Posts Tagged ‘Emini’

What Is A CDO And Why Should I Care?

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

For many in this country economics have become a nightmare. On top of all of the basics about how money works, another layer has come completely unraveled. That being the business of “shadow banking”.

To the degree that the population becomes wise to how this works, is the degree to which all of us can avoid the pitfalls of financial oppression.

The warning signs were clear that nothing good would come from the development of Collateralized Debt Obligations, CDOs. I was fortunate to have been in banking and in a group which voiced serious concerns over the development of crazier and crazier esoteric instruments. They were to be peddled as “same as cash” but were in fact far from that. By July 07 the auctions for these began to fail as financial institutions backed away.

The bankers started pushing the CDOs out the door. They managed to get them off their books and into the hands of others, most of whom were sold these as “same as cash” which of course they were not.

The instruments were created by companies such as Blackrock and Nuveen. By mid-February 08 the market for these seized up entirely. We are talking about a 300 billion dollar market freezing up.

Those who had trusted that these instruments were really the same as cash found their economic lives grinding to a halt. The regulators of course were flooded by complaints.

The brokerages insisted that they had done nothing wrong. Investigations ensued. Brokerages agreed to make their smaller investors whole at least.

Was the press interested? Well, it didn’t boil down to a quick set of soundbytes. Besides, the perpetrators were some of the biggest financial institutions in the country.

Finally, when Bernanke and Paulson held the country ransom for 700 billion dollars the story got media attention.

What kind of accountability is it that plays Robin Hood on the taxpayer for the benefit the banks?

Two days after the Presidential Election the markets continue to sputter. The word on the street is that that market is not pleased with the idea that full the street will not get full bonuses at year end.

So what kind of bonuses are we talking. Dick Fuld, had in 07 cleared 34 million.

Clearly Rand’s notion of enlightened self-interest did not trump raw greed for the banking industry. For more on Rand, see Objectivism and the 1957 novel “Atlas Shrugged”.This all plays nicely into the capital C Conspiracy Theorists who are ready to gloat over the “I told ya so’s”.

These “Too big to fail” are not national institutions. They are international. The idea of a sovereign nation is a thing of the past.

Will the New Vikings prevail? Stay tuned

James Horne has been a financial analyst for over 10 years. He is CEO of Pure Reason LLC, the home of Shadowtraders. His voice has been heard by hundreds of students learning to trade Futures with Shadowtraders online day trading strategies. Before you buy any trading software, make sure you attend Shadowtraders Monday Night Webinar, and hosted by Barbara Cohen

Futures Trading Basics For The Novice Futures Trader

Monday, April 5th, 2010

Futures trading for Tradestation traders is concerned about trading Futures Contracts. What does a Futures Contract mean? How can Tradestation traders benefit from learning to trade it? A Futures Contract, a cash forward sale, or a “Forward” Contract, is a contract between a buyer who wants to purchase a specific product, and a seller who supplies that same product. It’s a forward contract because it must be delivered by a specific date. Futures Contracts are actually formal agreements. That means that each contract obligates the buyer and the seller; neither may default. Trading Futures is characterized as zero sum, every dollar made by the buyer is a dollar lost to the seller and vice versa. When prices are too low or too high, then it is either the buyer or the seller that profits, and the one that profits does so at the expense of the other. Let’s see an example. Say oats prices rise, the farmer benefits but the oatmeal manufacturer suffers. If oats prices fall, the farmer suffers, but the oatmeal manufacturer’s bottom line goes higher.

Futures trading takes place in two different ways. Commodities are traded at a Futures exchange, on the floor like at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME), where there are open outcry pits. But Futures trading can also be done “electronically,” with an internet connection, where individual investors place their buy and sell orders straight from their desktop trading platforms, like Tradestation.

Futures traders can be broken into 2 groups, hedgers and speculators. An example of a hedger would be a farmer, manufacturer, exporter or importer. The goal of the hedger is to create futures positions that reduce the risk that the price of their commodity may fall. For example, a pork belly farmer believes that his pigs will be grown by August. He signs a pork belly futures contract before the slaughter at the current price in May for delivery in September. In May, the price of pork bellies is high because of reduced supply. Should the price of pork bellies drop by September (when the contract expires), the farmers’ price has already been ensured. Mind you, the farmer is assuming a risk. What if there is a virus and many pigs die before September. The price of pork bellies would rise even further, but the farmer is already obligated to deliver pork bellies at the price negotiated in May. The farmer would lose additional profit. Conversely, in September there might also be a huge number of pigs and the price of pork bellies ends up being lower than his May price. In this case he wins.

Speculators, on the other hand, are trading Futures for the sole purpose of earning a profit, not for protecting the price of their crop. Speculators actually comprise the majority of traders in most markets. Speculators are willing to assume risk in the hope that if they buy low, they can sell high (going long), or by selling high, they can later buying back low (going short). For example say the soy speculator knows that the weather has been a problem for months and the soy crop will be limited in September. The speculator is happy to buy the soy Futures contracts in July at the current price. He is betting that the price of soy will skyrocket and he will make a killing in September after the small harvests in August. Speculators provide the liquidity needed to fuel the Futures market. Without speculators, no one would take the other side of the hedgers contract. As in the example above, the farmer sells the soy to the speculator in July for the current price. The speculator assumes risk, hoping that by September, the delivery date, the price of soy has risen and he can make a profit at the farmer’s expense. What he prays doesn’t happen is that come September, the price of soy goes down, meaning that he over paid.

Prior to organized Futures exchanges, like the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME), Futures trading was a far more risky proposition. Contracts were drafted between one farmer and one speculator, and signed wherever the farmer happened to be selling his produce, for example, in farmers markets. There were a lot of problems with these personal contracts. First and foremost, either the farmer or the speculator was allowed to default on the contract. Who would enforce payment or delivery? If the speculator was going to lose his shirt, he would not complete his side of the contract. If the farmer realized that the price of pork bellies had risen dramatically, he would default and sell the pork bellies in the open market. Since these contracts were drafted between 2 parties, the speculator could not sell his contract to another speculator. Here’s another problem…there was no one who would certify the quality of the delivery. Farmers could fill their side of the contract with lower grade pork bellies, and the speculator could not do much about it.

Since the start of organized exchanges, it became the job of the exchange to validate quality, payment and delivery. Exchanges regulated that now good-faith money was required with a third party to make sure of contract performance. This reduces the number of contract defaults. Exchanges were finally able to standardize contracts, stipulating the terms of each contract, like commodity delivery dates and product grades.

Organized exchanges have taken Futures trading far beyond buying and selling of just commodity contracts like corn, wheat, rice, soy or pork bellies. Today, there are futures contracts for several different asset classes, including energies, treasuries, currencies and equities. Futures belong to an asset class called “derivatives,” securities whose prices are derived from one or more underlying assets. As an example, the S&P 500 Futures Contract underlying asset is the New York Stock Exchange’s (NYSE) S&P 500 Index. The S&P 500 Index is one of the most intensely watched equity indexes around the world. The index represents the top 500 well recognized stocks that are now traded on the NYSE. Here is the difficulty with the S&P index, however…you cannot trade the Index. The CME devised the S&P 500 Futures Contract that you are able to trade. As with the case of the S&P 500 Futures Contract, when the value of the S&P 500 Index inflates, the S&P 500 Futures Contract inflates with it, and vice versa.

Now, Futures can also have a currency index as its underlying asset. For individual investors, the Currency Futures Market is designed for the small number of contracts that individual investors intend to trade. With Currency Futures, individual investors can trade the exact same currencies that are being traded in the Forex market, but trade on the CME.

Shadowtraders specialty is in training individual investors how to be Trading Futures. Most of the other Futures education companies can only train investors in trading the S&P 500 Futures Contract, and in particular, the Emini, earmarked towards individual traders. Shadowtraders is much more interested in presenting to its clients a variety of different Futures, including energies, treasuries, currencies, etc. We trade many assets, all of which have liquidity and volatility. For example, we know the days of the week that a particular Future trades, the times of day it is easiest to trade, how many contracts are traded for that, whether or not you can even trade it, etc. That is Shadowtraders expertise.

If you are a Futures trader and experiencing losses, if you are stuck trading just the S&P 500 Emini and you want to expand your horizons, or if you are new to Futures trading and want to get more information, attend Shadowtraders Webinars held on Monday nights.

Barbara Cohen has been a professional day trader for over 10 years and is the CIO of Shadowtraders. She has trained hundreds of students to trade the Futures Market with Shadowtraders trading course. Before you purchase any trading course, make sure you attend Shadowtraders Monday Night Webinar, and hosted by Barbara Cohen

One of the Most Important Trading Strategies for Trading Emini Futures Contracts

Friday, April 2nd, 2010

To understand the essential nature of pivot trading, you’ll need to first of all understand that the stock market is controlled. Perhaps it could be best said that the Stock Market is entirely controlled and if it were not, then millions of Futures contracts and millions of shares of stock could not change hands each day so competently.

If you don’t believe that the market is controlled, then examine this example of how control might work. Towards the end of May 2009, Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner traveled to China and met with Chinese economic officials. The Chinese admonished Geithner, the conversation went, probably, like this…the Chinese telling Geithner that they have thoroughly invested in the U.S. stock market and in the U.S.Treasury bonds. Yet they are willing to withdraw from the US. Market if the stock market does not go up soon.

Geithner knows that could literally crash the U.S. economy, an economy held together with bobby pins.

Can Geithner and his buddies in the Treasury do anything? Geithner’s meeting with the Chinese takes place at the END of May. Upon his return, the Dow goes from 8,200 to 8,800 in two weeks, a 600-point spike. This is a market that had not moved for over two months, hanging around 8,000. How could the stock market move 600 points in two weeks if it hadn’t moved in over 2 months? In July and August, the stock market went up almost 1,000 points. Look at the Dow chart for the last five years. You can see that May through August are always thought to be summer doldrums. How, then, could the market go up 1,300 points in just over one month?

How does control make you a 12-minute trader? That’s easy. The market is controlled. The market’s “movers and shakers” know where they are want to take the market and they how fast to get it there. Movers and shakers abide by very controlled trading rules, a most important one being Futures Pivots. In order for you to become a 12-minute trader, you must learn the movers and shaker’s rules…buying when they buy and selling when they sell. You’ll need to truly become a market shadow.

What then, are pivots? Pivots are support and resistance price levels that allow the insiders to control daily highs and lows during any given trading day. There are in actuality 17 Futures trading pivots — eight intraday (occurring in just one day) and nine inter-day (occurring over more than 1 day). Futures Market insiders use Futures Pivots and stock market insiders use Stock Market pivots. To be a successful 12-minute trader, you need to have the pivots to appear on your technical analysis charts. It is very difficult to trade without pivots because you won’t know where the market may turn on a dime.

Want to uncover more about being a 12-minute trader? Want to learn more about Futures Market pivots and technical analysis? Attend a Monday night webinar on trading the Futures marker put on by http://www.shadowtrader.com. You’ll see for yourself the 17 pivots in action on the current day’s technical chart. Shadowtraders always demonstrates the current day’s chart, not some chart from several weeks or months earlier.

Before you buy another trading course, make sure you attend one of Barbara Cohen’s excellent free Monday night Webinars