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Friday, May 30, 2008

Weekly Recap

A very quick recap of the weekly activity.

I purchased a new position on Tuesday, HF at $11.60, a tad higher than I wanted but I got busy at work and failed to change my limit order...it doesn't really matter in the long run though as it was my initial entry price anyway. I'll probably move the stop up to $11.25 from $11.15.

I moved my stop on BVF to $12.10 last night.

I looked at the chart for LNR and decided to leave it alone. It's at 17% if it gets stopped out so I feel it's a good spot for a gain and it allows enough room for the price to flucuate while it decides where it is going.

This is a far cry from having to decide and manage 6 or 7 trade entries in one day, jiggling with the stop settings, and all the rest that goes along with higher volume trading.

I like it.

On the weekend I will select 10 more stocks to add to my potential list and chart maybe 5 of the existing potentials that look like they might be ripe for trading in the next week or two. I have three active, 12 iminent, 23 charted potentials, about 30 uncharted potentials and about 200 that fall within my general criteria.

A side comment. What other small enterprise can one start with $5K, no appreciable overhead, no staff, no inventory, no franchise fees, no business permits, very little risk and an almost guaranteed customer base? Oh, next year when the Tax Free Savings Accounts (TFSA) come out , no income taxes, no capital gains taxes.

The only downfall with the TFSA will be that I doubt they will let me use margin in the account, they don't for RRSP accounts already and these are likley to be treated similarly.

Sometime in June I will be transferring a larger sum to work with but I will be keeping this startup running separately as the other will be a transfer from an "advisor" managed RRSP account that has been losing money. I might have to change some of my rules for that one.

JD.

Thursday, May 29, 2008

Statistical restart

I was reviewing the account last night and, after paring the last of the non-CTP stocks yesterday, I decided to only track the actual CTP trades. As I have been ahead and behind in my account as far as profit and loss is concerned since I started playing in February I have never really worried much about the real hard numbers, just the generalities. As long as I had enough cash left to continue running my tests I was happy. Now that I am tracking accurately and making consistant gains I feel that I should keep the record straight with regards to the trades that actually follow my plan within this trial...mostly in fairness to the plan and to justify the time I've spent getting this plan on the move. Perhaps it's a little ego rub too... [;^)

So, of the 8 trades four have been according to plan and four have not.

Non-plan - RUS, SW, TET/UN, SIF/UN, I pared the last of these yesterday.

Plan - ATD/B (no longer active), LNR, BVF, HF (active)

The company names are of little import here as I am tracking only price action. If anyone is interested you can go to TSX.com and enter the symbols into the "Get Quote" box. This will give more information and website links for the companies.

I will still base the returns on the initial $5,000 for percentage calculations.

The timeline still stands as one of the first trades, LNR which is still active, did follow the plan even though it would be considered a late stage entry.

My goal has not changed, 1.5% per week. I'd like to see it compounded each month or the equivalent.

While this will make the numbers look better right now, I feel it is a truer representation of the efficacy of the CTP trade strategy. Interestingly 3 of the 4 trades that are removed from the trial were the ones that lost some money while one made a profit.

I will still be keeping general account numbers for my own information but posting only current CTP trade stats. In the long run, having left these stats alone or updating them would make little difference.

JD.

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

HF - Hanfeng Evergreen

This is a trade that I entered this week.

Ticker symbol - HF
Company - Hanfeng Evergreen

They are based in Toronto and deal in fertilizer with China...which is more than I need to know about the stock but I thought I would share what I can recall of them. With potash pricing taking off and China's development this is a good candidate for some nice prices down the road.

I have traded them in the past and made decent profits on same day and next day trades. Now I am looking to increase the returns by increasing the length of the trade by using the CTP approach. While the price may not take off and make great gains I figure that it is a good trial of the system and, hopefully make some nice Target trades.

I marked the chart the same as for the CTP example...green circles the short sell zone, red circles the buy zone. The little red arrow is the day that I actually placed the trade so I currently have 100 shares of HF.

Here's the six month chart: I'm still working on getting these nice and sharp but this gets the point across.













This one is not down trending, it is a consolidation triangle which works a bit differently. I am entering this stock later than I would like but I wasn't watching it for these entries in the past. As it is I hope to at least make a small profit and at best be there when the prices takes off...we'll see.














This is a 2 year chart to show the price historically. The last six months is all I have made notes on as it is the most relevant and the most defined trend. Prior to that the price was not very predictable but could have still been traded using the CTP principles with varying results.

This does look like a very shallow downtrend over the last year

Out of curiosity I applied my strategy historically on this stock and four trades would have been made since February. Those trades combined would have profited $4.75 per share. Considering that the very first price bought at would have been about $11.25 that is a 42% realized gain or profit. I skewed this against me as there could have been another $1.25 in there, but I prefer worst cases. This cash would be used as a buffer for the next few trades as the possible profit per trade gets smaller the farther along this particular trend type that you get.

That't the theory, we'll see how well I fair as time passes on other similar trades.

JD.

Strategy - intraday checking...NOT!

I note this today as one of my strategy steps is to not have to deal with trading during the day with the exception of new orders at the market open and setting stop loss orders after a new order is filled. There has to be a sense of confidence in the system rather than feeling that it needs to be monitored.

I sometimes leave my trading software running in the background and check prices out of curiosity or to see that my settings are appropriate. Today I have shut it down. I have all my stop orders placed as I have no intention of moving them anyway, so I really don't need to waste time checking on things until after the close to get the final numbers and make adjustments for tomorrow. I might look at lunch time though.

I figure if I write this down I might actually do what I say...which is a big part of this blog in the first place. It gives me some sense of accountability as I can check back to see that I have followed what I said. A kind of "walk the talk" thing.

JD.

Monday, May 26, 2008

Counter Trend Positioning (CTP) - breakout

I did some thinking on the weekend...yardwork does that to me...I managed to get this into a presentable form.

Keeping in mind that CTP is, as far as I can tell, my own trading style as I haven't seen it anywhere yet and I have read a lot technical blogs, sites and as much as I could glean from services and books while browsing. It is a combination of styles that I have seen though. I find some swing trading, position trading, some level of buy and hold, trading for targets....maybe some others along the lines of technical trading with indicators and patterns. I liked the idea of mixing it up to come up with one general strategy that can work in all market conditions from a select number of stocks.

I went over my goals for this particular strategy.

1) not lose money overall
2) make some target profits
3) be in a really good position when the price breaks in your favour

1 leads to 2 which leads to 3.

Counter Trend Positioning broken down.

Consider that a trend can be one of four types...keeping it simple.

1) the uptrend, everyone's favourite, price is moving up
2) the downtrend, everyone's bane, I like them though...it's the whole basis for CTP
3) the consolidation...mostly horizontal, there are a few styles but that doesn't matter right now
4) the "churn", no real trend the price seems to follow no real pattern at all

Consider also the old mantra "buy low and sell high".

So, the best place to be is buying a stock when it's price is the lowest. That would mean buying a stock at the very end of a downtrend. So how do you tell when a stock is at it's lowest or the trend is reversing? The easy answer is that you can't with any real accuracy. This is where CTP comes into play.


THE DOWNTREND (over simplified)

























I've marked the chart as follows: (now that I look at it it looks like a kid's drawing with crayons...track ball drawing is fun.)

black squiggly line - the price over time
blue lines - trend upper and lower boundaries
red circles - buy zone
green circles - short sell zone

So the plan would go something like this.

1 = short after the peak

2 = cover near the bottom then buy after the bottom bounces (this is the Counter trend part)

3 = sell after the peak using a stop as an exit strategy (the after is critical...more on that another time) then short after the peak

4 = cover near the bottom then buy after the bottom bounces

5 = sell after the peak again, followed by another short sell

6 = Cover near the bottom then buy after the bottom

The price passes the upper trend line at BRK (= break) and planning on selling AFTER this possible peak IF the price had dropped leaves me in the stock as it breaks the trend up and does not drop back yet.

7 = this peak establishes one of the first points of the upper new trend line I will do nothing as I want to stay in

8 = buy more shares here...margin may be used here under certain circumstances.

The period between 6, 7 and 8 is where all the fun is and it can take a number of forms. This rough example is a clean break and determining where #8 is going to be is a whole other topic. Suffice it so say that the gains realized from 1 to 6 should result in a good cash position where the risk tolerance can be increased in order to give the price movement more room to help the break play stick.

Keep in mind that 1 to 8 might take a year so there isn't a lot of trading going on until there are a few stocks in the portfolio that are being managed.

This is the Positioning part of CTP. I have effectively met all of my three primary goals without having to try to time the trend reversal by just being there each time a trend change could occur. From the example and a bit from my actual trading:

1) not lose money overall

This is only one stock example as the overall is really aimed at the entire portfolio, but if half of the stocks do this good a loss isn't in the books. The startup is the risky part while things get going and I am trying to establish excess cash from the initial target trades. Small loss allowances, tight stop loss settings and small sized trades. I set some quantitative goals which I don't really expect to be met in the first few months...but it gives me something to aim for. My first trades were mis-aimed as I jumped the gun on the final plan by a few weeks...but I still learned and I am still ahead so I am satisfied.

2) make some target profits

In the example I have made money with the short/cover buy/sell trades along the way, (the individual initial targets). In m ytrading I have made some and lost some but I am ahead overall and every time a stock gets sold for a small loss or profit I replace it with another and put the recently traded stock back in my watch list for the next cycle...it doesn't get dropped only because I may have set my stop wrong.

3) be in a really good position when the price breaks in your favour

Well, in the example, the price broke and the next steps would be to continue buying as each new low is made in the new trend thereby adding to the position and increasing the rate of gains after each new addition. At this point the strategy is to remain in the stock as long as the trend up continues. If the stock pays dividends, bonus money, if the stock splits, even better. This leads to the comfortable situation of being able to let the stop ride considerably lower than the new lower trend line which leaves the stock price lots of room to swing and continue moving up while buying at each low. My stop will sell the stock automatically when it breaks the trend and heads back down.

Then you can start the process all over again to catch the next bottom.

JD.

Saturday, May 24, 2008

The short sell

OK, it looks like I need to get into this one now. I was going to post a trade setup for Monday but it requires some explanation for the trade first.

The short sell:

Selling of a borrowed stock, the profit comes from a DROP in the price when you buy it back...opposite of a Long Trade in some respects.

Everyone knows what a long position is, buying a stock to hold until the price goes up for a capital gain or there are dividends paid to you as a shareholder. Basically buy low and sell high...pretty simple.

The short is more complicated. I've been asked to explain it a number of times so I think I can break this down easily.

When you deal through a broker you don't actually own any shares, they hold them for you and your account reflects the amount you have purchased. So the broker still owns them, this is important.

You short sell the shares to the market.

In a short sell you borrow some shares of the company you are going to trade from your broker. (Sombody has an account that has bought these shares but not always the case) For example, ABC stock is selling for $15 right now so you sell the market 100 of the broker's shares. The cash for the transaction is not yours, it is basically held in trust. So $1500 is held separately and the 100 shares show up as a negative quantity on your account.

In a short sell, as stated above, you are waiting for the price to drop to make your profit.

The price drops to $12. You decide that the $3 difference is enough and you now have to cover the short shares. Covering is buying the shares from the market to give back to the broker. In my trading software the "BUY" button is also the "COVER" button as they are the same transaction as far as the market is concerned.

You buy or cover the shares for $12 and pocket $300

The shares are covered for $1200 total which can be considered as deducted from the $1500 held in trust. You give them back to the broker. $1500 was held from the sale, $1200 was the cost to "cover" or buy back the shares from the money held in trust so you get to pocket the $300 as profit.

The "short" version is that you short sell the shares for $15 per share, then cover the shorted shares at $12 per share and get to keep the $3 per share.

Three things to remember as you hold a short position:

1) holding over the ex-dividend date you will be responsible to pay the dividends to the broker

2) if the stock splits, you will be responsible for buying the appropriate number of shares to cover the number the split was (2 for 1 you need to buy 200 instead of 100...at whatever price you can)

3) last but certainly not least, if the price goes up you lose the difference. This can have serious consequences unless you depend on your strategy.

This one is sometimes hard to get. I understand that only around 2% of people investing or trading in the U.S. have ever even done a short sell. It is misunderstood. Most of my trades have been short sells and I like them.

JD.