Showing posts with label technical analysis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label technical analysis. Show all posts

Sunday, August 5, 2018

Near miss by falling burrito; Technical analysis update

I went to CMG this past week to get more credit, and just after I put on this trade:

A Chipotle outside Columbus Ohio on Monday 7/30/2018
I had sold the 450 put and bought a 430 put to limit the risk on that side to $20 (minus the credit I received: 98 cents) ... By the time I looked at it Monday morning, the stock was down to $429 (i.e. total loss) ....

But (a) no smoking gun was found and the store was reopened the next day, and CMG stock recovered all the way back, almost:

I think I'm going to stop trading CMG and TSLA and stick with AMZN only for an equity in this 4-5 day timeframe. Both CMG and TSLA have been periodically (and not just during earnings!) prone to these violent moves, CMG from perceived pathogens and TSLA depending on Elon Musk's latest tweet ... and the perceived safety or lack thereof in its cars.

AMZN controls the world ... or at least is so much more a diverse and huge company than either of these other two,  so it should be less vulnerable to this sort of move (IMHO) ... GOOGL is a possibility for this reason also.

And if I want to stick strictly with indexes, I can always use RUT and/or NDX ... both are slightly more volatile (i.e. they pay better!) than SPX. The SPX advantage is its 3 expirations per week ...

Technical Analysis Update

I read a couple of books after my TAC (Technical Analyst Colleague) predicted a Wednesday close almost exactly on the money 10 days ago. But I've concluded that while technical analysis may be valuable for some (including TAC), I don't think it's for me.

I closely read this book:

This guy is a fundamental analyst who reads a lot of newspapers ... I don't do fundamental analysis but I do like newspapers! So this rang a bell with me.

His take on Technical Analysis: Fuhgetaboutit ... gives numerous of examples of public predictions of TA practitioners not working.

Overall: a good book and very enjoyable to read.

Another book I merely skimmed so admit I may have missed something:

The author goes through a lot of space giving the scientific method and statistics and whatnot, all of which I was familiar with coming in and so just flipped through at high speed. 

His conclusion (also read at high speed so may have missed something) was that the only real evidence he could cite was the head-and-shoulders pattern 


... does work for trading futures, but he couldn't cite anything else that was proven to work.

All that being said, I do see traders that swear by TA and are apparently making money using it. So how is this possible?

One possibility is that the best of them have such experience in the markets and looking at the charts that they intuitively see what's coming and where to draw the channel lines, etc. Tim Knight is an example of this kind. In his Tastytrade show Last Call he spends 15 minutes on charts and apparently does well trading this way. But seeing where to put every stop isn't (apparently) one can program ...

Best of luck to all technicians out there, including my colleague TAC, but I think I can win without being a technician myself.

Results chart after this week's trades:
ExpirationUnderlyingLong putShort putShort callLong callCredit ReceivedResult
07/16/2018/SPX2680273028102860$3.60Won 100%
07/18/2018/SPX2700275028202870$3.95Won 100%
07/20/2018/SPX2700275028352885$2.40Won 100%
07/20/2018 (a.m.)/NDX7260731074107460$5.99Won 100%
07/25/2018SPX2705275528352885$2.40lost 16% of amount at risk
07/27/2018SPX2695274528252875$3.50Won 100%
07/30/2018SPX2720277028502900$2.60Won 100%
08/01/2018SPX2730278028702920$2.15Won 100%
08/03/2018CMG430450490510$1.01Won 100%
08/03/2018AMZN1692.51722.51887.51917.5$2.60Won 100%

9 for 10 winners (90%) and the loser only lost 16% ... may present trends continue! More next week ...

Sunday, July 29, 2018

Slow learner I am (the right way to get more credit); Amazing Technical Analysis or just lucky?

I went back to "no rolling" last week as regular readers will remember. But I didn't move the short call strike back out to the .08 delta, and was bitten by this for Wednesday expiration. (I didn't have a Monday-expiring trade on this week as I had done the Thursday NDX a.m. settled one last week instead of the normal Wednesday to Monday one.)

And the market bit me on Wednesday; I was short the 2835 call but we had a spike late Wednesday the ran the close up to 2846. It was Trump:



... claiming a deal:



Fortunately the wider "wings" proved their worth; this was only a 16% loss (on the amount at risk) instead of the 100% it would have been if the wings had been 5 or 10 points wide.

I must be a slow learner sometime ...



I got away with it this time, having sold the 2825 call expiring today (July 27) ... but that was the .16 delta ... if not for the (moderately) sharp downturn today I'd have lost this one too.

I was just trying to get a little more credit ... $3.60 (7.8%)  instead of $2.40  (5.0%) or so ... That's OK but this is the wrong way to accomplish this.

The SPX is in record high territory, making its volatility (and therefore the credit we get with these trades) very low.

But there are other underlyings; AMZN, TSLA, CMG that could be used on the Monday -> Friday trade at least, possibly on the Friday to Wednesday trade also (closing early) ... Let's look at the returns these give! All of these are current (Sunday afternoon 7/29) prices and are the wiiide .10 put and .08 call spreads, with wings sized proportionally to the SPX 50-point wings

AMZN with 30-point wings gives 2.50 or so, about 9.1%.

CMG with 15-point wings gives 0.85 or so, about 6%.

TSLA with 15-point wings give 1.65 or so, around 12.1%.

So I'm going to use one of these for at least one of the three trades per week while SPX volatility is so washed out, and for the SPX trades I'm going to stick with the .10/.08 deltas, cheap though they may be.


I've generally been ignoring technical analysis, thinking it not useful for what I'm doing and generally that there should be no connection between chart patterns and future prices (other than what chartists inject into the market in "it looks like a head and shoulders top so I should sell!"

But an amazing (or just lucky?) bit of technical analysis this week by a colleague ... He predicted: S&P close around 2845 on Wednesday and a pullback after that ...

Closing price on Wednesday was 2846 ... only after the Trump Deal To Make A Deal announcement late in the trading day ... So what happened? How is TAC (Technical Analyst Colleague) doing this?
  • He just got lucky
  • He's actually psychic and just uses the chart info the way psychic readers use palmistry or Tarot cards
  • There's some deep connection between the charts and underlying reality and the quantum level
Anyway, I'm reading up on the subject to figure this out and will have book reviews later in the week.





Here's the result chart so far:


ExpirationUnderlyingLong putShort putShort callLong callCredit ReceivedResult
07/16/2018/SPX2680273028102860$3.60Won 100%
07/18/2018/SPX2700275028202870$3.95Won 100%
07/20/2018/SPX2700275028352885$2.40Won 100%
07/20/2018 (a.m.)/NDX7260731074107460$5.99Won 100%
07/25/2018SPX2705275528352885$2.40lost 16% of amount at risk
07/27/2018SPX2695274528252875$3.50Won 100%
07/30/2018SPX2720277028502900$2.60Still open
08/01/2018SPX2730278028702920$2.15Still open

Totals: 5 wins, 1 loss (83.3%), 2 still open. More next week ...