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.

Take the Good with the Bad

By -

Yesterday morning I shared some bad news about a stock that I was short – APL. Today the shoe is on the other foot. One of my shorts – ASIA (on which I had a somewhat larger position than APL, 1400 shares) lost about a quarter of its value due to its bad earnings release.

0729-asia 

I confess that in situations like this I just take the money and run; I don't want to be in a situation like AMZN presented recently in which it opened dramatically lower and spent the rest of the day climbing to a virtually unchanged position.

Hitting Turbulence (by Springheel Jack)

By -

After the fast bleed up of the last few days I'm expecting to see a
return to serious volatility during the next few days. I'm not sure of
the direction, but looking at USD particularly I'm expecting that we may
see some significant moves down, though longer term I'm still leaning
firmly bullish on equities.

On the GBPUSD daily chart we can see that the top of the strong rising
channel has almost been reached. I am expecting to see a return to the
bottom of the channel once it is hit and I'm expecting to see a parallel
move in EURUSD at the same time:

100729_GBPUSD_Daily_Rising_Channel

On the EURUSD daily chart we have nearly reached the next obvious
resistance level, which is the last significant declining resistance
trendline in the 1.315 area:

100729_EURUSD_Daily_Declining_Resistance

We've seen some recovery on ES overnight, but the broadening descending
wedge I drew on the 60 min chart is unbroken and I am expecting it to
hold for at least one more swing down. The target of the broken rising
wedge is the important support level at 1084.5 ES:

100729_ES_60min_Wedges

On the ES daily chart that 1084.5 target is the level of the lower trendline of a much larger rising wedge, if it is hit today.
If that rising wedge should break downwards next week then I would
expect it to develop, as they often do, into a rising channel and the
target, if hit at the end of next week, would be the lower trendline of
that potential rising channel in the 1050 ES area, so we could see a
retest of the mid-July lows:

 

100729 ES Daily Rising Wedge or Channel

I'm out all day today but I'm leaving some orders on. It should be an interesting day. 🙂

The Final Throes of (…no, no, not wave 2….) the Comment System

By -

Good evening, hard-core Slopers and Slopettes!

The official Tim Knight comment system is nearing its birth, but we need your help as midwives. There have been a number of improvements, including:

+ Elimination of some nasty-ass bugs;

+ Ability to crop your profile picture;

+ Most important, the ability to choose from three styles of updating:

Show in Place – which is the smart kind that keeps that hierarchy intact and apparently drives people crazy

Show Separately – which blithely tacks on new comments to the end

Disabled – which doesn't update automatically at all

There will, in the weeks and months to come, be many improvements to the system, so don't ask for heaven and earth right now. Just help me make sure it doesn't erase your hard drive or anything. Go to the test page here, and leave remarks/bug reports in the comments section of that page.

Thanks every so!

The Death Cross: Is It Credible? (By Ryan Mallory)

By -

Much has been made of the recent 50-day moving average that crossed
below the 200-day moving average on the S&P. Among individual
stocks, when the 50/200 cross occurs to the downside, many traders take
it as a sign to get out of the stock immediately, or to start a new
short position. With that being said, and the failed attempt, to-date by
the bears to drive this market lower in the wake of a the 50/200 death
cross, I asked myself, is this even a legitimate phenomenon that we
should be paying attention to? Is there a legitimate play that we can
take advantage of when this death cross comes about? So I decided to run
some tests on my own and here is what I found. 

For my testing I looked at all the stocks in the S&P 500 over the
past five years – let me just say that if there hasn't been a
correlation in the past five years, is it really worth trading? So let's
begin.

Here are the results for when any stock in the S&P 500
experienced the death cross and the subsequent results over the next
month brought as a result (had you shorted the stock when the death
cross occurred). As you can see not all that exciting at all.

So maybe there is the slightest edge there, but not enough, in my
opinion, to warrant any statistical significance. By the time you are
done with commissions and SEC fees and such, there's probably nothing
but a nasty loss staring you in the face.

But perhaps I wasn't giving the death cross enough of an opportunity
to do something with these stocks, and maybe I should expand my time
horizon to 3 months instead – so that is what I did, and here are the
results had I shorted the stocks during the 3 month time period.

Once again not all that impressive. In fact, the results are pretty
much the same, except there are a few open positions still out there,
that haven't been accounted for since they are still in the 3-month
window, which is the reason for the difference in total trades (but none
of those trades would alter the findings).

So Then I took the inverse of the trades, and looked at what it was
when you BOUGHT the stock on the 50/200 death cross and SURPRISE! The
results were the inverse of shorting the stock, but clearly
unprofitable, just like short trade was. But what obviously stuck out to
me is the fact that 54% of the trades were correct. Same goes goes for
the 3-month Buy Signal. 

Hold for 3 Months

And this time you have an even better winning percentage (55%) and a
slightly better gain/loss ratio. Which made me ask myself, "What if I
put a little risk management in the equation and simply added a trailing
stop-loss of 10% – what would my results be?" (assuming I could prevent
some of those big 50% and 60% losers).

And here are the results…

And LOOK AT WHAT YOU HAVE HERE! A profitable trading system (on
paper). The winning percentage falls quite a bit, (from a best case of
55% on a 3 month hold to 44% with a trailing-stop), but for every dollar
lost, you earn $1.90. Not bad at all! – And that is with BUYING any
stock on the S&P 500 that has a 50/200 death cross, but also putting
on a 10% trailing stop-loss on every trade.

Finally, what happens when you SHORT any stock on the S&P 500
when the 50/200 death cross occurs to the downside? Your results are not
much different had you just held it for one month or three months. But
your winning percentage drops dramatically (down to 35%).

So what can we conclude from this? That the death cross that has
become a "Sell-Sign" for many traders is nothing more than statistically
insignificant, if not downright dangerous to trade off of. You will do
yourself a lot of good, if you just ignore the death cross when it
happens in individual stocks, as there is no merit to it at all.

Check Out Ryan's Blog at SharePlanner.com