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- 17 October 2012
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Keep predicting a crash long enough and sooner or later you’ll be right ?I loved a tweet by Radge sometime last year - along the lines of the bear market the bears have been predicting for 18months has arrived (from memory it was around the sidewise and sometimes down period 1st half of 2021 - after the market had moved up around by some a much greater % than the small down move.
I guess not dis-similar to "bears have predicted 10 of the last 5 bear markets".....
Trend trading is trading with the herd
As "Trend trading" has notoriously a low strike rate (win/loss ratio) can it be reversed by swapping the buy & sell signals? (is it as simple as that?)
Skate.
A broken clock is still right twice a day.Keep predicting a crash long enough and sooner or later you’ll be right ?
The problem is the nebulous definition of the term crash. If you're highly leveraged or trading derivative products, a 20% move against your positions could take you out at a much greater percentage loss. The main differences between the GFC and now is the much greater amounts of leverage, debt, inflation and interest rates. The Federal funds rate in 2007, just before the GFC event, averaged 5% in contrast to now .25% - no room to maneuver. A sharp downturn in markets now will test the resolve of the Fed and RBA to raise rates to tackle inflation this year. Seriously doubt all the forecast rate hikes will be implemented.Keep predicting a crash long enough and sooner or later you’ll be right ?
Wasn’t intending to get into a debate about the technical definition of “crash”. I just used it in the general sense as a reference to those who crawl out from under their rocks to claim the sky is falling in every time the market drops.The problem is the nebulous definition of the term crash. If you're highly leveraged or trading derivative products, a 20% move against your positions could take you out at a much greater percentage loss. The main differences between the GFC and now is the much greater amounts of leverage, debt, inflation and interest rates. The Federal funds rate in 2007, just before the GFC event, averaged 5% in contrast to now .25% - no room to maneuver. A sharp downturn in markets now will test the resolve of the Fed and RBA to raise rates to tackle inflation this year. Seriously doubt all the forecast rate hikes will be implemented.
being a 'low debt person ' i had never considered that angle , i NORMALLY apply a negative percentage to a major index ( say minus 30% or worse to the XJO )The problem is the nebulous definition of the term crash. If you're highly leveraged or trading derivative products, a 20% move against your positions could take you out at a much greater percentage loss. The main differences between the GFC and now is the much greater amounts of leverage, debt, inflation and interest rates. The Federal funds rate in 2007, just before the GFC event, averaged 5% in contrast to now .25% - no room to maneuver. A sharp downturn in markets now will test the resolve of the Fed and RBA to raise rates to tackle inflation this year. Seriously doubt all the forecast rate hikes will be implemented.
Interesting definitionALTHOUGH i saw an analysis on March 2020 arguing a 'crash' must also pierce the long term support levels
Now I'm definitely no chartist so feel free to ridicule my analysis, but here's my observation based on the XAO chart below.being a 'low debt person ' i had never considered that angle , i NORMALLY apply a negative percentage to a major index ( say minus 30% or worse to the XJO )
ALTHOUGH i saw an analysis on March 2020 arguing a 'crash' must also pierce the long term support levels
but yes the next confidence shaker could be very educational
Easy solution to offsetting the inflationary impact on our market gains….we’ll just have to work smarter to improve our trading returns ?now the difficult factor is 'real inflation' to subtract from the market gains
Missing volume:Now I'm definitely no chartist so feel free to ridicule my analysis, but here's my observation based on the XAO chart below.
A few things worry me: the price movement of XAO is now in uncertain territory. The white regression channel on the price chart clearly shows XAO price movement well within two standard deviations since July. However what worries me is this week we have now seen XAO move well and truly outside the lower two standard deviation level so interesting times ahead. Looking at the ATR we are definitely seeing an uptick in volatility relative to the longer term volatility since the start of 2021. Only thing that I'm curious about is that this week hasn't seen an increase in volume, which if you look back to the covid sell off that decline was accompanied by increased volume.
View attachment 136629
Yup…will be watching volume closely over next week. But as it stands without the increase in volume I struggle to get my head around this being a broad based sell off (but hey, what do I know). Haven’t looked at this week’s volume on DJI.Missing volume:
maybe the big movers and shakers have been actually out of the market..we saw huge periods of [top open, low close] which could indicate off load by manipulators aka big fishs?
Another potential cause: the Super funds and retails individuals invested in ETFs are more stable and expect a rebound.
Volume might come suddenly after 2 days+ of constant fall, or if the rebounds stop and new lows are reached here or on the NYSE.or after the week end...
Note: just ideas..I have no clues
was interested to check EODTough going this week that's for sure, but my swing system still managing to close out a few positive positions.
View attachment 136626
Daily change | open | close | ||
BTR | $0.063 | $0.046 | -$0.021 | -31.34% |
WIA | $0.076 | $0.063 | -$0.012 | -16.00% |
a Bell Direct member posts advancers/decliners most nightsYup…will be watching volume closely over next week. But as it stands without the increase in volume I struggle to get my head around this being a broad based sell off (but hey, what do I know). Haven’t looked at this week’s volume on DJI.
There was no luck involved—my system made deliberate decisions to get me in and out of the trades so nothing to do with luck ? I’m just being flippant and don’t want to stir up that discussion again ?So lucky you got out..I actually missed that critical point!!!
Sorry, luck was wrong term.There was no luck involved—my system made deliberate decisions to get me in and out of the trades so nothing to do with luck ? I’m just being flippant and don’t want to stir up that discussion again ?
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