Sharesmagazine
 Home   Log In   Register   Our Services   My Account   Contact   Help 
 Stockwatch   Level 2   Portfolio   Charts   Share Price   Awards   Market Scan   Videos   Broker Notes   Director Deals   Traders' Room 
 Funds   Trades   Terminal   Alerts   Heatmaps   News   Indices   Forward Diary   Forex Prices   Shares Magazine   Investors' Room 
 CFDs   Shares   SIPPs   ISAs   Forex   ETFs   Comparison Tables   Spread Betting 
You are NOT currently logged in
 
Register now or login to post to this thread.

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

skinny - 07 Nov 2012 16:14 - 9470 of 21973

120801_cartoon_600_605.jpg

Balerboy - 07 Nov 2012 16:18 - 9471 of 21973

LOL skinny.,.

Shortie - 07 Nov 2012 16:42 - 9472 of 21973

11:31 EST - The cost to insure US Treasurys using credit-default swaps is up 6% since last night in the wake of the presidential election, according to Markit data. Meanwhile, the cost to insure investment grade company debt is up nearly 3%. "Risk sentiment has taken a turn for the worse as market participants realize that, while the election outcome last night may have changed some of the faces in Washington, the major principles did not," says Otis Casey, analyst at Markit in New York.

Shortie - 07 Nov 2012 16:43 - 9473 of 21973

11:38 EST - Wells Fargo's chief economist John Silvia sees some sort of resolution to the fiscal cliff now the election's done. He expects the Bush tax cuts to stay although highest earners may pay more. There will likely be $100 billion of budget sequestration that will include defense cuts. New taxes on interest and dividends are likely. Silvia also sees continued Fed easy policy and low long-term rates, which should boost real estate and commodity prices.

cynic - 07 Nov 2012 17:11 - 9474 of 21973

there's no question that this fiscal cliff nonsense will be resolved - as i posted earlier, as usual, it will be the 59th minute minute of 11th hour ...... i really do get very cross with these american nincompoop senators who think only of playing heavy-handed partisan politics and clearly have no great concern for the general wellbeing of the country or its perception in the wider world (as if they even know that exists)

Toya - 07 Nov 2012 20:01 - 9475 of 21973

Just catching up with all the posts here - wonderful cartoons Skinny :0)

Had a lovely ride on my shorts today, and then went long at one time, thinking the DOW would surely pick itself up at around 13000 but got beaten up!

Chris Carson - 08 Nov 2012 00:48 - 9476 of 21973

Speculative or stupid? Long Dow @ 12,953. Caps futures.

cynic - 08 Nov 2012 07:31 - 9477 of 21973

inevitably speculative, but i do not think stupid, but then i bought more at 12945

skinny - 08 Nov 2012 07:46 - 9478 of 21973

EUR German Trade Balance 17.0B consensus 17.2B previous 18.1B

EUR French Trade Balance -5.0B consensus -5.0B previous -5.3B

Shortie - 08 Nov 2012 09:20 - 9479 of 21973

I'm staying short with the trend on the DOW, I don't think it matters when the fiscal cliff is resolved, the US debt situation remains and will eventully lead to austerity. The ongoing QE programme is likely to remain under Obama, the yield on 10-year treasuries should fall back to 1.5% or lower and the dollor remains strong despite the massive increase in money supply. So short dollor, short Wall St and now to pick my entry points.

HARRYCAT - 08 Nov 2012 09:23 - 9480 of 21973

Just as a matter of interest, do you not hedge your currency activity with a pairs trade, just in case it all goes wrong?

Shortie - 08 Nov 2012 09:34 - 9481 of 21973

I never hedge my currency trades Harry and will admit I've been caught out a few times. If you short GBP/USD what would you buy to hedge? EUR to me would be the obvious obe against USD but really the position only magnifies losses if USD gains...

Seymour Clearly - 08 Nov 2012 10:00 - 9482 of 21973

I never hedge currency trades either, just can't seem to reason why I should effectively bet against myself. I know lots of people do, just doesn't work for me.

Shortie - 08 Nov 2012 10:25 - 9483 of 21973

Some people just play minimum stakes below the minimum bet allowed, to do this you can hedge to reduce your exposure. e.g. GBP/USD minimum is 50 cents, if you wanted to just play 10 cents you could open a short at 60 cents in say the December future and then a long position of 50 cents in the January future to achieve a 10 cent short. The downside of doing this is you tie up funds covering the margins against each bet.

hilary - 08 Nov 2012 11:21 - 9484 of 21973

There are two ways that I'm aware of to hedge currency trades.

Using cable and fiber as examples, as there's an element of correlation between sterling and the euro...

The first method can be used to offset short-term price fluctuations of a long-term trade. Suppose you're long cable and are happy to hold for several months. If the price is going to go up, it obviously isn't going to go up in a straight line, and there will be down hours, down days and down weeks along the way. You could use a series of fiber shorts on any of those faster timeframes to hedge the long-term cable long trade for those times when things aren't going quite to plan.

The second method can be used as a hedge as part of a grid trading strategy. Grid trading is very dangerous as it breaks one of trading's golden no-no rules of never adding to a losing position to average down. In grid trading, if you're long and the price moves down by, say, 30 pips, you add to your long... and continue to do so at every 30 pip step. Your average entry price is reducing all the time and you will be working with a very low profit target of, perhaps, 5 pips. Sooner or later the average entry price will be low enough to get out of all the trades in your basket en-masse and bank the measly 5 pip profit.

The risk of this system is that the market continues going the wrong way and you get a margin call or, worse still, are forcibly closed. One solution is to trade cable one way (eg. longs only) in the grid and hedge by trading fiber the other way (shorts only), as one pair will be banking profits all the time that the other pair is adding to its losing positions.

The strategy might sound hare-brained, but I'm an introducer for lots of Forex brokers and, trust me, I can tell you that it's VERY popular!

Shortie - 08 Nov 2012 11:46 - 9485 of 21973

Looks like AAPL is on for another short position...

cynic - 08 Nov 2012 11:49 - 9486 of 21973

confess even i have become disillusioned and shall swallow the very bitter pill

Plateman - 08 Nov 2012 12:02 - 9487 of 21973

Nice to see you back as an occasional poster Hils, and as as usual with a positive contribution.

Shortie - 08 Nov 2012 12:04 - 9488 of 21973

I thought you'd exited a while ago Cynic.

cynic - 08 Nov 2012 12:25 - 9489 of 21973

foolishly not ..... it is a stock i have traded successfully over recent months but completely f'd up this time ..... stupid boy :-(
Register now or login to post to this thread.