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What is an example of a long term hold strategy and "working the positions"?
Are you talking about buying the dips on fundamentally strong companies?
Ripieee, how many ASX stocks do Lincoln rate as being in the 'strong' or 'satisfactory' categories, as a general guide. Thanks.
Once again, hello to all who are following!!
EOW 04
Portfolio performance up to date (Starting 1st of March 2017) = 5.11%
Market performance (ASX200) up to date from 1st March 2017 = 1.46%
This week sells: SDF
This week buys: COH, APX, BBOZ
We sold off SDF this week after buying in 4 weeks ago, the SP of the stock has been trading sideways since entering the trade and I have decided to close the trade off and reduce our exposure to the financial sector to nil. SDF was brought in at $2.749 and sold out at $2.70 with a minor loss.
This week we also opened up a few trades, I have been watching APX for awhile since it's earnings upgrade to find an entry point. Since the gap up to the $3.60 levels, we have seen a minor/healthy pullback before more demand came in for the stock, suggesting to me that this gap will not be filled. We are maxing out our exposure to the IT sector with the inclusion of APX now. I have also opened up another position with COH after it broke out of it's previous high at $142, had a pull back and made new all time highs. This COH trade means we are maxed out on our limits within the healthcare space as well as we have 3 H/C stocks in the portfolio now.
View attachment 71396
I have taken a contrarian view on the banks and to a smaller extend, the overall market now due to an "impending" property market correction, apartment oversupply that is due to come onto the market in major cities, China's credit risk and their current debt levels which could have an adverse impact on the Australian economy should **** hit the fans. BBOZ is a bear ETF which is leveraged by x2 and tracks the ASX200 inversely. As the banks make up majority of the ASX200 index, this is my method of hedging/shorting the banks and the overall market. We have placed a stop loss on BBOZ in case my perceptions do not come to light. As it stands right now, our portfolio is still 85% Long, 7.5% short and 7.5% in cash. If the ASX continues downwards, we may look into scaling into the BBOZ trade.
Have a great weekend all!
Ryan
Ryan... just a suggestion. Your BBOZ trade appears to be a different kettle of fish compared to the rest of your positions. I am not saying the position is or isn't without merit, but I think it should be excluded from your calculation of portfolio performance - and ideally excluded from your capital used.
Because ultimately you are recording your trades to measure how well your strategy (as detailed on your first post) is going. By all means start another record showing how well you interpret, time and execute your macro contrarian views, but keep it separate.
Thanks for the tip on not including BBOZ in my portfolio and run it as something separate so I am able to measure the performance of the strategy properly. From my POV, BBOZ is a macro play on the ASX and I still apply T/A to the trade and have it categorized as a "Trend Reversal". As I only run one portfolio and not multiple portfolios across different time-frames or asset classes, I didn't think to exclude it from the portfolio.
If i did take out the capital used to purchase BBOZ for calculation of my performance, how would I go about doing it?
Do I remove the amount of capital used to purchase BBOZ from my capital on the date of purchase?
If BBOZ trade is part of your strategy and you believe it makes sense to measure it alongside your other long positions, don't let me tell you otherwise. There is no absolute right or wrong answer, just depends on what you are trying to measure/record/evaluate with the record. It's your money so you can do what you want.
What I meant was, taking up a position in BBOZ would use up capital and change how many positions you can take (or their sizes) in your longs otherwise. So the suggestion was to eliminate that indirect impact if possible. But if you don't have the capital to compensate then there isn't much you can (or need) to do about it.
Just be careful mate with cutting and chopping here and there. If there is no fundamental change or any news developments or there is no technical reason (e.g. break below support level) you may regret getting out of positions early.
If there is a good reason such as news development that you had with NIB holdings (NHF) that you mentioned very early in this forum, then it may prove worthwhile as shown below...
Just be careful mate with cutting and chopping here and there. If there is no fundamental change or any news developments or there is no technical reason (e.g. break below support level) you may regret getting out of positions early.
If there is a good reason such as news development that you had with NIB holdings (NHF) that you mentioned very early in this forum, then it may prove worthwhile as shown below...
Hmmm don't know about that.
If a stock is stagnant and other opportunities arise
I'd certainly cull it.
Hey Quant,I suggest you compare returns to accumulation index not just straight XJO . The gross returns for dividends is north of 6% . BBOZ is an index trade and whilst I haven't checked your portfolio stocks against index correlation probably a good idea to do so . Nice work and stick to it ..
PS BBOZ is something traded on SMSF not sure why you wouldn't include it in any portfolio , WHY wouldn't you ? Easiest way to expose super to short side imo . or any portfolio fwiw , to not include it is stupid imo
https://au.investing.com/indices/s-p-asx-200-accumulated-chartMight be a silly question here but where could I find the accumulation index? What is the ticker code for the accumulation index of the ASX200?
Flows related. Imo it will underperform over the next few monthsDo like your NST(Northern Star Resources) stock, which is one of the stocks that have gone up a lot compared to most other gold stocks on the ASX. It should perform well if the gold price keeps rising which it generally does when uncertainty comes into play.
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