Friday, August 22, 2008

Whew!

As expected, we had our retrace this morning. I must say I'm very lucky to have seen it coming. Selling my SKF yesterday afternoon was a damn fine call. I think that bad boy was down something like eight bucks this morning. Multiply that by a chunky position and you get the idea of the sort of pain I sidestepped. I actually felt guilty for having sold it until I woke up and saw the futures up huge in the AM.

I'll admit, I was a touch surprised by the strength this morning but it's exactly what I want to see. This is typical of a retrace to a broken trend line. Same thing with oil yesterday, retraced in a straight line.

So with the market up over 12,600, I started selling. Have a handful of shorts touching the underside of their trend lines which I have added to. Started buying back my inverse ETFs. SKF I will scale back into a hundred shares at a time.

I was down at one point almost 2.5%. Now just down a touch. If I am correct in concluding that the advance has ended, I'm going to look like a genius. If not, I will retreat again.

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Going Higher, For the Moment

This afternoon we broke out of a two day old triangle on the S&P. We may have another 10 points or so to the upside. I decided to stand aside somewhat. Took down my DXD and SKF. Holding onto SRS and will be looking to add. I'll be back in SKF soon enough but there is no reason for me to sit and get pounded.

My target for the S&P is 1285. If we make a run at the broken trend line off the lows we are looking at 1295 or so. For the time being anyway I'm waiting for 1285-ish before I consider getting aggressively short once more.

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

RISK!

We are going lower. Could we bounce tomorrow? Sure, why not. I will add to my shorts either way. We are going lower.

My general mind frame in the market is that anything can happen and you will often be wrong. At the same time, I want to get paid when I'm right. Don't feel as if I capitalize on winning ideas to the degree I should in order to maximize my returns. The whole idea is to maximize profit and minimize loss. I feel confident in my ability to do the latter but not the former. So in a situation like this, where I have a high probability of success, I will press my bets, i.e. take more risk.

Let me put it this way: if we go lower, say re-test the lows, I will get paid. I will materially improve my situation.

So here is the challenge. I have to stay put and wait. Not so easy. It's a big and growing position and I tend to have happy feet. I have to submit to the volatility inherent in a bet of this size. If I entered at the right time my position will not be threatened by a pullback. If not, I'm wrong and I admit it. Limit losses, period.

My time frame has gotten shorter, and churn higher, lately due to a number of factors. Choppiness of recent market action (i.e. failed breakouts, of which there are many) and more time spent in front of the laptop in the summer, to name two. Looking to play the big swing here in the longer time frame.

All the time I am closer to taking my trading to the next level. Now with better tools, I'm tweaking and improving my trade all the time. The whole idea is to stay at the table or in the game until you get your chance to win big. But win big you must.

My biggest fear is the next bullshit bailout. Paulson and that other asshole, Bernanke. Better come up with some coherent plan fellas, Fannie and Freddie are going to zero pretty quick. The list of financials circling the bowl is lengthy. In totality, it's too big to bail but I'm sure the stunts will continue.

Bearish Again; It Feels So Good

We are just beginning the next wave down. I suspect it may get ugly. Yesterday I tacked quickly and became an aggressive buyer of SKF. Today I will add SRS.

Financials will lead the market lower again. Commercial real estate is about to get smashed. Recently I had been seeing a lot of breakouts and potential breakouts, now I see failed breakouts and resistance. I remember feeling the same way last time commercial RE shares topped out. This time though I mistakenly bought some of the failed breakouts.

Nothing, rather not much, has worked for me recently but I feel very confident betting against the market here. Refiner trade didn't work. AMLN didn't work. HSY didn't work. That's what happens when you get too cute. The market charges tuition fees.

I realize that there is a degree of the 'get it all back' mindset, following losses, but I really want to press my bets.

Monday, August 18, 2008

Rut-Roh!

The uptrend lines on the DOW and S&P have been smashed. Reality is about to set in. Seriously this may get ugly pretty quick, or maybe it will get ugly gradually, but it is going to get ugly. Consider yourself warned.