This week's guest is Mr
Euro and gives his own thoughts on
the week ahead and a personal view on his trading
strategy in the US Markets with explanations of
some of the Technical terms for those new to
them.
If anyone else would like to be the guest next
week please let us know by emailing mike@moneyam.com
Monday 28 June
Interims Beale - Near the end of
March, the retailer announced sales for the first
20 weeks were 5.1% below the previous year, and
that all indications were that the rest of 2004
would remain challenging. High costs and low
retail inflation are to blame.Finals Northgate
Information Solutions - In May Northgate
announced results were expected to exceed market
forecasts. The software outsourcers Rebus
HR Group acquisition has performed better than
expected, and the group should meet consensus
pre-tax profits of around million.Tuesday 29 June
Finals Carpetright - The second
half of the carpet retailers financial year
saw a sales increase of 8.6% compared with the
same period last year. Like-for-like sales
increased by 4.2%. Carpetright is now trading
from 364 stores, as well as the 38 carpet
concessions within Allders, the rollout of which
was completed in March.Finals International Greetings -
In June the greetings products manufacturer
acquired Krakajack, one of the leading suppliers
of crackers to the Irish market. The deal is
forecast to contribute illion to turnover and
facilitate IGs entry into the lucrative
catering market. Expect news on further
acquisition plans today.Wednesday 30 June
Finals HMV - The music retailer
enjoyed a strong Christmas, which continued
through to its April year-end. Management expects
profits to be at the top end of expectations, the
market consensus being million. Cash generation
has been stronger and net borrowings should be
better than forecast.Ex-dividend Workspace Group - A
year of strong growth saw the flexible
accommodation provider raise its total dividend
by 10.3% to 31p. The groups focus on
managed workspace properties has
continued to generate capital growth, with net
asset per share rising by a healthy 22.1%.
Pre-tax profits rose 12.7% to 1 million.Thursday 1 July
AGM - Scottish Mortgage Inv.Trust - The
trusts net asset value grew by 33.6% in
2003/04 after increasing its exposure to Emerging
Markets and Asia. SMIT has assets of billion and
aims to maximise return and dividend growth
through investment in UK and international
markets.Economics - Productivity Q1 - Just
how hard do we work in the UK? These ONS
statistics give details of output per job, output
per hour and unit wage costs for the whole
economy of the UK. Read the report at
www.statistics.gov.uk/productivity.Friday 2 July
AGM - Incepta - Inceptas May
results reported a greater sense of optimism
among clients, but can the same be said for its
shareholders? The PR group suffered a 33% dive in
pre-tax profits and admitted recovery would be
patchy. Expect some positive
forecasting combined with hard facts.AGM - Vitesse Media - The
aim-quoted print and on-line publisher reported
some encouraging results in April. Operating
losses fell from ,000 to 000 in exceptionally
difficult market conditions. Analysts forecast
pre-tax profits of ,000 this year. The group has
cash in the bank and is on the acquisition trail.ThoughtsA personal insight into trading the
US markets
Rather than providing trading thoughts for this
week, I thought it might be an idea to share my
trading style with you. Its a bit different
to what you would normally read on a Sunday
evening and probably a different trading style
too. I do hope you find something that takes your
interest and that it doesnt bore you to
death!
I have been trading for over 10 years now, got
involved with the early ESI BB where I had the
misfortune to meet a number of the characters
still around today. Unfortunately less that about
5% remain, that tells you how difficult this
trading business is. You only need to look at how
people come and go on Crocs Traders
Thread for confirmation of this.
More by luck than judgement, I stumbled across a
method of trading that makes me reasonable money
and has enabled me to continue in this game. I
have traded everything, from Dils (a well
known Welsh maverick) dartboard method to pork
bellies. I found trading futures unprofitable but
was quick enough to recognise this and accept I
wasnt good enough. Equally I find it
difficult identifying decent opportunities in the
UK, so I trade the US, specifically the NASD.
If you are good enough to make money in the UK
then making money in the US will be like taking
candy of a baby. So how do I trade and
whats my set-up?
My data feeds come primarily from e-signal
($400/month) & MoneyAM and I trade through DA
brokers (Direct Access, a method of placing
trades directly into the order book via an
electronic exchange). Stock Exchange rules
require a minimum balance of $25k if you are
going to trade more than 4 times a week
this is known as a pattern trading (day trading
to us).
If this is beyond your means there are ways
around this i.e. DA CFDs (Contracts
For Differences a method for gearing your
trading i.e. allows you to trade up to 10 times
your account size) but I wouldnt bother
with spread betting companies. In my experience,
they will use every dirty trick in the book to
stop you making money in this way - beating the
market is difficult enough without trying to beat
the crooks too. I have been banned from 2 such
companies and another refused to open an account
for me when I described my trading style.
I have 5 different scanners (scanners identify
stocks based on a given criteria) that run in
more or less real time, which aim to pick up on
momentum, be it up or down.
This doesnt have to be a chart breakout but
can be based on heavy buying from market movers.
These opportunities arise from between 45-90
minutes after market open and also from 8pm CET.
Here is an example of a trade from last week
picked up using the scanner method:
I normally deal in 500 share lots with this
method but in 1-2000 shares for the method
described below.
In my experience, these opportunities earn you
money 20% of the time (depending on market state
(trending/range bound). This isnt to say
the remaining 80% are losers, perhaps half are
flat but the secret, for me at least, is to get
out the moment the market goes against you.
This method alone is not enough and is not even
my primary source of income; my main trading
takes place during the first 30 minutes of the
market opening. Many advocate avoiding the first
hours trading, institutions generally wont
touch it and some trainee traders are not allowed
to trade during this period. For the stupid,
brave or skilled operator its a gold mine.
Volatility is tremendous with stocks moving a $
(or 100 points) - sometimes without hitting a
trade all in the blink of an eye.
But surely this is just gambling? No, its
the easiest way I know to make money legally.
My entry & exit points are based 95% on L2
(level 2 enables you to look into a stocks order
book i.e. who is buying and who is selling).
Charts can be useful for general
support/resistance and to know where the
technical traders will enter based on Fibonnacci
levels or pivot points (technical trader
indicators) but not much else. By studying the L2
book you learn to recognise patterns and can
predict the move.
NASD L2 is very different from the UK and for me
at least tells me everything I need to know about
a market. You see the action before it gets to
any chart. Its not easy and it takes a lot
of time to feel comfortable but the rewards
warrant the investment IMHO.
An easy way to get started for the novice L2
trader is to simply view the book for a couple of
days and note the number of times you can see a
gap (the market on one side supported by only one
Market Maker with a large gap to the next) about
to appear before it actually does. Its not
uncommon for 30c gaps to appear and I have seen a
50c gap filled in a few seconds. Liquidity can be
a problem in such cases so be careful.
One of my personal favourites:
I derive 80-90% of my profits through this method
and could pack up for the day by 4pm CET, but the
truth is I cant. I love the markets too
much and probably like many of us, sit around
staring into L2 books, my scanners and entering
trades that arent there.
This weeks trading was difficult, or at least
Monday and Tuesday were like watching paint dry
and even more painful than watching the England
Rugby team. I counted myself lucky to only be
300 down by Tuesday; it could have been 10-20
times that given market conditions, but my
momentum trades of the week helped:
I was in and out more times than England score
points against Wales at Twickers well over
50. I try to stay in the market for no longer
than 10 minutes or so a day (when not playing
momentum), yes I miss out on opportunities but I
cut down on risk. When playing momentum, as
mentioned above, I scale down on size and will
let them run a bit longer.
There are individuals that will coach you to
trade in this way. They charge 1000+ per day
and I am sure they are good value. Whilst I am
not going to give away all my trade secrets on an
open forum I hope I have given you a flavour of
what works for me.
Mr Euro
A special thanks to Haystack and
Martini for their editing contribution and I have
to say, Martini has gone well beyond the call of
duty top man.
All the
above comments are purely a personal opinion and
no investment advice is intended. Please do your
own research
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