- Joined
- 27 October 2008
- Posts
- 291
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- 2
I don't use stops,.
So you use technical indactors to determine fundamental 'value' and then dont use stops due to your fundamental leaning.
Sounds dangerous/risky/illogical to me.
Good luck
So you use technical indactors to determine fundamental 'value' and then dont use stops due to your fundamental leaning.
Sounds dangerous/risky/illogical to me.
Good luck
Hello,
Tells me everything I need to know.
Have a look at maximum adverse excursion. Good trades rarely go far against you.
Thank you.
MSbot.
I never said anything about using technical indicators to determine fundamental value.
May be the case for some systems, however this is the number 1 curve fitting tool(MAE) but if it works for you then thats all that matters. Most professional traders I know don't use stops, thats just my experience if yours differs then thats fine.
PT mentioned the 10% rule which is his risk management strategy... there is no stop price level per se on individual shares because the trade is a pair.
PT, I would really like to know in your trade screening, how do you adjust for any fundamental events that can lead one to believe that, two shares which used to behave a certain way would no longer do so.
For instance, whilst I think RIO / BHP should lock step (i.e. high correlation) due to underlying commidity price movements, but why should their share price relationship go back to historical mean, given the market is clearly putting a different risk profile to RIO due to it's debt.
Changes in fundamental differences usually show up in a declining or increasing correlation chart, it all depends how long your average trade lasts for, the longer the trade the more attention you need to pay attention to fundamentals, the shorter the avg trade the more attention you pay to the technicals but in both cases you want to look at sentiment and enter at extremes. Again its up to the trader to take a educated guess based on experience whether the market has discounted, not discounted or over-discounted a fundamental event.
BHP/RIO does have high correlation but like you say recent events have lead to a re-pricing of the relationship, thus BHP has become stronger relative to RIO or RIO has become weaker relative to BHP and rightly so since the failed takeover, my belief is that this has not only been priced in but over-done since on a valuation basis RIO is some 40% cheaper relative to BHP, I would think a more rationale relative valuation for RIO would be around 25% cheaper than BHP to account for the debt situation. Plus in the last month RIO share price has gone from $82 to $37 and BHP has share price has been relatively unchanged so sentiment and technical oversold indicators are at extreme's for RIO and I'm speculating that the merger arb trades that were previously placed were huge and have been unwound dramatically thus causing a mis-pricing between the two stocks. I may be wrong I may be right, thats trading.
When I refer to pro traders not using stops, I'm talking about guys who trade prop/funds/groups for years that ive come in contact with not your famous market wizard trader, etc
Miner BHP Billiton bucked the trend, gaining 1.4 per cent to $28.20, while Rio Tinto shares fell 10.24 per cent to $33.03.
Anyway, good on you Pairs for putting your trade out there for discussion - I think 90% of users could have their trades picked apart by others with an opposing view.... as you said, there is always another person on the other end...Unfortunetly looks like the wrong end this time...
Anyway, good on you Pairs for putting your trade out there for discussion - I think 90% of users could have their trades picked apart by others with an opposing view.
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