ETF USO, or United States Oil (new video)

Today I'm going to take another quick look back at a popular ETF USO, or United States Oil. You'll quickly see how the MarketClub "Trade Triangle" strategy is working in this market.

In this short video, I give you a specific triangle to look for in the future and how this market can play out in the next two months.

You can watch this video with my compliments and there is no registration requirements. We would love to get your feedback about this video on our blog.

All the best,

Adam Hewison
President, INO.com
Co-creator, MarketClub

How to trade the ETF market (new video)

How trade triangles can help you trade in the ETF markets

Today we will be looking at our trade triangle technology and how it can help you time the ETF markets successfully.

In this short video I will show you exactly how to use our trade triangle technology in the ETF markets.

You can watch this video with my compliments and there is no registration requirements. I would love to get your feedback about this video on our blog.

All the best,

Adam Hewison
President, INO.com
Co-creator, MarketClub

If you didn't make money in May watch this video

If you didn't make money this month then you weren't watching our Trade Triangles.

See how we did in three major markets (my new video).

Continue reading "If you didn't make money in May watch this video"

Why Bears Are Finding Such A Good Meal With The Dow

With the Dow looking for new lows, I've asked Finance Fanatic of Crash Market Stocks to give us his take on the upcoming market. So read on and see why although future conditions may not be pleasant, the bears may make it out just fine.

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During the last couple of months, it seems as though the entire NYSE has become one giant day-trader’s gathering that we use to only see exist in the penny stock markets.  The new volatile Dow coupled with the addition of 2x, 3x, and even 4x leveraged ETFs, has helped gambling day-traders find a new place to hang out during the day.  A year ago, most would not consider companies like General Electric (GE), Bank of America (BAC), and Wells Fargo (WFC) as “day-trading” material.  However, today alone, they had a combined trading volume of 532.26 M.  Well, these are the times we are in today.

Although, currently, many people feel that it is pointless to try to value stocks “fundamentally”, I beg to differ.  As I look at the fundamentals, I see the market following them quite closely…Downward (See Below).

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sure, daily movements are volatile with the help of government intervention, but our down-trending correlation is right in line with the technicals of the market I have been looking at.  Here are just a few of the reasons I see a feast of bears for the coming months:

1) Housing market is still in the Pits

We should not be confident that anything is getting better as long as our housing market struggles. People underestimate just how important that number is. Housing values are the number one driver of consumer sentiment, because in most cases it is people's biggest investment. All across the county, most people's biggest "investment" (Their house) has lost anywhere from 20-60%, depending on the market. That takes a lot out of people’s expectations. Also, as we continue to be very sluggish in new home sales, we continue diluting the housing market with a mass surplus of available inventory.  At this rate, we could match the demand for housing without adding a single house for the next 10 years.  As long as our housing market remains in the gutter (which our most recent numbers have confirmed), I believe we are not done hurting.

2) Many retailers plan to go bankrupt this year

Think of hundreds of mini GM scenarios going across the country. Even though many of these retailers will not have the giant influences that the big 3 autos do, they still will do their damage. They have people that rely on their pension and laborers across the country. Also, it is easy to tell from recent months, without lending, many businesses in a capitalist market cannot survive.  For so long, most US retailers have been paying for their inventory with expensive debt, relying on strong and fast sales to pay off the inventory.  Well, with sales slowing the most we’ve seen in years (even with liquidating sales!), this debt piles up and retailers go under, like Mervyn’s. With the continuing loss of small and large businesses, I still see a significant downside risk.

3) Commercial real estate foreclosures

This could be one of the biggest factors. Look what the initial subprime crisis did to the market from 2007 to 2008. Well, commercial real estate is running about a year behind them. We have just begun to see foreclosures in the commercial market. These are going to pile up in 2009. The amount of debt that will be handed back to banks is unreal. Much of the commercial real estate that was purchased between 2003-2005, was done on 5-10 year, CMBS/Conduit loans that are very highly leveraged, with very low interest rates.  As these properties come up for refinance the next 3-4 years, I expect to see some serious foreclosures. In my opinion, it will be World War III when it happens, which makes me feel we're not at the bottom.

4) Government's Out of Bullets

After President Obama signed off on the latest stimulus, he fired off one of his last, long anticipated bullets that people hoped to have made a significant impact.  Unfortunately, the praise has not lasted as long as most had hoped.  With treasuries already oversold, the discount rate a 0%, two huge stimulus plans already passed, and a new “hope bearing” president now in office, I would like to think we’re almost out of ways to artificially ignite this market.  Sure, we may see some more “programs” announced, but I don’t see many silver bullets left.

With these and several other elements, I continue to be on my toes and very bearish in this market.  I have been finding much success in the inverse ETFs as well as put options on certain retailers and other companies.  Inflation is our next beast to tackle in my opinion.  Being in a bear market does not mean we are without hope of making money, we just have to be making the right moves.

-FINANCE FANATIC

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Crashmarketstocks.com is a site that focuses on macro-economic news and discusses new tips and strategies to help make money during a recession. Most entails different equity vehicles that are performing well in a bear market, but can feature any profitable vehicle.  Finance Fanatic is a specialist in the Real Estate market and has been engaged in equity markets for about 8 years now.  His degree is in Finance and Capital markets.

Navigating the Q's

Today I'd like to welcome Allan Harris from AllAllan.com. Over the past few months Allan's blog has become a daily reader for myself, along with many others in the office. His analysis and ability to read the markets is uncanny. Allan decided to do an experiment, on his own, following the Q's...I think you'll find the results VERY interesting. But be sure and visit Allan's website for more details.

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There is no greater feeling as a trader then the feeling you get having successfully navigated an options trade in the QQQQ. This is how I do it, using Market Club Triangles.

I consider Market Club triangles as serving to alert me to breakouts in the underlying tradable, a 3-day breakout for daily charts, a 3-week breakout on the weekly charts. I only use weekly charts because there are less whipsaws and signals generated on weekly charts also serve to confirm an intermediate term trend is in place. Market Club does a great job of monitoring my portfolio as well as market indexes, etf’s and individual stocks for these 3-week breakouts.

Here is a Market Club chart for the QQQQ with the weekly Triangles going back about one year. Notice that there are whipsaws, but more importantly, note how many tradable trends are caught using the automated triangles:

Below is my Excel worktable analyzing these signals. I stated with the Buy generated in September 2007 and finished with the Sell generated on September 2, 2008.

Note that there were a total of eight signals for this 12-month period, about one signal every six weeks. There were 5 net winners and 3 net losing signals.

A Buy & Hold strategy generated a loss of about 12 QQQQ points, or about 24%. A Sell & Hold strategy gained those 12 points, or 24%.

Using the Triangles returned about double the Sell & Hold strategy.

Using the Options made this whole exercise worthwhile, generating over 500% for those eight trades.

Winning 5 out of 8 trades is only a sampling error away from four out of eight wins, or a 50% win ratio. How does something so close to a 50% win/loss generate 500%?

This is an observation that a lot of wannabe traders miss: The magic here isn’t so much pinpoint market timing, it’s that age old trading rule of letting profits run and cutting losses combined with a decent market timing model.

In the case of the Q signals and returns, I’ve used a 50% stop loss rule, meaning all trades that fall 50% based on the underlying options are closed out. All trades that do not fall 50% are held until the next signal. That is why all of the losers are 50% (worst case basis) in the table of trades.

As for the winning trades, the returns above are based on a conservative assumption of losing one month of time premium for each trade and a beta of 60% for just-out-of-the-money calls and puts. Actual real money returns may be a little better or a little worse, but these assumptions capture a fair value for the strategy over the course of the past 12 months.

Finally, considering all of the angst in the market the past few months, look at how beautifully this strategy has bypassed all the fundamental and technical analysis out there and simply went short on September 2 and held short for the entire decline since then.

Consider the ease of trading like this, following the weekly triangles in and out of the Q’s and ask yourself, what other methodology would have navigated this market with as much success and as little sweat equity as the weekly Triangles?

Trading doesn’t have to be complicated, losing proposition. As I have shown, it can be both simple and rewarding.

Allan Harris

AllAllen.com