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FTSE + FTSE 250 - consider trading (FTSE)     

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

cynic - 09 Jan 2008 18:56 - 538 of 21973

as i write, Dow once more looking sickly (-60) but GOOG down a whopping $40+, admittedly on a serious heavyweight at $625 ..... glad not in that any more!

Falcothou - 09 Jan 2008 19:54 - 539 of 21973

Enjoyed Jim Rogers Hot commodities book published 2007. If you can't be bothered reading it he says that commodities hit rock bottom in 1998 with respect to inflation and have been rallying since then, albeit in fits and starts, the pullbacks can be quite extreme. Essentially the ones to go for are ones with supply/demand issues and over this century there has historically been a commodities run after equities go bearish. The FTSE is more like a commodities index itself of course especially since August. If there is high demand ie from China and India then it takes a long time to establish crops such as coffee or to build a mine so even if there is strong demand supply remains constrained for some time. I'm looking for a pull back to get into US Sugar as it is a popular biofuel in Brazil and the EU has cut the subsidy on Sugarbeet. I read recently that Goldman Sachs are bullish soft commodities which are very sensitive to weather and harvests, but less so metals which have enjoyed a great run in 2007.

steveo - 09 Jan 2008 23:06 - 540 of 21973

Here are some of the platinum tips

phpt:uk is an etf
anglo platinum agppy:us 75% owned by anglo-american another was impala platinum impuy:us, impala is higher risk as it is mainly in zimbabwe.
You can't see charts with moneyam but they are available on bloomberg.com.

Question is will it pull back to gain a better entry point. Please DYOR. As a fund manager tipped them on live TV yesterday he will probably sell tommorrow and buy back in a week !!!!

cynic - 10 Jan 2008 09:44 - 541 of 21973

indicators, which i agree often prove wrong, are that last night's rally was no more than a DCB ..... Dow indicating to open -89

HARRYCAT - 10 Jan 2008 11:42 - 542 of 21973

Only -13 now, but crucial FED speech this afternoon & also BoE rate decision to come. Sideways trading 'til then, imo.

HARRYCAT - 10 Jan 2008 12:02 - 543 of 21973

No change to BoE rate. Held at 5.5%
Now it's up to the U.S. this afternoon.

cynic - 10 Jan 2008 17:39 - 544 of 21973

below is a snippet from www.cnnfn.com and explains why Dow has suddenly come to life this afternoon, despite a bunch of pretty negative reports ....

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke pledged Thursday to slash interest rates yet again to prevent housing and credit problems from plunging the country into a recession.

The Fed chief made clear the central bank was prepared to act aggressively to rescue a weakening economy.

cynic - 10 Jan 2008 17:41 - 545 of 21973

was initially up about 100, but now back to almost neutral, but that is still a lot better than it might have been and looked at the opening bell ..... last hour of trading could be its usual exciting stuff!

cynic - 11 Jan 2008 18:28 - 546 of 21973

Wall Street is currently plummeting (down 195 and has been lower), but for sure the Fed is going to cut rates quite aggressively and i dare say if there are other stimuli that can be applied, it will ..... it therefore seems to me that a long flutter on one the US indices may shortly be quite tempting

HARRYCAT - 11 Jan 2008 22:47 - 547 of 21973

I seem to have lost my calender of events. When is the next FED rate review, please?

cynic - 12 Jan 2008 09:03 - 548 of 21973

from memory, 29th Jan.

given the state of the markets, and indeed world economies, one does wonder whether one would be better off in cash, or if in the market, then short of advertising companies (WPP?) and other shares in the luxury and non-essential sectors ..... the only sectors that are now looking healthy are the miners (gold especially) and oilies and the like.

btw, that does not contradict my previous post ..... even in a bear market, the indices do not go south in a straight line.

spitfire43 - 12 Jan 2008 10:07 - 549 of 21973

The fed have already indicated that they will cut rates to support the economy, even with everything looking very negative and for very good reasons. It still wouldn't surprise me to see the US economy to still lead the way out of this mess. As you say cash is king at the moment.

HARRYCAT - 12 Jan 2008 17:37 - 550 of 21973

Maybe the old theory of Utilities & Supermarkets being safe havens will kick in again? Both pay a reasonable divi, though capital growth is dull.

cynic - 12 Jan 2008 18:36 - 551 of 21973

in that case, much as i avoid the place, i guess tesco would be your best bet ..... given the choice, i would almost never shop in any supermarket ..... the quality is generally poor and over-priced relative to a quality independent specialist ..... apart from which, supporting a supermarket for meat, fish, veg and similar, is (almost) tantamount to death by 1000 cuts for the few quality independents that remain .... don't get me started!

halifax - 12 Jan 2008 19:57 - 552 of 21973

I agree our local butcher has just closed as the owner will make 000's by selling the plot for residential development, which is much more lucrative and easier than spending the next 10 years running a butchers shop.

HARRYCAT - 12 Jan 2008 20:04 - 553 of 21973

Actually I wasn't planning on spending my hard earned pittance IN the supermarkets, just hoping that the masses will. Happy just to hold the shares, maybe.
It always amazes me that with everything there is choice, but when it comes to water & sewerage, each region is a monoploy. Anglian Water supply the H2O and charge me accordingly, take it or leave it! No competition, though regulated by Ofwat.
But, the theory is, we will all need food, Water & drainage regardless of the economic climate.

steveo - 14 Jan 2008 08:44 - 554 of 21973

If we all need food the least risk is going long on soft commodities, rather than supermarkets themselves as they are prone to reduced margins as food stuffs increase in value.

Rogers expects cotton, maize, wheat to increase for the next 3-5 years, more inflation on the way, hard times ahead for UK supermarkets, tesco would have to be the best due to far-east growth story.

Personally I am going long on wheat and cotton via spread bet, and we haven't even had a drought for a while so the price will rocket if that occurs.

cynic - 14 Jan 2008 08:47 - 555 of 21973

no drought? ..... ask them in Australia!

steveo - 14 Jan 2008 08:49 - 556 of 21973

Ok forgot about that one, I meant in america or russia.

cynic - 14 Jan 2008 14:16 - 557 of 21973

in that case do you mean maize or wheat?
how about rice futures? ..... now that is an interesting one for you if you are into softs
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