results as well as my screen shots of my trades to show you that it can be done. In addition, with time you will see that the trade timing is consistent and duplicatable. There is no substitute for understanding price action and how to maneuver through those waters, but with my semi-custom timing indicator, it is a nice tool to help ensure that you are on the right side of the trade as seen in my videos and postings.

Anyone interested in seeing me trade live, send me an email and I will patch you into my trading screen. It only takes a couple of minutes. If you want to hear me as well, I can connect you into my room through SKYPE. You can download that program through my website to listen and if you want to talk and ask questions in between trades you will need a headset. A microphone can be bought at Walmart or similar store for about $15. The relay of information from my computor to yours is in real time, no delay. I try and get the calls out with enough time for you to place your orders.  I am usually only trading for a few points with my partners to reach a daily goal of 2 to 3 points for them. Sometimes I come back and trade a little more myself  but it just depends.

In today’s market action, it was good to see the market hold but it is a little scary as it flirts with the current support off the bottom end of the range. The market sentiment numbers have come out as of yesterday and I will update them as I am able to get the information in tomorrow’s post.

My day trading today went quick lasting only 15 minutes before I picked up my daily goal. I have it posted below, but as I remember it was +3 ticks, +3 ticks, +3 ticks and +2 ticks, for a total of 2 & 3/4 points. Take a look as I have a screen shot of my trades below. I have not been trading that much lately, but that is ok. I will be increasing my contract size in the next day or two, so my profit will start going up while I still only need to trade for 2-3 points.

I wish everyone the best.  Vince

http://www.screencast.com/t/gKGSolGl                  Part 3 of sample training video

http://www.screencast.com/t/jPWhWDmn             Today’s equity chart

http://www.screencast.com/t/Y0qFdpVy               Screen Shot of Today’s trades

Training series / First in a nine part series

Monday, February 9th, 2009

Hello, this post is for Monday, February 9 th, 2009 and today I will begin a 9 part sample training series on how to trade the S&P 500 E-Mini Futures for daily profit.

I know some of you missed Saturday’s training with conflicting schedules, but I have decided to give out some of my material to the readers of this blog. The information is, I feel, very valuable to the person who is trying to find a method that has the ability to take money out of the market every day.

All traders are different, in that you may find a group of traders who all use the same method, but they all use different entries and get different results. That being said, you can train yourself to react in a consistent fashion when you have repeatable patterns presented to you. The main idea is to walk away with a modest profit and do it again the next day and so on. It is a very attainable goal if you know what to do.

The first thing anyone who aspires to become a successful day trader is you need to know how to trade. That may sound a little simplistic, but you would be surprised at how many people do not trade with a plan but by the seat of their pants. I don’t mean to offend anyone out there who is able to trade this way, but whatever feels good or looks good usually does not produce consistent results.

There are so few people who are able to be successful at this. In a way, I guess that’s good because the returns would not be as large as they can be for some. For the person who makes a million dollars a year, the odds drop way down. One of the reasons for that is most people are not able to 1) trade profitably and consistently;  2) they cannot overcome the mental aspect of trading . You first need to know how, then you need to work on yourself in ways you may have never thought about before. Sounds like a lot of work and it is. Nothing worth while is ever easy, cheap and without cost.

Have you ever thought of the main reason for your trading pursuits?  One of the many benefits I find rewarding about living a trader’s lifestyle is you have the ability to make your own hours. For me, that is a high on my priority list. Not having to work for someone else is without a doubt high in the ranking. You know, the money is not as important for me as it may be for others, because I don’t need so much to meet my daily needs. The time freedom is probably the most valuable to me. The money just affords the opportunity to take advantage of that benefit. The answer to the question above is going to be different for everyone, but it is a good question, so maybe give it some thought.

This business is not for everyone and I will be the first one to tell you that. You need to have a desire and/or a passion to pursue this seriously because you will be going up against professional traders worldwide. You cannot take a casual approach and expect to consistently come out on top.  

Back to the training series. I have part one of a nine part series posted below. These are only 5 minute clips and they will continue the next day where I left off. The nine parts will last a total of 45 minutes and this represents just one complete trading day. I have moved up my chart to a 233 tick chart from what I usually trade, 100 tick.  I look at 3 different time frames during the day and make my final trading decision in the 100 tick. When you trade a higher time frame chart, two things happen. You usually need to account for a bigger stop, so your target needs to be higher as well to account for that, and the second thing is you have fewer trade setups.

The smallest time frame for me is the 100 tick as I have said and this is basically a scalping method by definition (taking small profits of a few ticks to a few points). I find that, it would be advantageous for someone to trade a separate account for a different style. Like trading for larger point runs based on the appropriate trade setup. With this style, I do like to gradually scale out of trades when I see nice chart patterns present themselves. Maybe taking off the first part at 1 to 2 points, then the second at 2 to 3 points and the rest, let it go to where ever the market says get out, that is easy to identify with my method.

I might add, there is another way I have handled nice trade setups and that is, I would identify the next biggest time frame up from the 100 (I usually go up in incriments of 4, for me that would be the 400 tick chart). When I see a nice pattern in the 400, that I know in the past has produced nice movement, I look to the 100 tick and go long with a standard order, lets just say 3 contracts. I will add another 3 at a new break out with my new stop in place and move up my old stop to the second add on spot. I will add again at a new break out treating it as a separate order with its own separate stop.  In a 10 point run you may be able to add 4 or 5 times safely without any additional risk other than your first order. Basically, I am pyramiding my position for maximum return without the risk. You stay within the larger trend which is pushing you higher and add in the smaller time frame for maximum return. You can do that if you are able to recognize patterns and be ready with your plan in place. Keep that in mind when you view the short video’s.

You can see the patterns more easily in a larger time frame. That is why I have gone up to the 233 tick chart. It does not matter the time frame, everything is always the same. There are a lot of ways to trade and no one can say that my way is the best way, because it may be the best way for you but different for others. I would say, I do like the 233 tick chart and I have traded it before. It is the maximum time frame I can go and still keep a small 5 tick stop, so it is a very good alternative to the 100 tick, which may be a little too fast for someone who is just starting out. This is still plenty fast and the trade setups are still fairly frequent. When I counted the trade triggers generated in the one day, there were 50 possible trades for this time frame (233 tick)

Again, the training is broken down into 9 segments of 5 minutes each, given to you one each day and represents the full trading day of  Thursday, February 5th, 2009.  By the way, Friday’s market action looks the same as Thursday’s and Wednesday’s looks the same as Friday’s, they all  more or less look the same, repeatable trading patterns that happen over and over again.

This is just a sample of what you can learn with me. If you decide to partner with me, you will be able to follow me in the morning for 30 to 60 minutes, capturing your daily goal. I think you will be nicely rewarded with new knowledge, experience and hopefully some extra cash to go along with it. 

Ask about my “Mentoring Special”, Learn While You Earn.

Have a great day!

Vince

http://www.screencast.com/t/WhGbWgD8Y                     Sample Training part  #1

http://www.screencast.com/t/44E4Uu492Qt                   Today’s equity chart

http://www.screencast.com/t/tBnsAUQswkN                   Today’s trades

http://www.screencast.com/t/kGkg0mjTPe                     Add on trade/1 entry 3 exits

http://www.screencast.com/t/ut61mZJgZn                      Updated equity chart

Hold on, tomorrow is the day

Friday, February 6th, 2009

Hello everyone, it is Thursday evening, February 5th, and all is well.

I will go out on a limb here and give you my opinion on what tomorrow can potentially bring. A big move to the upside is what I am expecting to see in the daily chart. We went down like a rock to test the low end of the range (the purple line drawn on daily chart). It started in the night trading and when this morning’s open came, it dropped straight down, to catch up with the futures market. At that point it really did a good job in shaking out all the weak hands in the market and at that point the buyers came in to scoop up the deals.

With today closing near the high end of the range, the pattern is very bullish. The funny thing is, we also bounced down off of the upper outside trend line from above. When the market hit that today, it did just like it had done before and reversed its direction off of that high. It is getting sandwiched in between the two lines and something is going to give. Once it does, it will explode initially in the direction of the break. I have seen it a thousand times.

The question is which way will it break? I say it will be to the upside. What do you say? The pattern looks very strong to me, but again, I have said it many times before, you need to read currently what is happening and make your decisions based on that. So far, the big picture in the daily is still neutral, until we get that break out, in whatever direction. But you all know by now that I have a bullish leaning, in part because of the fact that very few people think the market is going to go up. It’s one little clue telling me that most people are generally wrong, even if they are considered experts. Actually all the more so.

Tomorrow is going to be a very interesting day, check the news. 

There are very few people who know how to read the market from a technical perspective and there are even fewer people who can do it with some degree of consistency. I rarely listen to any news during the day and a good reason is that today I did happen to hear that there was bad news on the economy – new information. I do not know what that was, but just heard that it was bad. Conventional wisdom will tell you that the market should go down and it did initially this morning, but it reversed in a very strong way, catching so many people off guard and forcing them to cover there short positions, which will push the market higher.

It’s not over yet. In fact, if the market can get a footing sometime tomorrow and make it into positive territory, there are going to be a lot of nervous people out there in bad positions going into the week end short. It could be painful for them and many do not have a great deal of tolerance for the stuff, so I would expect a fast big move catching a lot of people off guard, but not the readers of this blog.  We shall see.

Day trading was OK over all. I hit just a touch under 3 times my daily goal, but it was a rough start.  The early morning had good trading volume, that is what I like. The ability to move quickly in my direction giving me my points, a good thing.  I started as the market was slowing down, like the other day. I did not have the volume and direction early on that I like to see.  What can I expect, trading in the slow time of day is going to give slow or low volume. 

I still traded the split trades, taking two exits instead of one. This gives me the ability to move my second target up to capture a greater profit, but it shows that trade as being two trades instead of one. It does not really matter, but I am just explaining that the number of trades is half the amount posted. I took 25 trades in all and picked up a lot more than I needed to hit my daily goal and that is after commissions. I probably won’t be trading that much tomorrow, but its nice to know that I can continue to trade for more if I choose too.

After 11 am the volume came back into the market and the setups came with them. I pulled straight up once that happened. You have to take what the market gives you and it was not giving me much early on.  Knowing when it’s best to trade is important. The key times of the day are early morning and after 11 am. Some people break that down into a science and zooming in on specific time ranges within those high volume times. There can be something to it, but if you know how to trade, you just read the charts and follow.

I am still planning to have a training session on Saturday which can give you a chance to ask questions and get more information. The class is free for those interested and will start at 8 am West Coast time and continue to 9:30. Just give me an email message and I will be able to patch you into my trading screen. If you want to hear me, you will need to download SKYPE and need a headset if you want to ask questions. If not, you can still hear through your computer speakers.  Below are some of today’s trades.

Bye for now.

Vince

http://www.screencast.com/t/kAkWNuTYB           Some live trades taken

http://www.screencast.com/t/J0d93XOvrj           Today’s equity curve

http://www.screencast.com/t/Cbb7P2fBR              Daily S&P chart updated

Another good day

Thursday, September 4th, 2008

As I have come to expect, I had another good day in the market.  Not being cocky, but the hard work has been paying off, so to speak.  The best thing I can ask for is to look for set ups that happen over and over and over again.  Different market conditions are always present, but the method works.  Now, I need to stay focused and humble.  Steady as she goes.  I don’t need to conquer the world in a week, but a steady path is what I have come to expect. 

I want to take a moment to explain a few things on the trading vehicle that I am using.  I trade the S&P 500 E-Mini futures.  It’s called the “Emini” because it is a smaller version of the large contract.  I say contract because that is what I am trading.  “A Contract”, an agreement between another trader, fund manager, investment bank and so on.  They are wanting to set this agreement up to protect their investments from a market drop so they may be wanting to sell this agreement with someone who will contract with them, anyone, around the world or in the same city as they are.  Someone who will assume the risk they are seeking to alleviate.  You are not really investing in the companies of the S&P 500, but are piggy-backing on their daily movement.  As the real index moves up and down, the futures move very close to it.  Sometimes above it and sometimes below it, in anticipation of where people think the market will actually be in say 1, 5, 60 minutes or more from now. 

As I mentioned in an earlier post, this is a very large market with participants all over the globe controlling assets in the 100’s of billions of dollars all there for different reasons.  All I have to know is why I am there and continue to exploit my advantage.  I am taking a calculated risk and will be rewarded for my experience, patience, discipline and foresight.  When I am on track with the right mental preparedness, I am hitting in the 90% + winning percentage area.  My targets are usually small, but not always. It depends on market conditions, and my losses are very small when I get them.  Losses are a part of it, and I take my losses just like other speculators. But not as often as the winners come in. 

I will be posting a video of some of my trades and still shots as well.  In addition, I will be posting an equity curve of my daily profit after commissions so you can see how all my trades are coming in.  More to follow with a lot of education on what I am doing and how I do it for the select few that will learn my method. And that it is a “method” and not a “system.”  When someone learns the method they will be able to adjust for market conditions. Whereas a system will start to show multiple losses in not being able to adjust itself as I am able to.  The goal is to be profitable every day and get my paycheck sent out to me on every Friday for half of my profit. 

Why do I trade?  Quite simply, to make a living and have the free time to be where I want to be, doing what I want to do.  It is the best job in the world for those who can learn to master their emotions and stay the course they have set for themselves. 

More to come!

 Vince  -  vinnie@sniperdaytrading.com