Monday, October 26, 2009

NG trade

Natural gas continued its climb the first couple of days last week, with November futures reaching over 5.30 and the December futures reaching over 6.00. At those prices my contracts were down $1400 and $2500 respectfully. Finally prices began descending Wed, Thurs, and Fri.

On Friday, my November contract almost touched my break-even price of 4.75. With only Monday and Tuesday left before expiry, I decided to sell at the end of Friday at 4.81, for a small loss of $150. I didn't want to risk holding over the weekend, just in case prices went up. (Remember, even a 0.20 rise would be a $500 loss).

Today (Monday), prices continued their decline with quite a large drop. November closed down 27 cents at around 4.50, with 1 trading day left. So if I had held on just one more day, I could've turned a $500+ profit. Oh well, things could have gone much worse, so I'm happy getting out when I did, considering where things were at just a week ago.

The drop was nice because now my December contract is down to 5.20. I had planned on taking a large loss on it, but who knows, it might actually go under $5.

Anyway, after this trade, I think I'm done with trading pure futures. Too risky and too stressful. I know, I know, I only made 1 trade. And I'm glad it didn't go exactly as planned, or else I may have fooled myself into thinking it was easy money. But all is not for naught! The setting up of my OptionsXpress account was all part of a larger plan to eventually reach my trading destiny, which I am now ready for... and I'll leave that for my next post.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

NG Update

It was a bit of a scary week with all the cold weather. Natural gas spot price kept going up, reaching 4.25, but the November futures kept bouncing off 5.10 or so. Luckily, last Thursday's Storage Report showed a larger-than-expected 69 bcf net increase in stocks, reaching a total of 3658 bcf for Oct.2, which I think helped keep the ceiling on the futures price, as I had hoped it would do.

I've been watching the weather forecast all week, here: http://www.weather.gov/forecasts/graphical/sectors/conus.php?element=T
(Turn off "Table Mouseover Effect", click +12 hrs if necessary to show "High" Temperatures", click the word "High", then use the "Next Image" buttons at the bottom to view each day's forecast up to a week ahead).

A week ago you could see that the cold weather would end around today (Wednesday), which turned out to be correct, and now for the next week it looks like it will be much warmer.

Natural gas prices have dropped quite a bit the last two days. Spot price is now at 3.80 and November price is 4.44. People think the drop was primarily related to news that UNG will begin to move its investments out of futures to other instruments due to anticipated regulatory restrictions and position limits on futures trading. See this article for more details:

The weekly storage report gets released tomorrow (data is for the week up to Oct.9), and it should show the total stocks are above 3700 bcf, which I think will scare people.

Looking at the detailed historical data provided by the EIA, storage usually tops out between Oct.25 and Nov.16, most often right around Nov.7. I'm predicting that this year's storage will probably top out around 3900 bcf, based on historical patterns and extrapolating for this year. If this happens, certain regions will likely reach their maximum capacity and not be able to take any more natural gas.

So the fundamentals look perfect for a further drop in natural gas prices over the next couple of weeks... at least to me. However, all the trading reports I have access to on OptionsXpress keep saying everything looks bullish, there is strong support, prices are set to rise, etc.

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Weather

November natural gas has still been hovering around $5 (good thing I didn't sell more at 4.70!). Spot price is now up to $3.20.

What worries me is a cold weather front that will be moving through the northern states over the next week or two. Temperatures are expected to be much colder than average. This could really push prices up a lot.

Hopefully the natural gas storage report released on Thursday will help keep the spot price from shooting up too much. Also, next week UNG supposedly has to start rolling their November contracts into the December ones, and the shorts are hoping that this will force the November contract price down.

Sunday, October 4, 2009

Natural Gas - no new trade

After some research, I've decided it's not worth the risk to enter into any new NG position.

The commenter on my last post prompted me to look into the price action history for the last 2 big spread spikes seen in the graph. These details can be found in the historic weekly EIA updates (see here: http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/oog/info/ngw/historical/ngwu_2006_07.html).

Well, it turns out that right after the $1.50-$2 spread back at the end of September 2006 occurred, the spot price rallied $3 over the next month! Spot went from an average of about $4 to over $7, while the Nov Future went from about $5.60 to over $7 as well (actually expiring below the spot price). There was no major reason stated for the increase other than cold weather.

For the 2nd largest spike, in Nov 2007, this time the spot price didn't really move at all, and the futures contract did come down over $1 to close the spread.

I've been reading a bunch of message boards and it's amazing how split the view is on what the November futures are going to do. A lot of people actually think it will go up and close in the $5 to $6 range. And of course a lot of people, like me, think the price will have to drop. Another big topic is UNG, which controls a large percentage of natural gas futures, and there seems to be a lot of confusion on how they are affecting the market. I think there is a lot of manipulation going on.

I've decided not to sell another contract because:
a) The market knows best - Nov must be $4.70 for a reason. In 2006 the market was right.
b) There is a lot of uncertainty in what the price will do; there are a lot of people on both sides of the fence.
c) Colder weather is expected next week.
d) I calculated that I could only handle about a $1 increase in the futures prices if I sold another contract. No trade is worth the risk of getting wiped out over such a small move. Currently I can weather a $2 increase in futures price (which would probably require a $3-4 increase in spot price - in 24 days).

I still think Nov will easily drop below $4. Even with colder weather, the latest economic news shows the demand isn't there, and storage is at record highs, so I can't see a repeat of 2006 happening. But whatever, I'm just going to play it safe and be happy with the small gains I'll make if I'm right. And if I'm wrong, at least I shouldn't lose my shirt.

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Natural Gas Insanity

Yesterday (Friday), the natural gas spot price dropped a whopping 60 cents from 2.92 to 2.32, a 20% drop. And what did the November futures contract do? It went up 25 cents! All futures months went up. This is insanity.

Over the last week the spot price has dropped over a dollar, while the November futures contract hasn't moved. With the Nov contract closing at about 4.72, this has resulted in a $2.40 spread between the spot price and near-month futures contract, which by the way has only 25 days left until expiry.

Here's a graph I found showing that this is the largest spread in over 3 years (and I bet even longer) - check out our spike on the right:



I've been scouring the latest news stories & blogs, and no one is offering any real explanations. They're all basically saying, "wow, there's a crazy spread" and that's it.

This premium cannot last another week, so it seems like an opportunity of a lifetime to make money. When the markets open Sunday evening, I'm going to try to sell another Nov e-mini contract -- or two -- at anything I can get above 4.50. I doubt it will fill because the price will likely open lower than that.

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Birthday trade

Today I sold 1 e-mini November natural gas contract (QGX9) at 4.75.

It was up 23 cents from yesterday's close. I really can't see this rally having much more steam. I've read that the rise is due to a combination of short sellers getting out and people being more optimistic about the economy (an improving economy will boost demand in NG). That's all fine and dandy, but the reality is:
- Natural gas inventories are going to reach record highs - they'll increase until mid-October.
- Weather/Temperature has been very favorable.
- There have been no hurricanes.
- There has been no sign of increase in demand yet.

So yes, sure, NG demand will pickup at some point, but for the next month there is no justification for the spot price to keep going up. I'm still reading analysts predictions of NG falling below $3 in October, mainly citing the inventory levels and favorable weather (meaning no big increase in demand).

Current spot price is either 3.44 or 3.59. The site that shows 3.44 showed yesterday's close at 3.37. That would mean it only increased 7 cents today, while the futures all increased about 25 cents, which seems strange, so I'm wondering if the 3.59 number is more accurate. I don't know what its previous day's number was though. I still have to find a site with spot prices I can trust. Either way, I have anywhere from a $1.16 to $1.31 buffer, with 34 days left till expiry. I feel very safe in this trade. In 4 trading days the Nov contract will become the near-month contract, as the Oct one expires on Sep.28th. It will be interesting to see the behaviour of the Nov contract when that happens.

The weekly inventory numbers will be released tomorrow morning. As long as the inventory increase isn't way lower than expected, I think NG will drop quite a bit in the coming days. But who knows, because right now the rally is against me.

Monday, September 14, 2009

NG trade

I entered my first futures trade today! I sold 1 e-mini December futures contract at $5. That contract is QGZ9 if you're curious (QG = natural gas e-mini, Z = december, 9 = 2009). Current spot price was around $3, Oct contract (which expires in about 9 days) was 3.20, Nov was 4.35. The Dec. contract ended up at 5.07 the last I checked.

This trade requires about $1300 margin, and for every $1 move in the contract price, I lose/gain $2500. With futures, you need to be aware that the required margin value doesn't change over time, but your Futures Buying Power does, and this is what determines whether you get a margin call (i.e. are forced to liquidate or add more money into your account).

Futures Buying Power = (Total account value (cash and futures positions) - sum of margin requirements for your open trades). So say you start with $10,000. Your account value and futures buying power are both $10,000. If you buy/sell 1 e-mini NG contract, your account value is still $10,000, but your Futures Buying Power is now reduced to $8700 ($10,000 - $1300 margin requirement). If the trade moves against you by $1, that's a $2500 move, so that means your total account value will be $7500 and your futures buying power will be $6200 ($7500 account value - $1300 margin). This trade would have to move about $3.50 against you for you to get a margin call -- i.e. the point when your account value drops to $1300 and your futures buying power is $0.

Here are some things I learned:
  • I was wrong about futures trading 24/7. They usually stop trading at 5:15pm on Friday and resume at 6:00pm on Sunday. They trade from 6:00pm to 5:15 every weekday. However, hardly anyone seems to trade in the evenings, or even that much in the afternoon. So basically it ends up being not much different than stock-trading hours.
  • The e-mini contracts have waaay lower volume than their corresponding regular contracts, and the spreads are horrible. E.g. when a regular NG contract is at $5.00, the corresponding e-mini contract might have a bid of $4.95 and an ask of $5.05, and a single trade won't happen for 10 minutes.
  • Because of the bad spread, when an e-mini trade does occur, the trade price is usually 2-3 cents lower than what the latest trade of the regular contract was at. E.g. When my order at $5.00 went through, I could've gotten a normal-sized contract at $5.03 at that moment.
It might have been better to buy the Nov contract, since it will drop more within the next month than a later contract, assuming spot price stays the same or goes lower, but I thought I'd give myself a little more time in case their is a temporary spike here. I'm tempted to sell another contract, for a total of 2, but I should probably play it safe on my first trade.

I am hoping for NG to drop in the coming weeks (obviously) and to sell my contract at $4 for a $2500 gain.

Here's another interesting article:
http://www.zerohedge.com/article/why-has-natural-gas-spiked-60-labor-day

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Natural Gas Links

I found some great links that provide pretty much all the up-to-date information one needs to understand what's currently going on in the natural gas world:

Weekly Natural gas update (updated every Thursday evening):

Weekly storage report (updated every Thursday morning):

EIA Short-term Energy Outlook (updated monthly):

Natural gas continued it's mini-rally today. Dec contract jumped about 35 cents to 4.95. I can't check the markets until the afternoon tomorrow, but I may enter a short position then unless the rally appears to still be just as strong.

Some choice quotes from the most recent articles above:

"EIA expects that the Henry Hub price of natural gas will average $2.25 per MMBtu in October 2009, which is the lowest monthly average spot price since September 2001. Prices are projected to bottom out in October, and then rise through February 2010, averaging $4.59 per MMBtu in February, and fall from March through August 2010."

"Despite a 20-percent drop in prices and a 45-percent drop in working natural gas drilling rigs since the start of the year, total natural gas production increased slightly from January to June 2009. This current production trend reflects significant improvements in horizontal drilling technology and robust productivity from shale gas discoveries in Louisiana, Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Pennsylvania."

"As electric power demand for air conditioning wanes, a continuation of recent natural gas supply trends could cause spot natural gas prices to fall below current projections before cooler temperatures induce higher demand for space heating. In the projections, prices rise modestly in 2010, reflecting increased economic activity and lower production levels as a result of the current drilling pullback. However, it will take some time to work off current inventory levels and enhanced production capabilities should limit significant increases in prices throughout the forecast period. On an annual basis, the projected Henry Hub spot price averages $3.65 Mcf in 2009 and $4.78 Mcf in 2010."

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Trade Update: DXO

I mentioned that I sold most of my DXO a couple of weeks ago. I was planning to hold onto the remaining amount (about 20%) for a while, but lo and behold, Deutsche Bank decided to shut down DXO due to concerns over new regulatory restrictions imposed on the futures exchange. There is some info about this here:


They are supposedly redeeming the notes at today's closing value, but just to be safe, I sold yesterday at 4.37, since there was nice spike in the price anyway. That was about my break-even price.

I'm just glad this happened now after I was able to sell at a profit, and not when I was temporarily down 50%!

On another note, my futures trading account with OptionsXpress.ca is finally all setup! Too bad I didn't set this up sooner -- I'm up $5000 in my virtual trading (I was able to sell Dec Natural Gas at 5.09, and it's now at about 4.60). I'm going to wait to see what happens tomorrow because as I feared, NG dropped pretty far before my account got setup, and now a rebound has finally begun. The spot price was down as low as 1.83 and just jumped up to around 2.45 in 2 days. The Dec contract got down to 4.30 and rebounded to 4.70.

I don't want to sell into a rally, so I'm going to wait until there is a down day. BTW, there are a whole bunch of comments on my last post that talk about the risk involved here.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Natural Gas Futures

The NYMEX natural gas September contract (expires at the end of August) is around $2.80 right now. This is the lowest price in a long time.

There is a huge oversupply of natural gas right now. Almost every article I read talks about how the near future for natural gas prices looks grim, and no-one expects it to go over $4 anytime soon unless there is a major hurricane (hurricane season is just starting) or a really cold winter.

Here are some recent articles to read:

It's all over the news in Alberta too. The alberta natural gas price has been forecast to even fall under $1 in the coming weeks:
(Note: prices in Canada are quoted in different units, but the conversion factor is close to 1.1, I believe).

So why I'm I interested in this? Well, the NYMEX December contract (expiring end of November) is currently trading above $5 right now. Every 1 dollar move in natural gas is a $10,000 change in value for a single contract (which requires about $10,000$5000 margin).

Now it seems to me that the December contract is very optimistically priced. If the Natural Gas spot price were to remain at its current price for the next month, the December contract would likely drop to around $4.20, judging by November's current price. This would be an $8000 gain / 80%160% gain in one month if you had sold the December contract (like shorting a stock).

It seems like easy money, however:
- the price is so low, it could easily rebound a bit. A $1 move up means a $10,000 loss. Natural Gas has many times historically moved $2 or more within a single month.
- the market is usually smarter than you. If it's so obvious that prices are going to stay low, then why is the December price currently still over $5? There must be something the big players know that I don't.

I'll have to play it careful. For one, I wouldn't actually buy the regular contract - it's too big and I could lose all my money. There is a mini natural gas contract that is 1/4 the size ($2500 for a $1 move). I'd only sell a couple of those. Secondly, I'll probably hedge my trade by buying a nearer term contract, in case prices do go up. I'll have to figure out mathematically what makes the most sense.

I worry that I won't get my account setup soon enough though, and by then prices will have dropped further, making it too risky to sell natural gas at such low prices. I wanted to get in at the beginning of August, when I first started reading up on all this dire news on natural gas. At that time, the December contract was above 5.50. Already I'd be up about $5000 on 1 normal-sized contract.

Oh well, if natural gas doesn't work out, I'll probably buy into gold on dips and sell on short rises. A $10 move in gold is a $1000 gain on one contract (about $5000 margin). I feel way more familiar with gold anyway.

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Futures/Commodities Trading

For a long time I've been interested in commodity/futures trading. It's this bizarre world: trading contracts dealing with wheat, sugar, orange juice, oil, gold, frozen pork bellies.... And everything is crazy leveraged: You can control some amount of a commodity with just 1/20th of its value. E.g. You can put down a $5000 deposit (the margin) to buy 1 contract of gold, which is 100 ounces, which is worth around $94,000 at today's prices. You can make or lose thousands of dollars per day.

It used to be only the uber-rich would play in commodities, other than farmers who would buy futures to actually hedge against changes in the markets that would affect their income negatively. But in more recent history, new "mini" contracts have sprouted up that are 1/2 to 1/10 the size of the regular contracts, allowing smaller players to get into the market. It is also easier to setup futures trading accounts nowadays. However, I've never run across anyone talking about trading futures, other than one older family friend years ago. You just don't hear Joe in the office talking about his soybean contracts doing well.

The commodity markets are hard to learn about and understand. There is not much good information out there and I think it takes a lot of experience to really get a feel for things. Even though there are trillions of dollars traded in futures each year, there aren't many little guys participating. It is risky. I remember reading stats on how most amateur futures traders end of losing most of their money, mainly due to not understanding and managing the risk involved.

Anyway, it is really interesting stuff and I'm going to try to get my feet wet. I was surprised that there aren't more online brokerages that offer futures trading accounts. In fact, I couldn't find one true Canadian one that looked trustworthy and mature. After much research, I finally settled on OptionsXpress.ca. They're still an American company which happens to have a small Canadian arm to allow us Canadians to get involved.

OptionsXpress really impressed me. They have an amazing website with tons of information on it. It makes you feel very welcome and comfortable. All of their information is easy to follow and understand, and they are completely open about everything. You really seem to know a lot about them after reading through the site (compared to some sites that don't have much info and thus seem more shady). They seem trustworthy, their trading platform seems solid and easy to use, they have tons of help and examples for every type of trading action available, all sorts of common questions are answered in their FAQs, and they have a Live Help feature -- it all really gives you peace of mind. I actually used their "Live Help" feature and chatted online with a person, who was very helpful and answered all my questions. I've started the process of setting up an account, and everything has been so smooth so far. They give you FedEx shipping labels for free overnight shipping of your application, and you get automated emails for each stage in the process (e.g. "We just received your application and are now processing it). I'm looking forward to using them. However, who knows, I may not even get approved -- it's a two step process: first creating a regular equity/options account, and then applying for futures trading.

It seems the most popular online broker is interactivebrokers.ca/.com. They have crazy low fees and apparently have the most powerful trading platform, but I've heard it's very complex to use because of this. They seem geared more towards experts than to first time traders, so I didn't feel comfortable going with them. All the other brokers I looked into just didn't seem as organized, informative, and trustworthy as OptionsXpress.

The first thing I want to trade, if I can get an account setup soon, is probably the most volatile commodity out there: Natural Gas. More in my next post...

Trade Update - DXO, DIG, FAZ

It's been a long time since I've updated this blog, but I actually haven't done any trades until recently anyway.

Yesterday I sold most of my DXO at $4.85 and the rest of my DIG at at $30.24.

Oil is up to $74 and I decided to get out. I made about 15% on the DXO trade - not very much, but I had a LOT of money in that trade.

I'm a little disappointed. I said that holding DXO would be an easy 100% gain, and it should've been (DXO went below $2 a couple of times and is now about $4.85). I bought too much too early on the way down and had no more money left to buy when it was really low. Even with not timing it well, I still actually made about 30%, if we're just talking in US dollars. What really hurt me was the change in exchange rate. Most of my DXO was bought when the Canadian Dollar was at a low $0.78 to the US dollar, and now it's at $0.93. So I "lost" over 10% in gains due to the Canadian dollar skyrocketing. Due to "the constant leverage trap" with leveraged ETFs/ETNs, DXO did not perform as well as it could have if it didn't drop so low at the beginning. It also switched over to using the July 2010 futures contract as its basis, which has way more premium built in to it, meaning it wouldn't perform as well as near-term contracts assuming oil only moves up slowly.

So why'd I get out? Oil recovered nicely to $75 as expected, but I don't see reason for it to go much higher right now. The economy still sucks and the markets are irrationally optimistic -- the markets have been in a huge extended rally, so I thought I would get out while things are good before the next "storm" hits. I'm not saying oil won't keep going up. I just don't want to bet on it doing so. I think Oil will do really well long-term, but short-term, I'm too scared and so I'm taking my profits. I would consider re-entering if oil drops to $60.

FAZ - let's not even mention that. Worst trade ever. I'm still holding some of it which is pretty much worthless right now. Again, FAZ/FAS are only for day traders. They both lose money over the long term and are too volatile for non-day-traders to be playing. Luckily I didn't put much money into that, so my gains on DXO still far exceeded those loses.

On DIG, I believe I made just a couple of percent on the last 1/3 of my position that I sold. So I've averaged about a 25% gain on my full DIG position.

What's next? I'll save that for my next post.

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Argggggh...

Well FAZ dropped 41% in one day! That's probably one of the biggest one-day moves ever of one of these leveraged ETFS. And I didn't sell - stupid me. Here's what went down.:

I bought FAZ perfect timing, and the markets gradually dropped the next 3 days. I was up about 15% on Wednesday and thought about selling, but decided to wait one more day. And then out of nowhere -- Wells Fargo sends out a pre-release announcement about their expected earnings. Maybe I'm just not paying attention, but I didn't know this was going to happen. Their earnings statement date isn't until April 22nd, one of the later ones in fact, and here they go letting their numbers out before any of the other banks. And of course the news was really good. Here's the deal: Wells Fargo was always one of the healthiest banks out there. They didn't get involved in any subprime loaning, they didn't need any bailout money (but got some like all banks), and so of course they're doing well! I'm no conspiracy theorist, but this was obviously all planned out to downplay the bad news of bad banks. I bet some serious institutional money was thrown into the markets timed with the release to help spur this rally. Seriously, everyone is over-reacting to the news, but I guess everyone wants a rally.

If I knew there was any news coming out, I would've gotten out. That was my plan as you could see from my last post. But I also said I would only hold 2 - 3 days, and I didn't get out when I should have. I should have at least set a stop at my break-even point, and even with the huge gap down, I would have only lost about 15%. I even still had time to sell Thursday morning, and I actually considered switching to FAS to try to recover my losses (which would have worked becase FAZ was down 20% at the beginning of the day, and ended down 41%, and so I would've made about 20% on FAS just in the last half of the day).

I should've sold no matter what, because I'll never break even. Huge drops like this are horrible to recover from in leveraged ETFs which have to match the *daily* performance of an index. Here's an example to show why:

Say some index is at 100 and it's inverse 3x ETF (e.g. FAZ) is at $100. Say the index goes up 14% in one day, meaning the 3x ETF drops 3*14 = 42% (like FAZ did). The index would now be at 114 and FAZ would be at $58. Now say the index returns to it's previous level the next day. This would require only about a 12% drop (114 * (1 - 0.12) = ~100). That means FAZ would increase 12*3 = 36%. FAZ would end up at $58 * 1.36 = ~$79. So while the market has returned to where it originally was, the holder of the 3x ETF is down 21%.

Let me re-iterate this: Even if the markets return to their previous level the very next day, the holder of the 3x ETF is down 21% !!! This is why huge movements in ETFs are so detrimental, and also why you do not want to own them long-term. This is known as the "Constant Leverage Trap". You can read more about this here.

Bah. Luckily I didn't put too much money into this, but I did put in more than I should've for such a risky play. I really need to start learning from these mistakes. I even said last time that FAS/FAZ were too crazy and you have to be a day trader to use them... and then I jumped back in anyway and got burnt again. Sigh....

Sunday, April 5, 2009

FAZ

I bought some FAZ (3x inverse financials) near the end of Friday at 15.93. The market kept rising in the last 10 minutes and FAZ closed at 15.60.

It's of course a risky trade, being a 3x leveraged fund, and I'm buying in the midst of a rally. In one month, the Dow has gone from 6600 up to 8000, and FAZ has dropped from over $100 to it's current value of around $16. The trade is a gamble, but I'm betting that after a month of large gains, the markets will pullback here, especially since the Dow has now reached the key resistance level of 8000. It could fly through it -- anything's possible -- but I think it's much more likely to get stuck around the 8000 range or bounce off it. It's been a pretty large rally and the economic news is still pretty dismal. Earnings season is now here (roughly from Tuesday to 6 weeks later), and the news should be bad.

Take a look at the chart below to see the Dow 8000 and 9000 resistance/support levels:



I think one of the riskier things about this trade is that I'm buying pretty early, without any confirmation of a change in direction of the markets. I probably should have waited to see if the DOW blows through 8000 or starts to drop. Instead, I'm trying to time the top perfectly, which usually doesn't work out too well :)

I don't want to set a stop on this trade, because the 3x ETFs are so volatile it would probably get hit and I would lose money now matter which way the trade eventually goes. I'm pretty confident DOW won't go above 8400 right now. I'm planning to sell in 2-3 days.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Trade Update - Citi

Markets were up again today, but Citi did not outperform the rest of the market like I had hoped. I would've done much better if I had just held onto UYG. As I mentioned, I don't want to be holding Citi long (too risky, even if it could easily go over $2), so I just sold it off near the close today for about a 15% gain.

Trades:
Sold Citigroup at 1.63 (bought at 1.42) for a 15% gain in 3 days.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Citigroup

Citigroup was up 15% in the morning, but closed up only 6% at 1.54. I actually decided last minute I'd get out at the close, but my order was too late and didn't get filled. So we'll have to see what tomorrow holds.

On an unrelated note, DXO has been dropping. Last time it was at 1.80 I knew I should be buying, and it went on to reach 2.60 or so. Oil is dropping again (down to $42) and DXO is down to 2.22. I'm hoping it drops down to the 1.80's again, and if so, I think I will find some money to buy a whole bunch more to lower my average. Oil seems to have found its support in the $40's and any dip into the 30's is a great buying opportunity. And of course we'll be laughing once it returns to the 60's or 70's at the end of the year... that's the plan anyway :)

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Trade Update - C

I bought some Citigroup near the close at 1.42. I know, I know... I tell everyone I'd never buy any banks, and then I go and buy Citi on a day that it's already skyrocketed up 35% :-)

I'm betting on another +30% day for it tomorrow, however unlikely that might be. The reason it's up is because of news from their CEO that they were actually profitable for the 1st two months of 2009. Because the stock price has been completely trashed up until now, and now there's finally a bit of good news, I'm expecting more people to jump on board tomorrow. Even if it pulls back tomorrow, I think I'll hold on for a couple of days before selling. We may be in a short-term market rally here, and I think Citi will recover to the $2 range. I'm not holding for more than a few days though.

Trade Update - UYG

Huge market rally today, led by the financials, averaging up 8% as of now (mid-day). Citigroup up 36%, Bank of America up 28%. UYG up 21% so far, so I exited my position, even though I think the rally may continue tomorrow.

Trades:
Sold UYG at 1.85 (bought at 1.53 on Thursday), for a 21% gain in 5 days.

Monday, March 9, 2009

Update

I forgot to mention last post, I bought a little bit of UYG at 1.53 on Thursday. With the markets dropping so far, so fast, I'm just looking for a short-term bounce again.

Saturday, March 7, 2009

What's up

Sorry, it's been over a month since my last update. I've just been busy at work, and haven't been doing any trading really. So what's up? well not much... mostly everything is down.

Can you believe this: The Dow Jones and S&P500 are down 24% Year-To-Date already. Yep, even after the huge drop at the end of 2008, if you jumped back in the markets on Jan.1, 2009, you'd be down about 25% now just over 3 months later. So much for the advice you've been hearing people give about buying when things are "cheap" and holding for the long-term, since stocks always go up in the long-term :) Try telling that to Japan, where over the last 20-years (which is quite long-term), the stock market has dropped 80%.

What's in the news today... In the U.S., 11% of mortgages are delinquent (behind in payment by 1 or more months) or in foreclosure. Unemployment is already over 8%, and will hit double digits soon. GM is going under. et-cetera.

So if everything is going to the crapper, what do you invest in? Here are some ideas, mostly from the pages of Sprott of course:

1. Gold. Not mining companies, but gold bullion. You can hold this through an ETF like GLD or ETNs like DGL (or DGP, it's double-leveraged counterpart), or you can buy gold coins, and it looks like Sprott is coming out with a gold bullion fund soon. While gold could skyrocket in the coming years, don't use it to try to make a lot of money; Use gold to preserve your wealth in these troubled times.

2. Oil. Not oil companies, but oil itself. This is a more long-term idea that I've talked about before. Oil cannot go to zero. We are running out of oil. Right now, demand for oil is low, and yes the price of oil could go lower (and I've lost money on paper because of this), but the demand for oil is not going to go away anytime soon, and the price will go higher -- much higher. So if you can handle potential short-term losses for long-term gains, now's the time to get into oil. You can participate in oil through OLO (or double-leveraged with DXO), or the canadian ETF HOU, or even USO.

3. "Recession-proof" stocks. I really like Jean-Francois Tardiff at Sprott. He manages a couple of the Hedge funds there. On BNN recently, he picked 3 "recession proof" stocks, all of them income trusts, as good investments for 2009:

1) SIF.UN Energy Savings Income Fund - sells natural gas in 5-year fixed price contracts to residential homes. No matter the price of natural gas, they will always make a profit since they fix their margin (e.g. buy 5-year gas contracts at price X and charge the customer price X + 20%). Number of customers is growing strongly. The yield of this income trust is currently around 12%.

2) FMD.UN Future Med Healthcare - distributor of hundreds of healthcare products mostly in Ontario. They just bought a company in Quebec. Expect revenue growth because of the acquisition. Yield is currently around 12% and likely to be increased.

3. LIQ.UN Liquor store Income Fund - the whole idea that in bad times we drink :) This company just acquired a competitor, which was much more aggressive in pricing. With that competition gone, their profit margin should grow. Price has dropped a lot, so yield is now around 15%.

Assuming no changes in distributions, if these income funds' stock prices were to remain flat through 2009, you'd still make over 12% from the distributions alone. Just remember that these distributions count as income (not dividends or capital gains), so you would be taxed on the full amount, so you'd probably want to hold them in an RRSP or TFSA.

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Trade Update - FAS

Sorry, I'm behind on blogging... So as you know I bought a puny amount of FAS at $12.55. It's probably a good thing my mistake happened, since FAS has since plummeted.

When I realized my mistake, I removed my stop, because I didn't want to pay commissions on such a small trade... I didn't really care what happened with it.

Then yesterday with the markets way down in the morning, I bought a proper amount of FAS at $10.01. I set a stop at $8.50 (for a max 15% loss). I thought this was a steal of a deal and was expecting a rally since it was Obama's inaugaration day. But FAS easily hit my stop and plummeted to $7.60, and incredible 40% drop from the previous day's close! It's still hard to believe these 3x ETFs... 40% in one day -- amazing.

Anyway, so I'm feeling pretty crappy about that trade, but still felt there's got to be a rebound here with such large drops. So today, with the markets up, I waited for the first sign of a rally in the afternoon, and I bought in again, getting in around $8.50 -- basically where I previously exited. It was a pretty bad price since it was much lower earlier in the day. But the rally was strong to the close, and FAS finished at 9.90.

It's nice it finished so strong, so that now I can put a stop just above my entry point and not lose any more.

Man, I think it's a little too stressful to trade FAS/FAZ -- you practically need to be a day trader.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Trade Update - FAS

Okay, I'm stupid...

I planned to buy FAS (3x bull financials) to catch a short rebound, since the markets have been mostly down the last 5 days in a row including being down sharply (3%) this morning.

I bought almost perfectly at the bottom at 12.55 before lunch and it immediately shot up to $15.00 before I realized my mistake: I was in such a hurry, I entered 1/10th the number of shares I meant to (because I was used to buying SKF which is in the $100's, not the $10's), so I ended up hardly owning anything. I can't make enough on this to even cover the commissions now, so I'm not sure what to do. I'll probably just wait till tomorrow to see. I think it's too risky to buy right now. If the markets drop again, I'll try to get into it again in the $12 range, this time with a proper number of shares, but I'm probably too late. Bah - so much for my perfect trade.

Lesson: Always review the trade confirmation page to make sure the total order amount makes sense before you click OK.

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Trade Update - SKF

I stuck with the plan and sold my SKF today at 138.10 (bought at 106), for a nice 30% gain in about 5 weeks.

Friday, January 2, 2009

Oil up

Oil closed up at $46 today, probably mainly due to the conflict in the Gaza strip. More details here.

In the last 5 days DXO has gone from $2.20 to $3.13 -- up over 50%! It just goes to show how much money could be made or lost with this ETN depending on your timing.

It looks like the Palestinian conflict could get worse, meaning oil could climb more. If oil gets above $55, I may sell off half of my DXO. Why? Well, while I still believe oil will go much higher long-term, I had obviously underestimated how much the economic downturn would affect it in the shorter term and how low it could go. If the current price is just being propped up by the recent conflict, it may be prudent to sell off some while it's high in order to be able to buy back in at a lower price. Also, I've got too much of my portfolio weighted in it right now since I kept averaging down as it dropped lower.

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

2008 - Year in Review, Look Ahead

Summary: 2008 sucked, The U.S. is in a recession depression and they are screwed for the next few years, Canada is starting a recession, and so good luck with 2009!

The numbers coming out on everything are just staggering, no matter what you're looking at -- jobless claims, housing starts, housing price declines, commercial real-estate values, vacancy rates, auto sales, etc. Just look at the news headlines I highlighted in my last post. I don't think people really realize just how incredibly bad the data is. I don't want to be a doomsdayer, but all signs are pointing to things getting worse before they get better. Everything I could want to say on this and more is captured in Eric Sprott's latest Markets At a Glance article. Please read it and re-read it:
Eric Sprott's Markets at a Glance - Dec. 2008: "Surviving the Depression"

You didn't read it, did you :) Go back and read it...

So the U.S. is screwed, but what about here in Calgary? With oil at all-time crazy prices, our oil industry here has kept salaries and spending high. But oil has dropped from $140 to $40, Oil & Gas companies are halting tons of projects, we're starting to hear the stories of the lay-offs, and the construction boom has ground to a halt. The problems in the U.S. will also eventually affect us, but no-one knows how much. So we are definitely going to start to notice a change here. Housing prices here dropped 14% in 2008, and we all know that a house is still pretty much unaffordable if your family isn't making $100K+. I cannot see anything but house prices in Calgary dropping further in 2009. If you're looking to buy a house, I'd wait another year. If you own a house, there's nothing you can really do and I wouldn't stress about it. If you have a good job, don't expect a raise, but be thankful for your job.

Investing -2008
In 2008, world markets fell by an average of 45%, the U.S and Canada by about 35%. I was concentrated in gold and energy stocks through Sprott mutual funds, which were hit very hard, and so I lost about 50% this year. Losing half of your life savings is still really tough for me to accept. While my Sprott investments were making about 25%/year the 5 years before, this now brings that down to an average of only 8% per year over the last 6 years.

The past 10-year return for U.S. market indices is slightly negative, and Canada is slightly positive. In other words, if you're a typical investor who started investing in the stock market 10 years ago, you've basically made nothing over that whole period!

As for my stock trading that I started doing again in October, and which this blog is mainly about, it's been mixed for me. For my small trades, mostly of SSO, DIG, and UYG/SKF, I averaged about a 12% gain over the last 2.5 months. Not bad, but nothing to brag about.

My biggest investment though has been in oil, via DXO. My average purchase price is about 3.68, and DXO is currently at 2.55. I bought in way too early as oil was dropping and now am suffering the consequences -- I'm currently down 30%. I will only break-even with oil around $55, and oil is currently at $43. Just a few days ago oil was down to the low $30's and DXO hit $1.80. I so badly wanted to buy more, and I would've made a killing in just a few days, but I had already spent all my money. I'm just going to have to wait it out.

Investing 2009
So what's the plan for 2009? I have no idea what I'd recommend to anyone. The thing is, the markets are often irrational. I think the economy is only going to get worse, but the markets could stage some big rally after dropping so much, no matter how little sense that makes given the current economic data. So I have no recommendation on what to buy or sell. For me, I'm just going to try to play the swings in the market.

Long-term I think oil, gold, and agricultural commodities will do well, at least preserving their values if not rising, so the ETNs for these might be a safer place to be than the general stock market. You can read my past posts on why I'm mainly moving into oil (DXO).

I guess that's about all I have to say, so good luck to everyone in 2009!

Thursday, December 11, 2008

News Headlines

Hmmm....Let's take a look at today's news headlines, and you tell me if it looks like things are getting better:

GOP Stands Firm, Putting Auto Bailout in Doubt
By DAVID M. HERSZENHORN and DAVID E. SANGER WASHINGTON - The prospects of a $14 billion government rescue of the American auto industry seemed to vaporize on Thursday morning as the Senate Republican leader, Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, ...

Recession seen worsening
Reuters - 4 hours agoBy Jim Christie SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - The "nasty" US recession will tighten its grip next year as unemployment rises and weak home and stock prices imperil consumers, finance firms and debt-laden businesses, a UCLA Anderson Forecast report released ...

US Household Net Worth Fell Most on Record in Third Quarter
Bloomberg - 1 hour agoBy Shobhana Chandra Dec. 11 (Bloomberg) -- US household wealth fell from July to September by the most on record as property values and stock prices tumbled, Federal Reserve figures showed.

Foreclosure Storm Will Hit US in ‘09 Amid Job Loss (Update1)
Bloomberg - 1 hour agoBy Dan Levy Dec. 11 (Bloomberg) -- US foreclosure filings climbed 28 percent in November from a year earlier and a brewing “storm” of new defaults and job losses may force 1 million homeowners from their properties next year, RealtyTrac Inc. said.California has highest total number of foreclosure filings in November Bizjournals.comForeclosures dip - but hold the applause CNNMoney.com

Jobless claims jump to 573000, a 26-year high
MarketWatch - 4 hours agoBy Rex Nutting, MarketWatch WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) -- The US labor market weakened further last week, with the number of first-time filings for state unemployment benefits jumping by 58000 to a 26-year high of 573000, the Labor Department reported ...

US Exports Fall More Than Two Percent
Washington Post - 3 hours agoBy Howard Schneider US exports tumbled in October as a collapse in global demand for goods and services undermined what in recent months has been an important prop for an otherwise shrinking economy.Trade Deficit in US Widens as Exports Decrease (Update1) BloombergDeficit of $57.2 billion is wider than forecasts; oil imports jumped MarketWatch

KB Toys Files Bankruptcy, Citing ‘Sudden’ Sales Drop (Update2)
Bloomberg - 38 minutes agoBy Steven Church and Heather Burke Dec. 11 (Bloomberg) -- KB Toys Inc., the 86-year-old toy retailer, filed for bankruptcy with plans to shut its 277 stores, citing a “sudden drop” in sales.

Costco Doesn't Expect To Meet Analysts' 2Q Profit Estimate
2nd UPDATE: Lilly Sees Slower 2009 Sales Growth, Big 4Q Charge
Krispy Kreme Q3 loss widens
Ciena Posts Loss as Customers Push Back Orders


This is why I'm short the market. Maybe SKF wasn't the best thing I could've bought to accomplish this since it's limited to just the Financial sector, but I guess it's good enough. It's already up to $120 from $106 when I bought 2 days ago.

The U.S. dollar is finally starting to drop, so gold is starting to recover. Currently it is at $820. This means my Sprott funds are finally recovering a bit.

Oil shot up to $49 to day on the US dollar drop and expectation that OPEC will announce a big production cut in their Dec.17th meeting. Also, the International Energy Agency's latest monthly report said that they actually expect global oil demand to rise in 2009 by 500,000 barrels a day, going against the recent U.S. goverment Energy Information Administration's forecast that demand would drop by that same amount in 2009.

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

SKF

I bought some SKF (2x inverse financials) yesterday at $106.00.

Here's what the 3-month chart looks like:

There's still no good news in sight, so I see no reason for a continued rally in the financials or the rest of the market. (You never know though, because at some point here, probably early next year, people will become optimistic and start investing again. This may happen with Obama coming into power and people just generally thinking we must be near a bottom.)
I still expect more bad news in December and even just looking at the chart from a technical perspective, this trade looks like a good risk/reward trade. I mean, SKF went from $280 to $100 here in less than a month, so I think the odds of a bounce are good. I hope to sell around $140.

Thursday, December 4, 2008

Oil

Oil hit $43 today. I just bought another chunk of DXO at 2.78. I can't really afford to buy any more. I think my break-even is around 3.70 now (requiring oil to be around $55, or higher the more that oil drops lower in the interm -- I'll cover the reason for this in another post sometime).

If Oil goes to $25 like some are predicting, I guess I'll be holding for a while longer than expected :) Oil will eventually go back up though, so again, no real worries. The one risk with ETNs are that if the issuer (Deutsche Bank in this case) goes under, you likely won't see any of your money again. This Credit Risk is something that differentiates ETNs from ETFs. So as long as Deutsche Bank stays healthy, which it looks like it should from what I've read up on it (although you never know), then I still see an easy 100% return on this investment.

Monday, December 1, 2008

Oil - $48

Holy cow: Oil just went below $48 tonight. If it stays that low, DXO will open below $3. I may have to just sell more of my Sprott funds off or try to to borrow some money so I can make another big investment here :)

OPEC is meeting again on Dec.17th, and will likely announce another production cut, but I don't know if that will do anything for the price of oil.

I'm wondering if I just try to play the swings in oil with some money. Just buy DXO on the dips (e.g. around $3.00) and sell it off whenever I'm up 20-50%. This would be a good strategy if it takes a year for the oil price to take off again.

Recession Confirmed

Market crash again today. Glad I got out of SSO and UYG! Apparently it was the biggest one-day point drop in the TSX since crash of '87. Like that even means anything any more. I think the media can stop giving stats like "the biggest x day point/percentage drop since xyz." Every day it's some new record; the volatility is just crazy. So just stop it with the stats unless it's something really major.

I was wanting to switch over to SKF (2x short financials, basically the opposite of UYG), but was waiting for it to go below $130. It didn't quite make it, and it shot up 30% today -- gah! Missed out again. There's so much opportunity to play these market swings, it's just impossible to time the peaks and valleys.

Oh, and the big news today was that yes, the U.S. is in a recession and it officially started in December of 2007. Well, no duh. I think it's so stupid that it took a whole year to "confirm" the recession. But I guess everyone's definition of the term recession is different anyway. According to the most commonly used rule of thumb, you have to have 2 consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth to be in a recession, which has not happened yet. Obviously that is not a very reliable indicator. I hated how the question in the news throughout 2008 was always "Do you think we're in a recession?" Why wasn't every single economist jumping up and down saying, "Yep, it sure looks like it!" No, no-one would ever admit it. You can never be negative... wouldn't want to spook investors and have the markets drop or something.

Of course Mr. Eric Sprott was right as usual, saying back in January and February of 2008 that it looked like the recession had finally begun. It's always interesting to go back to Sprott's Markets at a Glance articles from late 2007 and early 2008 to see how accurately they predicted the whole mess that is now happening.

I'm obviously more bearish on the markets than bullish, but I keep feeling I'm missing out on the short opportunities and then I end up going long when I think there might be a temporary bottom. And I could see myself trying to grab a short-term bounce again soon, buying back into UYG if it hits the $3.xx range over the next week. We'll see...