closed AIX/MAP
AIX at 1.44 (+2.9%)
MAP at 2.54 (-2.7%)
net profit 5.5%
FYI for those watching the thread. With CFDs and 10% margin this is a net return of 25.4% ROC (return on capital). If you want to rule of thumb convert PT's reported net gains to ROC using CFDs on 10% margin, halve his gain, times it by ten (leverage), then times it by 0.9 (for fees). So 5.5% => 5.5 x 0.5 x 10 x 0.9 = 25% ROC
I agree with SKC's comments that should have investigated the stocks beyond a couple of notes from GSJBW. If MAP were to be sold I would have lost a bucketload on this trade.
Announcment was MAP bringing management internal. Will save a few $ and make the company more attractive to investors and hence takeover. An EPS neutral decision.
MAP might come off more than $2.54 but I've taken profits.
leverage. 10% margin.
With CFDs if you buy a stock on 10% margin and it goes up 2%, you make 20% on your capital.
$10k of shares at $1 each => need $1k capital ($9k borrowed)
SP goes from $1.00 to $1.02 = 2%
shares now worth $10,200
return = $200
so 2% SP move made 20% ROC
ROC = 200/1000 = 20%
neglecting fees
I have been following this thread. What a great source of information its been for a newbie like me...
I will like to get some information about pairing indexes. If trading index pairs, what criteria should be used to choose good pairs?
Like for instance when stock pairs are chosen one of the criteria is that the stocks should be in the same industry group. So what is the rationale behind pairing indexes such as ASX200 and N225? Can any global index be paired with any other index and used as long as the correlation is high? Or is there a method of pairing indexes (like any fundamentals that need to be met before pairing them)?
...money management is don't place more than 25% of my a/c on any position, I hand pick on my own which entry signals to take then strictly stick to the system....
so,.. if you have a $20,000 account
does that mean that you can only commit $5,000 per pair trade (or to be exact, $2,500 on each of the stock)?
Furthermore, is that $5,000 of stock value or $5,000 of margin? ie... say if margin was 10% (on both pairs)... then your market value is really $50,000??
skc, I let you in on a little secret of mineI have every stock in the ASX100 paired with the ^AXJO which is the ASX200 cash index, periodically throughout the day I will rank by the +/- column and look for stocks that are -2 or +2 against the index, if I find 2 stocks where one is overbought and the other oversold and they are in the same sector il backtest them to see if the pair history is profitable and if so pair them up and make a trade, a like this situation because both stocks are out of whack with the market and generally when you pair them together the +/- is above/below 2.50,
Hi Korrupt_1
Are you sure it's not the other way around with AMP and QBE?
skc, I let you in on a little secret of mineI have every stock in the ASX100 paired with the ^AXJO which is the ASX200 cash index, periodically throughout the day I will rank by the +/- column and look for stocks that are -2 or +2 against the index, if I find 2 stocks where one is overbought and the other oversold and they are in the same sector il backtest them to see if the pair history is profitable and if so pair them up and make a trade, a like this situation because both stocks are out of whack with the market and generally when you pair them together the +/- is above/below 2.50, in JHX/TOL case it is 2.83, the best trade you can have is when a pair is more than 3stdev from its mean on no news.
You want to trade stocks when there are no news. HVN reported disappointing sales, so the deviation is not statistical but more fundamental.
spot on skc
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