IFocus
You are arguing with a Galah
- Joined
- 8 September 2006
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I am sort of waiting for the bulls on this site to throw in the towel, then we will be close to capitulation.
I think it will be a double bottom. You have to be careful to not get caught in the centre rise known I believe by chartists as the bum crack.
I don't believe any other market situation is comparable to what is happening now.
We are watching three distinct crisises unfolding
1) Collapse of economic activity across the globe throwing millions of people out of work and threatening entire industries
2) Exponential increases in deaths caused by the virus adding another element to economic/social/political risks
3) A credit crunch arising as trillions of dollars of corporate and government debts become due while governments are printing more money to keep the system from collapsing.
Trying to pick when these events will be resolved from past events seems unrealistic.
To a certain extent many other market crashes could be seen as crises of confidence. Restore confidence and economic activity can slowly recover.
But that won't work when the economy is locked down by the government to control a pandemic that seems unstoppable without a total society lockdown.
This is all moving incredibly fast.I don't believe any other market situation is comparable to what is happening now.
One thought I have on that, and I have no firm evidence it's just a thought, is that an index will probably respond more predictably than any individual stock in this environment since what's driving it all is the overall situation rather than something specific to any one company.I'm interested in strategies that actively trade these types of bear markets.
Absolutely, this is where a long term plan that allows you to avail yourself of these opportunities, is paramount IMO.Like every other bull & bear market, you wont know until you are able to apply hindsight.
Then every one is right.
One thought I have on that, and I have no firm evidence it's just a thought, is that an index will probably respond more predictably than any individual stock in this environment since what's driving it all is the overall situation rather than something specific to any one company.
That's just a thought, others might have a firmer view on it.
I believe the situation is too volatile to effectively continue. IMV far too much of the current markets is about trading systems intended as quasi gambling situations. Perhaps there should be a review of what financial products are still required and for what purpose?
Absolutely, this is where a long term plan that allows you to avail yourself of these opportunities, is paramount IMO.
A long time ago I read a book called 'sensible share investing', I think a guy called Austin Donnelly wrote it.
Like all the investment books, you only take from it, what strikes a chord with your personal beliefs or sits well with your personality.
The thing I remember from that book was, when you think the market is high and you wouldn't buy your favourite share, because you think it is too expensive it is time to start selling some.
The other thing he said, from memory was, never be 100% in the market and never be 100% out of the market.
Those two things sit well with me.
Like every other bull & bear market, you wont know until you are able to apply hindsight.
Then every one is right.
In the US that would be the quant algos.
2008 had this feel on the way down. It was relentless down bars day after day. Then it wasn't. 2002 was similar, longs just couldn't gain any traction, there would be a bounce, days, then more selling. That lasted for some time. It was hard to really do anything, long or short, as there was little to no follow through. Really daytrading was about it (for me) at the time.
To trade this market you actually need more volatility (via leveraged ETFs) that (assuming long only) that when they bounce, they bounce enough to unload positions or partial positions, as I am looking to build positions over time. This (in time) will be an excellent entry point for anything. So currently I am looking to build, unload a partial position on a bounce (to keep the red ink in some sort of control) and repeat until the market/world, returns to some sort of normality.
This means taking capital for a position, divide by 10 or 20 and add on the way down, selling some on bounces, repeat. It worked well in 2002 and really well in 2009. We'll see if it works in 2020.
jog on
duc
I have been nibbling away, even if it falls more, how much? Another 10-15% at most?5 weeks relentless selling, has to be close to the sharpest impulsive move down ever.
Trying to put into context what a bottom will look like while sizing up the damage both real and psychological to markets, participants, governments, businesses etc.
No bounce or consolidations or any technical hint maybe volume will give something at this weeks end.
Any recovery looking to me to be a real grind at best
The VIX is a lagging indicator
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