Monthly Archives: September 2013

Breaking Up Is Hard To Do

My crystal ball seems to be having some technical difficulties. Who knew predicting the future would be so hard (insert annoyed wink here).

To illustrate why I feel that the futures market is a tough nut to crack, I have created this table to summarize my week long trading pain. As you can see, everything I have shorted has gone up and everything I have bought has gone down. My portfolio performance this week has been dismal and seems to be getting only worse. At this time I am down 14% percent, oh wait, I just checked again, make that 15%. Thank god I’ll have an eduction to fall back because this trading gig isn’t really working out!

Lessons Learned the Hard Way
The main takeaway from this week’s trading is that I seem to have an easy time getting into relationships, and much harder time getting out of them, but as it turns out in the world of futures trading: it’s all about the quickie.

Most of my positions actually started out okay, but I was too passive and never closed out any positions. You need to get out while the going is good (not that it was ever that good). I am in the long painful breakup stage. We’re dividing our stuff up and deciding who gets to keep the cat.


Post Break-up Analysis
Corn: Can We Still Be Friends?
Monday at 11am the USDA releases its much anticipated Quarterly Stock Report which will quantify old crop ending stocks, new crop beginning stocks and overall market demand. I am thinking that corn will remain quite low, and this position would be supported by a bearish report. Considering it is the harvest season and production is expected to be one of the largest on record, I am hoping that the price won’t rally much this week unless there are some big surprises in the USDA report. There is talk of a double bottom in corn, meaning the report could send prices up for a short time and before they adjust down to the their current lows. This makes me nervous given my poor predictive capabilities and my inclination to go short next week.

Wheat: A Little Something On The Side
I also have a bit of wheat in my portfolio. I shorted 5 contracts for Mar 14, but unfortunately the price has gone up not down to a tune of .256. The market was at a low and it looks like I got in when the bottom trend was reversing. I am going to get out and take the opposite position this week as there is talk of lowered harvest in Argentina due to freezing and rumors that the USDA report will lower its production numbers. I’m thinking of going for a full reversal on my position here as well.

Soybean Oil: The One Night Stand
I did dabble in soybean oil. It lasted 5 days. I am happy to say that is it over, and not so happy to say that it cost me dearly. Again, I bet the wrong way. Soybean Oil was trending down to record lows, mostly as a result of record crops in Brazil and the US (the main producers), I thought maybe it would reverse, but alas, it did not. I bowed out gracefully and will be spending my remaining free time with Wheat and Corn. Multiple relationships are too hard to maintain.

Play on Players
Next week I will trade early and trade often and try to take it slow, buying only a few contracts at at time (no more betting the house). Last week  I was feeling flush with fake money which made me buy more units than my risk profile usually would and has been responsible for my large losses. I am now officially a commitment phobe with my eyes set on becoming a player. In the words of Blackstreet: Play on players.

 

 

 

 

 

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Same Game, Different Venue: Casinos and Futures Markets

Las Vegas is my idea of living hell. Apart from the absurdity of vacationing indoors in air-conditioned mega malls and hotels to escape the desert heat, a vacation designed around the lure of the ‘big win’ is not luring to me in the least. I am admittedly not a gambler. I don’t derive any utility from playing the odds and making bets to better my financial situation, and would much rather exchange my money for an ownership stake in equity stocks or real estate.

This isn’t to say that I am more risk averse than the average person, I actually think I might be less risk averse, but I do try my hardest to make smart decisions with my investments and casinos certainly do not fit the bill.

So what do casinos have to do with Futures trading?

Same game, different venue. Punters making bets and trying to beat the house (or the exchange). Casino gamblers have countless tricks to gaining a perceived edge and admittedly, some tricks like card counting, can get you a bit of an edge, but no guarantee. Same with the futures market. Those who can follow weather and supply trends and stay on top of other indicators like interest rates and oil prices, and the millions of other variables that come into play, may have a perceived edge, but do they have a real edge? Or, if they do have a real edge, does the market change too quickly for them to be able to act on that edge? Maybe they think they are acting on the edge, but are really just getting lucky?

What I have determined from my week of trading.

  1. The markets are volatile. To get an edge is a full time job, and as mentioned above, given the sheer quantity of factors influencing the market, I am not even sure it is possible to get an edge. More likely, I think you just get lucky.
  2. The markets are fickle. Which goes hand in hand with volatility, but I like to think that volatility follows more of a predictable pattern (weather, supply, etc.) whereas fickleness is impossible to predict… maybe everyone had a dream about popcorn last night and everyone decide to go long on corn futures, who saw that coming!
  3. It’s all gambling. Unlike with equity stocks where you can examine a balance sheet, read earnings reports, scrutinize the details (as Mr. Soros would do), you can’t do that with futures. You are looking at the current market situation and making a guess about which way prices will go. The 50/50 odds don’t hurt though.
  4. No Cash. No Problem. The low barrier to entry (only having to put up a margin) makes it more attractive to gamblers. If you had lots of cold hard cash, you would likely buy a more secure stock… but as we all know, good stocks (especially ones that pay dividends) can be expensive and you have to pay up front. The futures platform lets you profiteer from products you don’t produce, own or really want to acquire, at a fraction of their real price. This is an alluring proposition to those who can stomach the risk, like taking out a loan to go to the casino.

Give me the Social Goods

There does not appear to be consensus regarding the effect of the futures markets on commodity prices. Some say they do in fact make prices higher, others say they don’t have a lasting effect as they have no bearing on the availability of land, cost of production, weather, and all other things that do influence the real price of commodities. However price volatility has increased markedly in commodity markets in the last 10 years, while trading has hit 10+ times the volume of actual commodities that are being produced. I am not convinced that there is no correlation between increased speculation and increased price volatility given the sheer volume of trades.

I can see the value of hedging and the importance of having contract if you are in the market as a producer or purchaser, but I am not so sure about the value of the speculator. Ultimately they don’t need to bring any value to the table so long as they don’t have any distortionary influence on the market, but I suspect that their participation is not as benign as they claim.

Unfortunately, because trading on the futures market has proven mildly addictive (probably another sign that it closely related to gambling!), I have been too caught up in my portfolio to answer to these more important social and moral questions…. but I’ll work on it!

This week I went long on corn, short on wheat and long on soybean oil. I’ll let the fickle numbers tell their own story, so far I am down, even with my accurate prediction that the FED would hold rates and not increase them as many anticipated. But things have a habit of turning around quite quickly so I am optimistic. Optimistic like any good gambler should be.

Happy Trading.

Harmony

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