cynic
- 20 Oct 2007 12:12
rather than pick out individual stocks to trade, it can often be worthwhile to trade the indices themselves, especially in times of high volatility.
for those so inclined, i attach below charts for FTSE and FTSE 250, though one might equally be tempted to trade Dow or S&P, which is significantly broader in its coverage, or even NASDAQ
for ease of reading, i have attached 1 year and 3 month charts in each instance
Shortie
- 06 Aug 2013 12:22
- 12700 of 21973
Lets see how far it extends 48000 maybe..top of its range 46330 and looks overbought but until it changes direction isn't worth a short play
Shortie
- 06 Aug 2013 12:26
- 12701 of 21973
Interesting Chart, note the CCI20 figure, maybe short today.
cynic
- 06 Aug 2013 14:45
- 12702 of 21973
shortie - are you not having a pop at AAPL?
Shortie
- 06 Aug 2013 15:54
- 12703 of 21973
Not just yet Cynic, I'll leave alone for now as it needs to break support and confirm to me its not just testing support for a move higher... I have been closing out FTSE short positions from last week taking profits.
Shortie
- 06 Aug 2013 16:09
- 12704 of 21973
Here's the bounce, see if it passes through support.. worth noting convergence and divergence also yet to break below 0..
cynic
- 06 Aug 2013 16:28
- 12705 of 21973
i too have taken a bundle off the table, fortunately profitably too :-)
Shortie
- 06 Aug 2013 16:43
- 12706 of 21973
I've left a short on the FTSE, note +6 up currently, DAX +7.5, DOW -98.0. We're still seeing pockets of strength so no doubt as the week progresses I'll be buying back my short positions once again.
skinny
- 06 Aug 2013 16:47
- 12707 of 21973
I've been short since yesterday morning (closed half this afternoon) - in case there is a ME incident - although the overnight charge looks quite large this week.
skinny
- 07 Aug 2013 05:56
- 12708 of 21973
@£16 per £ short charge.
cynic
- 07 Aug 2013 06:56
- 12709 of 21973
if ftse drops back to 6500, i'll assuredly be a buyer .... meanwhile, i'll try to avoid itchy fingers!
Shortie
- 07 Aug 2013 09:38
- 12710 of 21973
Overnight charge on FTSE, ouch... Shame I didn't read your post yesterday evening Skinny.. £14.40 per £ I was charged..
Shortie
- 07 Aug 2013 09:42
- 12711 of 21973
European stock markets staged broad-based losses on Wednesday, tracking both U.S. and Asian stocks lower, after Federal Reserve officials said a reduction in asset purchases is likely later this year. Investors were also waiting for the Bank of England's quarterly inflation report and whether the central bank will reveal a framework for forward guidance.
Charles Evans, President of the Chicago Federal Reserve said late Tuesday the economy should improve enough in the second half of the year to allow the central bank to scale back its $85-billion-a-month asset purchases. The comments came after Dennis Lockhart, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, told Market News International that the tapering process could begin at any of the three remaining FOMC meetings this year. The U.K. central bank was also in focus in Wednesday's trade ahead of the Bank of England's quarterly inflation report. Apart from laying out the bank's inflation projections, Governor Mark Carney is also expected to outline if and how the central bank will deploy forward guidance on monetary policy. "We expect the likely announcement of a more aggressive approach to monetary policy -- either via a time- or state-contingent commitment -- to anchor short GBP rates and to weigh on sterling," analysts at Danske Bank said in a note.
cynic
- 07 Aug 2013 09:51
- 12712 of 21973
excuse me guys, but does that mean that every single night you get charged +/-£14 for every £ (short only?) position you have open? ...... that doesn't sound a very good deal to me!
skinny
- 07 Aug 2013 09:52
- 12713 of 21973
Yes - bit of a bugger.
I've closed and am waiting to re-enter.
skinny
- 07 Aug 2013 09:54
- 12714 of 21973
No only overnight on a Tuesday, 99% of shares go ex dividend on a Wednesday - essentially you are charged to cover the dividend amount weighted to the FTSE.
Conversely, if you are long an ex-dividend share, you get the dividend - as I did with BT.A.
Shortie
- 07 Aug 2013 10:02
- 12715 of 21973
All depends on the amount of stock going ex dividned, sometimes the payment is very small and sometimes quite heavy like the one last night. Must get back in the habit of checking this though... Mind you its only ever a small set back.
Shortie
- 07 Aug 2013 10:11
- 12716 of 21973
I'm making the upper resistance point 6660, on the dailys. Seams to be some support at 6600, could break either way right now. I've set a short for 6610 as I'm thinking double top 6400 support needs to be confirmed.
Shortie
- 07 Aug 2013 10:21
- 12717 of 21973
148.504 I've also just gone long on the GJ, I'm hoping for support and a move back to 150's.
cynic
- 07 Aug 2013 10:23
- 12718 of 21973
very short-term you may be right, but looking forward, assuming the eurozone economies also start to perk up - i recollect seeing a few days ago that spain surprised on the upside - then ftse will recommence its upward trend towards 6900/7000
Shortie
- 07 Aug 2013 10:24
- 12719 of 21973
Asian stock markets ended lower Wednesday after overnight losses in the U.S. on monetary-policy concerns, with Japan shares falling the most in nearly two months as exporters took a heavy hit from the yen's advance. The blue-chip Nikkei Stock Average plunged 4% in Tokyo, its worst one-day percentage loss since June 13, while Australia's S&P/ASX 200 fell 1.9%, and South Korea's Kopsi gave up 1.5%. Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index also retreated 1.5%, while the Shanghai Composite Index slid 0.7% after a swinging in and out of gains. The moves came amid seasonally thin trading, with Kim Eng Securities strategist Andrew Sullivan predicting "light volumes to remain." He noted some market holidays this week in Southeast Asia for the end of Ramadan likely to make volumes "lighter still." "Summer doldrums seem to be upon us," he said. The weak tone in Asia followed a second day of losses for U.S. benchmarks, with the S&P 500 (SPX) sliding back below the 1,700 level after ending the day down 0.6%. Concerns about the Federal Reserve's stimulus outlook helped drive the drop on Wall Street, after Chicago Fed President Charles Evans said he expects the central bank to begin tapering its asset-purchase program by the end of the year. Japanese equities took an additional hit from the yen, as the U.S. dollar (USDJPY) fell as low as Yen96.74, according to FactSet, after having traded above the Yen98 level just over 24 hours earlier. The higher yen hit exporters, which have benefitted from a weaker currency. Among them, Sony Corp. (SNE) lost 4.3%, Tokyo Electron Ltd. (8035.TO) retreated 6.7%, and Olympus Corp. (OCPNF) slid 4.7%. Shares of Suntory Beverage & Food Ltd. , which debuted in Tokyo last month, gave up 2.9% of their value despite almost doubling its fiscal first-half profit. Audio-tech firm Pioneer Corp. (6773.TO) tumbled 8.7% after reporting a wider quarterly loss and slashing its fiscal-year profit outlook by more than 90%. But on the upside, energy major Showa Shell Sekiyu K.K. surged 3.7% after hiking its own fiscal-year profit outlook by 85%. In Sydney, the key mining and financial sectors were both heading lower, with Newcrest Mining Ltd. (NCMGF) sinking 4.2% after benchmark Comex gold futures lost their grip on the $1,300-an-ounce level in Tuesday trade. Fortescue Metals Group Ltd. (FSUMY) and uranium extractor Paladin Energy Ltd. (PDN.T) also helped lead mining-share losses, dropping 4.6% and 7%, respectively. Banks extended their weakness after the Reserve Bank of Australia's Tuesday interest-rate cut, with National Australia Bank Ltd. (NAUBF) off 1.7% and Macquarie Group Ltd. (MCQEF) lower by 3%. Chip shares traded lower in Seoul, where Samsung Electronics Co. (SSNLF) fell 2.6%, and SK Hynix Inc. (HXSCL) lost 3.6%, following a 0.7% drop for the Nasdaq (RIXF) . Among Hong Kong stocks, the energy shares were a weak spot after crude-oil futures lost 1.2% during regular trade in New York. Cnooc Ltd. (CEO) slid 1%, and PetroChina Co. (PTR) surrendered 2.7%, while China Petroleum & Chemical Corp. -- better known as Sinopec (SNP) -- saw a 2.4% decline. Casino shares were mixed, with Wynn Macau Ltd. (WYNMY) rising 0.7%, but MGM China Holdings Ltd. (2282.HK) dropping 4.6% after posting a quarterly loss.