Slope of Hope Blog Posts

Slope initially began as a blog, so this is where most of the website’s content resides. Here we have tens of thousands of posts dating back over a decade. These are listed in reverse chronological order. Click on any category icon below to see posts tagged with that particular subject, or click on a word in the category cloud on the right side of the screen for more specific choices.

The Bottom Line

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At the end of the day (literally…..not the metaphorical use, which came into vogue about a year ago, and which bugs me ever-so-much) all that matters is whether there is more money in your account than when you started in the morning.

By this measure, today, for me, was a good day. But how could that be? At the start of the day…

  • I had a six-figure position in DBA, which was a total pig today
  • I had an even bigger position in DIG, which also stunk up the place
  • I got stopped out of both at a loss
  • My IRA account is 40 positions, all of them long, all of them speculative
  • I entered my ES short today, as opposed to days ago, when prices might have been better

So how is it that I was able to end the day with a meaningful five-figure positive different in my account? One word: flexibility.

My DBA and DIG trades were a mistake. I got stopped out at a loss. Good. Because the loss I woudl have suffered would have been much larger at the end of the trading day.

My IRA picks, although long, were carefully selected, and they managed to hold fast even during today's turmoil. Yes, that account ended with a loss today, but the loss was minuscule, and in fact that account was in the green most of the day. In addition, even though the positions are only a few days old, almost all of them are still nicely in the green.

The ES trade – – which constitutes easily half of my profits for the day – – was entered at a "safe" level (about 866), and I was able to enter it without emotion.

One must stay flexible and nimble in a market like this. Lord knows I can't dance, but you have to be like an agile dancer. It doesn't mean being carpricious. It means being open to possibilities other than those you may have recently adopted. A case in my point is my whole EUR/USD—->Commodities/Oil thing. That didn't work out yet. I was positioned to benefit from a big rise in commodities. Not only did that not happen, but I lost money.

The difference is that I was willing to recognize that, "Gee, even though EUR/USD is up, DBA and DIG and OIH aren't participating, so something is very wrong with this picture." Based on that observation (remember, speculation is derived from speculare, the Latin verb for "to observe"), I changed my strategy.

As for the jobs report in the morning……….that comes down to a matter of luck. It's going to be a market-mover, and those heavily short could get their heads handed to them. Or they could have a huge payday. For myself, I cut my ES position in half in order to reduce my exposure. Besides that, though, we will have to play the cards as they are laid before us.

The Length Will Surprise You

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As pummeled as the market has been this year, you'd think a list of bearish ideas would be quite short. Not so. In fact, I'd rather not do the charts on these, since it would crush your bandwidth. Here's the list of symbols and stop prices; please note some of the stops are very far away, as is often the case when I initially enter a position. I've even thrown in some longs for good measure.

longs
——–
BIDU 105.54
DD 21.31
DRYS 3.59
ERTS 16.55
FCX 16.99

shorts
———-
ABFS 43.29
ABT 58.25
AIT 20.82
AMT 34.66
AMTD 13.92
AMZN 59.90
AN 14.41
ASTE 37.56
ATAC 17.64
ATO 25.24
AYE 35.49
AZO 129.33
BBBY 26.26
BCR 89.90
BKE 27.57
BVN 18.10
CBRL 30.08
CNP 16.21
COH 23.23
CXW 18.73
DECK 87.29
DV 61.58
ESS 100.48
FDX 97
FRT 64.90
GDP 37.80
GPC 40.20
GPRO 49.28
JPM 42.51
LDSH 18.40
LMIA 17.75
MTN 27.21
PSA 84.90
PSS 13.14
RATE 40.89
T 29.92
TRLG 17.61
UPS 69.39
URS 38.01
VMC 99.05
WEC 44.37
XEL 19.22
YUM 30.75

Turning the Ship Toward Bearish Ports

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Here's a snapshot of my three portfolios, each of which has its own personality.

My IRA is 100% long with 41 small positions, almost all of which are in the green after just a few days. Even today, with the market down pretty badly, it's up nearly 2%. I'm not touching a thing. This is going to sit as a "long term" (Tim translation: a couple of months) portfolio.

My personal account is 100% short, and I supplemented that with a Russell 2000 put position earlier today.

My family account was 50/50 early today, but after dumping my big DIG and DBA positions (both at a loss) and shorting a pretty big ES position, it's heavily bearish now.

The fact is, if the strong EUR/USD couldn't nudge things higher, the market is far too sick for me to be getting aggressive on the long side (my IRA notwithstanding). I'm going to buzz through all my individual charts now to take a temperature on a micro-level, since these indexes are pretty bewildering.