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
Balerboy
- 22 Mar 2016 08:06
- 20464 of 21973
That's ok then. ;)
HARRYCAT
- 22 Mar 2016 08:52
- 20465 of 21973
.
jimmy b
- 22 Mar 2016 11:57
- 20466 of 21973
Indices all over the place again .
cynic
- 22 Mar 2016 12:02
- 20467 of 21973
but in a surprisingly narrow range
jimmy b
- 22 Mar 2016 12:03
- 20468 of 21973
Yes i expected more carnage .
cynic
- 22 Mar 2016 12:11
- 20469 of 21973
US existing home sales declined in February
Compared to a level of 5.47 million in the prior month, existing home sales in the US dropped 7.10%, on monthly basis, to a level of 5.08 million in February. Market anticipation was for existing home sales to ease to 5.31 million.
may not have much effect, being overshadowed by brussels
Claret Dragon
- 22 Mar 2016 15:34
- 20470 of 21973
Hangıng around for the bıg red daıly candle to appear. Whenever that mıght be. Certaınly not goıng long from here.
jimmy b
- 22 Mar 2016 15:37
- 20471 of 21973
I am short FTSE but only around evens give or take a few pts.
My first attempt at a trade for several weeks .
cynic
- 22 Mar 2016 15:49
- 20472 of 21973
the markets really are amazing - dammit!
jimmy b
- 22 Mar 2016 16:00
- 20473 of 21973
And so far it's going no where.
Stan
- 23 Mar 2016 07:58
- 20474 of 21973
A down forecast to start, but fancy a bit of up ness later all things being equal.
KEAYDIAN
- 23 Mar 2016 09:03
- 20475 of 21973
And up we go.
cynic
- 23 Mar 2016 11:07
- 20476 of 21973
a good article for you to contemplate .....
Why a complacent VIX makes me nervous
The call:put spread measure of the volatility index (VIX), sometimes referred to as the level of put protection, is back at pre-CNY devaluations levels.
The US VIX has declined from 30 to a low of 13.4 in two weeks. It has declined eight out of the last ten days and is trading a full standard deviation off the historical average, even as most point to the S&P and DOW being overbought and overvalued again.
The ASX equivalent XVI hit 13.7 yesterday, the lowest level since 20 July 2015. It has declined 55% since the 10 February capitulation. It’s also trading over a standard deviation from the historical average of approximately 19.5, yet the ASX has seen trade volumes fall to 27% below the 30-day moving average as buyer exhaustion hits
Intraday volumes through the US, European and Australian options markets have also declined by as much as 30% in the past 30 days. Put protection buying has plummeted to complacent levels.
Deutsche Bank’s ‘complacency index’ is at its highest level since the top of the market last year.
Complacency breeds laziness and roots out diligence, which is not great when macro risks are everywhere.
The Economist Intelligence Unit has ranked 10 macro risks that may cause what could be massive shocks to global equity markets.
Four out of the ten global risks stand out as near term risks:
Number one on the list is a China hard landing, which has been a risk factor for over 10 years. It still remains the biggest global risk and it would severely affect Australia if the GDP targets were to fail.
Number six on the list is Mr Donald J Trump becoming President of the United States. We are 117 days from the start of the Republican convention in Cleveland, and Mr Trump is on course for the nomination. Besides the social unrest he may create, the protectionism and trade risk that may arise would see gold having its best year since 2011.
The horrendous event in Brussels illustrates that the seventh item of terrorism will be an ongoing risk.
And the eight risk is the Brexit, with 71 days until the 2 June referendum. GBP was shelled overnight due to the Brussels attack. It is believed that this strengthened the exit campaign and according to several betting agencies, the odds of Brexit have now increased to 46%. As we get closer to the date, the Brexit will shift up the risk order and the VIX will go with it. The economic impacts have been exaggerated by both sides but it will have a major impact and it will fracture Europe further.
The VIX cannot continue this level of complacency for much longer. Increases in put protection will signal that buyer exhaustion is upon us and the fixed risk dates are beginning to impact short-term trade.
jimmy b
- 23 Mar 2016 11:14
- 20477 of 21973
Still short FTSE .
cynic
- 23 Mar 2016 11:39
- 20478 of 21973
armageddon feels to be a long time in arriving
jimmy b
- 23 Mar 2016 11:41
- 20479 of 21973
Yes a bit boring ,what about you cynic ? we have to pull back at some point .
HARRYCAT
- 23 Mar 2016 13:31
- 20480 of 21973
Dumb question, but why do the Americans applaud the opening bell every day?
jimmy b
- 23 Mar 2016 13:39
- 20481 of 21973
Because they like to get excited about everything.
When billybob gets back from picking cotton and molesting his sister ,it's what's for dinner Ma ? It's cornbread Billybob , whoo yeee yeahhh .
HARRYCAT
- 23 Mar 2016 13:41
- 20482 of 21973
LOL!!! Good answer jimmy!
midknight
- 23 Mar 2016 15:37
- 20483 of 21973