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.

Thinking Leaner

By -

If you've seen the movie Schindler's List, there's a scene where Schindler is interviewing secretaries for his new business. He's quite the ladies' man, and most of the women he interviews he finds very attractive. So, in a bit of a comic relief (to an otherwise very dark, heart-rending movie), he winds up hiring dozens of them. He explains: "They're all so……….qualified."

I feel a bit like that when it comes to my stock picks. "I never met a chart I didn't like." Well, OK, that's not true. But I think you're getting the picture. When I see a stock that's attractive, I want to take a position.

Well, there's a problem with that. The problem is that it's one whole hell of a lot of work to trade a large number of positions responsibly. I have 176 positions right now, and there are times that number has approached 200. I don't think most mutual funds have that many positions!

Now, I'm sure virtually all of you will be glad that I'm finally coming to my senses. Hardly anyone runs around saying a person should own as large a quantity of stocks as possible. But I think a reason I've become seduced by taking lots of positions is that, during the formative 2007 trading year, I had to be very much a prospector. If I happened to dig up a chart that was good, I took a position. In the final throes of the bull market, great shorts were few and far between, so I considered any "finds" to be precious.

Well, they're not so precious anymore. There's a bajillion great charts out there. And I really shouldn't feel the need to have a position in all of them.

This finally sunk in recently, because I was given charge of another trading account with a respectable amount of cash to trade. I had a list of over 50 enticing long candidates, and I dreaded the thought of, once again, having to babysit stops, entering positions into MarketMatrix, drag symbols around in ProphetCharts, and so forth. Hell, I was up until 3:30 this morning updating my stops. It gets old!

So I decided instead to just focus on a handful of ultra ETFs. I usually had just one or two positions on, and I "peaked" at seven. I have traded this account for a mere two days, but it's already up 18%. And that's with just plain old ETFs! No futures! No options! And just a handful of positions. Simple. Easy. Profitable.

So I think that, in the coming days/weeks, I'm going to start exiting these positions and change my trading style to be more focused on a single digit quantity of positions in any given account. I will make an exception for my IRA, which has had good success with a few dozen little bitty positions that I just let sit and grow. But it also requires virtually no babysitting. For my actives, I think it's time to take Thoreau's advice: "Simplify, simplify."

As for the market – – my "pure long" accounts (the IRA and the aforementioned new account) did sensationally well. My other two accounts were up, but the gains were muted due to many shorts and puts.

I pointed out earlier today that I thought the EUR/USD had a chance of moving higher, taking energy and commodities with it. I did that post at just about exactly the point where that did, in fact, happen. I'd say this could get back up to almost 1.40 before rolling over again.

I am long energy in a very big way. My core positions are in USO, OIH, DXO, DIG, and I've also got DBA. I'm pretty confident OIH is going to fight its way back to about $88, and if it busts above it with any robustness, we could see some real fireworks. I am sort of counting on a failure, though.

I'd say the $INDU has a very good shot at around 8,500 in short order, and possible a cross above 9,000. Only the most sensational efforts by the bulls could put it past that, and even then, I can't see us getting past 9,750 or so, tops.

My view of the Russell is a claim to no higher than about 510, if that. I'm bullish, yes, but very short term!

And, the most important of all – the S&P 500. I think another 30 points of padding are within easy reach. We'll have to see how things look if/when we get there, but my guess at this point is that the bulls are in for their ninety-fifth instance of disappointment.

And a shout out to mole over at Evil Speculator – you are sounding a little down, my friend! I am completely addicted to your wave count charts, and I love your writing style. I hope you keep your blog going strong. I think it's terrific, and I wish you well with it.

Big Push

By -

Hi Folks – – – I'm still not ready with a "real" post. It was quite a day, and I felt very "on" (which doesn't happen very consistently). The push higher today was just sensational, and thank goodness I got out of my /ES shorts (and into energy) at the right time! My biggest winner was FAS. Anyway, here's a chart of the ES to break up the monotony.

Turning Heat Down and Moving to Energy

By -

I am going to set aside the gun-slinging with the /ES for a while, since the market is in too curious a position to have the risk/reward make sense. I'd love to short from much higher levels, but I'm not comfortable going long in this kind of environment.

Instead, I am turning my attention toward energy and commodity issues. As I've said before, if the market ever gets its head screwed on right and moves higher, these sectors will lead the way. The reason I'm comfortable doing this now is that the stop-loss levels are close enough to make these relatively low-risk trades. So my principal positions are in some of the issues I mentioned in the last post (OIH, USO, DBA, DIG……..)

The /ES has been very good to me so far this year, but I'm going to set it aside until the risk/reward makes more sense.