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candlestick

{Every Investor Should Investigate Trading in Commodities}

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Whenever we invest in stock indexes, or in stocks themselves, we find that we are investing in ephemeral things or in pages of paper that signify an investment at risk.  We can’t very well taste, a stock index.  It exists purely in one’s mind or on a sheet of paper or on a computer screen.  However, when you or I invest in Commodities, we exert control over things that we use every day – familiar household goods such as rice, corn, sugar, beef, and cotton.  There is something much more “personal” about it.

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A major difference between trading stock indexes (on the one hand)and the Commodities (on the other) is that stock and stock index trading is almost entirely driven by human emotion, while Commodities trading is mostly driven by the law of supply and demand.  The level of supply and demand, in turn, depends upon weather patterns, rainfall, carryover of last year’s harvest, amount of acreage planted, animal birthing levels, cost of animal feed, historical slaughter rates, availability of labor and transportation,cost of fuel, variations in worldwide usage, and general economic conditions both at home and around the world.

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Because emotional input has much less applicability to trading in Commodities than it does to trading in stocks, it follows that it is possible to more accurately predict the future course of Commodities prices.  It is easy to learn to interpret the formations of the seesaw-like waves of prices and of a group of Indicators that we read in conjunction with price data so that it is possible to quite precisely forecast the next direction of prices – particularly in the immediate future, such as tomorrow morning

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Whether we think that prices will go up – or go down – it makes no difference.  We can wager either way.  Of course, we would much prefer to choose correctly !

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Each of us has heard horror stories involving a load of soybeans being unceremoniously deposited at the trader’s front yard.  That conceivably could occur, but a trader would really have to work at it.  A little ordinary prudence should serve to keep anyone insulated from that risk. Also, if you stick to purchasing options and avoid getting involved in contracts, at least while you learn the system, it it would be impossible for it to happen.  The great advantage of buying options is that all of the cards are in your hand.  You put your money on the table and all the cards are yours.  At the same time,your maximum risk is the amount which you paid when you bought the option.  You have the right, but not the obligation, to perform.  The party who had sold you the option has all of the risk.

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Here’s the really great aspect of Commodity trading: Even before you begin to consider committing real money, you can reduce your risk of loss to zero by paper-trading for as long as you like while you learn the business.  What a concept! Learn something new and fascinating without risking even a thin dime.

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And, actually, this is a hugely fascinating world.  It is immensely satisfying to make a wager on the direction of a Commodity’s price – even a paper bet! – and observe it go in the direction which you had forecast.

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You should not try this haphazardly.  We know that prices move in waves; that the waves move in patterns; and that those patterns repeat themselves and are roughly predictable in size and direction as time progresses.  We do not merely stick a wet thumb in the passing breeze and take a wild guess; we make our investment selections having the benefit of a basic understanding of Candlestick price patterns and of the various Indicators which reveal clues regarding the next probable direction of prices.  So, it’s not guesswork at all.  We deal in probabilities, not certainties, with an understanding of these helping hands right there with us, guiding us to investment decisions which are sensible.  It’s a consolidation of all of the evidence before funds are placed at risk.

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Over a course of years of trading, I have found that trading Commodities is actually an enjoyable intellectual exercise that, when done conservatively and smartly, can be a real moneymaker, at a level of risk which is entirely controllable by the trader.

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http://www.CommoditiesJunction.com/

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Posted under Uncategorized on December 27, 2008 @ 6:11 am

{The Candlestick Argument for a Permanent Short in the Dow Industrials}

 

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How quickly time flies.  It is now over  a year since the markets posted a trend-changing long-term Top.  It was spotlighted by a classically bearish Japanese Candlestick pattern, and has been attended all the way down during the decline by a series of very similar bearish formations.  The events attending the near-collapse of the total national and world financial system during the last several weeks, leading up to enactment of bailout legislation on a scale never before imagined or seen, drove many shareholders to a state of great concern about the value of, and prospects for, their hard-earned nest eggs.

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It is terribly unfortunate that so many people have worked so hard all their working lives to put away something for their “golden years”, only to be faced with a serious decline in the market value of their holdings – and the prospect of worse to come.  What is even more unfortunate is that they have no appreciation of the protective steps which they could have taken beginning in the Fall and Winter of 2007, and should be taking now and into the foreseeable future.

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Every investor must avoid becoming a “deer in the headlights.”  The Candlestick  formations which have formed during the past several weeks foretell the destructive power of this pervasive bear market, and the urgent requirement to compensate for it in order to defend the value of one’s holdings.

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There is “insurance” available to accomplish that result.  It  is in the form of Inverse Stock Index Funds and Inverse Stock Index Exchange-Traded Funds.  There are many of them available on the open market, promoted by respected companies.  The goal of such funds is to increase in value when the particular Index to which they are tied decreases in value.  Many of them  work on a one-to-one basis – for example, a particular Exchange-Traded Fund might be so structured as to increase by one dollar in value for every dollar by which the S&P 600 decreases in value.  Many of these funds are leveraged, say on a two-for-one basis.

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More and more competent observers are coming to believe that the country is ensnared in a secular bear market which is just now gearing up for a devastating depression  I favor the idea that every investor should create and maintain a ”Constant Short” position, using either an Inverse Stock Mutual Fund or an Inverse Exchange-Traded Fund as the means by which to accomplish that end; and that he or she should be depositing funds into that “insurance plan” consistently, on a regular basis.  It is even possible, by so doing, to totally offset the possibility of loss in an investor’s portfolio.  Certainly, any degree of offset would be a welcome development.  On top of that, it is possible to make an absolute profit, as well.

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Stock and Index prices move in waves, which are clearly visible on price charts.  While a “Perpetual Short” plan can be of extreme value in protecting the worth of an investor’s portfolio, deft use of Japanese Candlestick analysis can also be very useful in identifying countertrends to be harvested for gain in upward countertrend corrections in a secular bear market.  Various methods of technical analysis are a great help in spotlighting the likely end of a countertrend rally and in pointing to a clear opportunity to “pounce on the bounce” for added profit as the market declines.

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 http://www.candlewave.com

 

 

 

 

 


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Posted under Uncategorized on November 12, 2008 @ 9:47 pm

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