Saturday, February 21, 2009

Welcome to The Jungle




This week is as bad as they get. Down, Down, Down -- w/ no let up in sight. Undoubtedly, he Value Mavens (who I personally don't think very highly of) still  have an excuse for everything. But does anyone listen to them anymore? Doubtful. I think the Value Gang  blew whatever credibility they once had. The problem is that the value investing methodology has a gaping hole in it. You get crushed on the downside. Obliterated! There is no doubt about it; rule #1. An investor must have an exit strategy when things backfire.  Value investing doesn't offer a way out.  It's built on the premise that the investor made a correct judgment in guessing the company's true value. If you get it wrong, good luck. So therefore during bad ass recessions, depressions, or flat out end of the world scenarios, value investing will lead you straight into the poor house. And that's what is happening now. Does anyone doubt that this thing can't go any lower. I have no idea where this massacre is going to end, but Dow 4900 is a possibility in my book. As is Dow 6900, Dow 5900 or Dow 2500 - I just don't know.

Year to date, in what 7 weeks, the Dow is -16.1%, DJT -15.1%, Rus 2000 -17.5%, Value Line Comp -24.9%, SPX -15.7%, and NYSE Comp -16%. I mean this isn't a bad dream, this is our worst reality. It's hard to believe, but it is! Welcome To The Jungle!!!!!

And you're going to listen to these kooks about dollar cost averaging, CNBC gibberish (Craemer and Fast Money) undervalued blue chip names, cash flow value gobbledygook, govt watching your back. Forget it... All you've got is you and so far the only safe place has been cash. Something that Buffett riled about in some crazed NY Times piece where he opined about following a hockey puck and robins in spring. What the hell was that about? 

The world is changing right under his big brained nose and he can't see it -- that's what's going on imo. Listen I don't have the big brain that the old goat in Nebraska was blessed with. But the one thing I've got is flexibility and the ability to change. Being cemented to one way of thinking or some  ideology is the kiss of death in investing.  Right now I don't give a damn about earnings, cash flow, dividends, moats, good deals, or undervalued buys. All I care about is price. That's right price...... Why? Price doesn't lie. Price determines the bottom line and that's all that counts as far as I'm concerned. Not some pie in the sky theory about what's going to happen in the future. If it's going my way, great. If not, it gets tossed and fast. That's what's keeping me alive in this wreckage. If I had listened to those nuts and continued buying up the cheap merchandise, where the hell would I be. Probably out in the street w/ a can in my hand, while those clowns in mutual fund land keep skimming from their investors. 

The law of averages may have finally caught up with Buffett. Only time will tell of course. His portfolio of stocks like WFC, BNI, GE (p), MCO, COP and just about everything else is getting crushed. His very own BRKA is in the crapper too. Where's Mr. money bags now? I ask, why isn't the old goat buying back his own shares ? Aren't they a great bargain? He loves it so when other managements buy back their shares at discount prices to "intrinsic value" (i.e., intrinsic bullshit). He calls it a prudent allocation of capital. Where's the master allocator now? I guess its the old Buffett double talk again - do as I say and not as I do. BTW - I wouldn't read that 900 lb Snowball book, about Buffett for anything short of saving my life. 

_____________________________________________

My week started out slowly. Pretty much broke even on Tues and Wed. I knew Tues was going to be real bad after Europe and Asia got hammered on Monday (we were off for the Prez holiday). And it did. In my last post I mentioned that 85% of what I'm doing is systematic... it's probably more like 75% systematic and 25% discretionary. I'm a real convert to the systematic thing. I've known about if for years. In fact I was a big Richard Dennis fan going as far back as the 1980s. But for what ever reason, I could never get it right. The Wealth Lab program from Fidelity gave me the system building part .  Once I figured out how to 1) put on the positions, 2) get out of losers and winners, 3) how much to bet per trade, 4) and keep my dang opinions out of it -- I started relying on it more and more. I really like the "keeping my crazy thoughts out of it" What the hell am I some sort of a genius? Hell no. Just go with the flow. My mantra is that the market knows more than I do, not I know more than the market. 

I started building my models a few years back. They aren't all that complicated. Simply put they place you on the side of a budding trend. That's it. Most trends don't work out. Only about 38% of the model signals turn a profit. The rest are losers. A very smal % of that 38% deliver jumbo sized profits. The idea is to catch one. There will be a few if we ever get moving the other way. 

My discretionary trading is based off of price and tape reading. No indicators, per se. Thursday was horrible. I bought in on a few plays and everything just kept going down. One of my worst days of the year. But I cleared out all trades by day's end. I don't want to hold any of this garbage (especially if they are going against me) overnight. Yes that what these stocks are now - garbage. Flicks on a screen. Pieces of paper. Nothing more.  Thursday I took a hit of 2.4%. That's a pretty big one day hit for me. I was feeling real crappy that night. I usually don't take this home with me anymore. When I was less experienced, I would have trouble sleeping and my bad trading would bring me down  overall. I'm generally past that and sleep great now a-days. I come in Friday, and it's more of the same shit. Down Down Down. This sucks. Good thing I got out of those losers Thursday because instead of going down 2.4% it might be 5% or even more. I was really starting to feel down, depressed - almost like crying but with out the tears. Like shit if you know what I mean. Nevertheless I saw an opening Friday on HIG (yeah that sewage that's going down the drain). I hit it at 6.20 but got stopped at 5.97. Life as usual in my fucked up trading world where you lose moneyat work (I'll save that one for another day). Any how, now I'm feeling even worse. But for whatever reason (it probably has to do w/ my years of doing this and just sticking w/ it) I kept watching. I put on some BRKB at 2260, went back to HIG at 5.93, and but on a big slice of HCBK. It had the look of one of those capitulation moves, after a week of nothing but down, when the Dow hit -200 or so. Long story short I caught it just right and had my best week in a long time. I really killed the market on Friday.

Does this make me a great trader or some sort of brain. No!! Not what I'm trying to say. What Im trying to say is that the market doesn't give a shit about you, your portfolio, your ability to pay bills or your future. Our emotions often get in the way of something good happening. Basically stick to your game plan and ride with the punches through thick and thin. If I threw up my hands in disgust, shut the computers off, and walked around the mall or something, I wouldn't have had my best day in several weeks. I mean Friday was big and just as amazingly "it came out of no where when I felt my lowest".  

_____________________________

On the systems front -- I got stopped out of my GOOG, Soybeans and Sugar trades. Soybeans was a loser from the start. Sugar was a break even. I moved the stop up to break even after Sugar was profitable. I try not to allow something that was profitable for several days to reverse into a loser. I thought GOOG could turn out to be a big winner but it reversed and was a small winner. If the market shows strength, GOOG is going to be one of my go to stocks on a discretionary short term basis until I get another model signal. 

The metal positions are all working. SLV is going real nice and stops have been ratcheted up. Every day SLV goes higher so do my stops. No way I'm getting caught here if it reverses, I'll be out pretty fast with a decent profit but not anywhere near a home run. Remember - my goal is to make profits not ride trends. Winners ain't going to be turned into losers. Period. PGM (platinum ETF)  stop has been moved up to small lose territory from the original volatility based location. GOLD futures going good with stops ratcheted up accordingly. 

Lastly I was short LCJ (live cattle). I got a signal a while back and put on the position using some discretion of where and when to get in ( I do that some trend followers don't).  A volatility hard stop was placed and at first it almost got hit for a loss. When the market plunged so did live cattle. I covered for a nice profit I used discretion to cover. Why? Why not let it run it's course you may ask? I noticed that live cattle was correlated to the stock market. The Dow Shot up so did LC, and visa versa. I've got enough exposure to stocks, via my earlier comments, so LCJ was acting as a nice hedge that gave me a nice gain. Side note - a lot of times I will remove some of my profits on these trend trades and let a smaller amount ride. Sometimes, I remove it all. It depends. The pure trend follower waits for a signal (price movement against the trend) to exit. I do that also but not always. I'm using a purer approach w/ SLV and Gold. 

My only new systems initiation was in UUP. 

0 comments:

Blog Archive

About Me

phil
I'm a professional trader with 25 years of experience. I try to avoid all outside influences and other opinions when it comes to trading. All that matters is price. Forget the other BS its basically useless.
View my complete profile
 
DISCLAIMER: INVESTING AND TRADING IS VERY RISKY AND FINANCIAL LOSSES ARE OFTEN THE RESULT. Investment success is far from a sure thing. This site is solely intended for educational purposes. I am not a registered investment advisor and it is not my intention to provide anyone with investment advice. I am not recommending that any reader of this blog buy, sell, short, or engage in any other investment strategy based upon the content set forth herein. I strongly urge all readers to perform their own due diligence before investing and or trading their funds. I will not be responsible for any readers financial losses.