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HOW ONE iTuliper IS INVESTED?

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  • Jim Nickerson
    replied
    Re: HOW ONE iTuliper IS INVESTED?

    I closed my SRS and SKF positions today getting out with 9.93% gain in SKF considering the 25% I shed a few days back, and 3.36% gain with SRS considering the 25% sold last week. Should and could have done better on both holding if I were thinking.

    On 1/22/08 I opened an ~1% position in GDX when the gold/xau ratio popped up above 5.0.

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  • Jim Nickerson
    replied
    Re: HOW ONE iTuliper IS INVESTED?

    jk, BiscayneSunrise, Tulpen, I appreciate your thoughts. I would not argue with anyone. I know the discrepany between degree of losses in world and here. We've not even hit bear-market definition on closing basis in big indices, close, but not there yet.

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  • Tulpen
    replied
    Re: HOW ONE iTuliper IS INVESTED?

    I think that yesterday's rally is one big bull trap. Also there is still an 7% gap between Europe and Asia on the one side and the USA on the other with regard to the percentage fall of the latest correction. I expect that to correct by the US stock falling at least another 7%.

    Currently 100% short oil (long DCR and short USO).

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  • BiscayneSunrise
    replied
    Re: HOW ONE iTuliper IS INVESTED?

    My bet now is that the equity markets are going to go up for a while--5, 10 or perhaps 20-30 days. No one knows how long or how much. It was quite a recovery today--from 12:45 to 4PM the DJI picked up 625$. I expect some follow through, and I am not sure that even today's opening price will be retested.[/QUOTE]

    Jim,

    Agreed. Time now for a relief rally which, to your point, shouldn't last more than a month, at the very most. A tradable rally only and as it progresses, a good time to sell what dogs you may want to unload. This morning, gold was showing some signs of climbing from its' most recent short term bottom.

    Greg

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  • jk
    replied
    Re: HOW ONE iTuliper IS INVESTED?

    jim, i think part of what's happening is short covering and the unwinding of quant trades. the quants were all long tech and short financials. now all the movement is in the other direction.

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  • Jim Nickerson
    replied
    Re: HOW ONE iTuliper IS INVESTED?

    Wednesday 1/23/08

    When the SPX moved up to 1330 today I added ~1.3% to my SSO and UWM +200% positions based on the SPX and RUT.

    I've been handed my head by not having sold my -200% SKF (Financial) and SRS (Real Estate) positions. Lack of logic on my part. For the moment I have a small loss of 1.3%, but I have given back ~16.5K in paper profits in two days. Not good.

    I read somewhere here today Stephen Roach saying you can't believe in globalization and decoupling at the same time. Regarding SRS and SKF, I have until today held the notion that I would hold on to the reduced positions in SRS and SKF I have had and wait out a correction, but I'm thinking the error is that interest rate cuts are targeted to help financial and real estate probably more than anything else, and today I think, regardless of a longer term out come, the markets reacted to that , and SRS and SKF suffered mightily.

    There likely will be more interest rate cuts at the next FOMC meeting, so it is finally dawning upon me I would better rid myself of SKF and SRS for a while.

    Usually when I decide to sell something, hell, I just put in the sell order at the market and get out. When I sit around to see if I am going to get a better price as the day goes on, I usually don't get a better price.

    My bet now is that the equity markets are going to go up for a while--5, 10 or perhaps 20-30 days. No one knows how long or how much. It was quite a recovery today--from 12:45 to 4PM the DJI picked up 625$. I expect some follow through, and I am not sure that even today's opening price will be retested.

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  • Jim Nickerson
    replied
    Re: HOW ONE iTuliper IS INVESTED?

    Tuesday, 1/22/08, day of 0.75 reduction in Fed Funds Rate.

    I added ~1.25% to my allocations to the long side by buying additional +200% ETF's DDM and QLD. These are bets that there will be some degree of upside reversal from the ongoingly very oversold conditions in the market now. Though it didn't feel like it today, these purchases seemed to be during an uptrend from the lows, using the DJI, earlier in the day. The DJI ended up 336.37$ off its intraday low. In many scenarios that would be a big move up--and in reality it was today.

    I also added to my RRPIX by ~ 1.1%. At its low today, 4.221%, TYX was bumping down against multi-year lows, previously 4.135% on 6/13/03 and 4.151% on 6/3/05. Based on those two dates, perhaps I am about four months too soon, but it seems crazy to me that anyone is going to keep buy 30 years bonds with yields at these levels. As with everything I buy, I'll see what happens.

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  • Jim Nickerson
    replied
    Re: HOW ONE iTuliper IS INVESTED?

    Originally posted by raja View Post
    Jim,

    Thanks for elaborating on this . . . .

    I have the same feeling about "less room to be ripped off", probably because of CEF's long history as a "safe" investment.

    Do you thing being "highly traded" matters in some way?
    One thought I had is that, when the gold bubble pops, it will be easier to pull out in GLD and SLV because of the volume . . . whereas with CEF, and GTU in particular, it might be hard to find buyers . . . .

    That is exactly what I meant, sorry I was not more explicit. If you watch GTU's volume it is very thinly traded and the spread between buying and selling is relatively high. My attitude about CEF and GTU, they both are in my wife's account, is that perhaps I or she will hold them for a reaonably long time--and I have no idea exactly what that means.

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  • raja
    replied
    Re: HOW ONE iTuliper IS INVESTED?

    Originally posted by Jim Nickerson View Post
    I own CEF and GTU outside our IRA's and GLD and SLV within one IRA, thus as you mention there are tax considerations. GLD and SLV are more highly traded than CEF and GTU. I tend to suspect that there is less room to be ripped off in some manner in CEF and GTU than in GLD and SLV, but that is just a feeling.
    Jim,

    Thanks for elaborating on this . . . .

    I have the same feeling about "less room to be ripped off", probably because of CEF's long history as a "safe" investment.

    Do you thing being "highly traded" matters in some way?
    One thought I had is that, when the gold bubble pops, it will be easier to pull out in GLD and SLV because of the volume . . . whereas with CEF, and GTU in particular, it might be hard to find buyers . . . .

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  • Jim Nickerson
    replied
    Re: HOW ONE iTuliper IS INVESTED?

    Originally posted by raja View Post
    Jim,

    I notice that you own CEF, GLD, SLV and GTU.
    Can you tell me your rationale for owning all four? Diversity?

    I recently switched completely out of GLD and SLV and bought CEF and GTU because of the tax advantages of the latter.
    I can't see any reason to hold GLD and SLV . . . but maybe I'm missing something.

    Thanks
    I own CEF and GTU outside our IRA's and GLD and SLV within one IRA, thus as you mention there are tax considerations. GLD and SLV are more highly traded than CEF and GTU. I tend to suspect that there is less room to be ripped off in some manner in CEF and GTU than in GLD and SLV, but that is just a feeling.

    Leave a comment:


  • raja
    replied
    Re: HOW ONE iTuliper IS INVESTED?

    Jim,

    I notice that you own CEF, GLD, SLV and GTU.
    Can you tell me your rationale for owning all four? Diversity?

    I recently switched completely out of GLD and SLV and bought CEF and GTU because of the tax advantages of the latter.
    I can't see any reason to hold GLD and SLV . . . but maybe I'm missing something.

    Thanks

    Leave a comment:


  • Jim Nickerson
    replied
    Re: HOW ONE iTuliper IS INVESTED?

    I turned around Friday morning and the DJI was up over 175 points, whereupon I sold all my -200% positions based on DJI, SPX, RUT, and NDX. That turned out to be right at the intraday high.

    The profits on these last liquidations were 17.03%. The profits for the liquidations on Thursday (25% of six -200% ETF's) plus those above netted out to 20.7%.

    I don't normally spend time figuring out "what if" scenarios, but I did on these sales from Thursday and Friday. Had I maintained all positions held last Wednesday, then at the close Friday the paper worth was right at 18% more than I gained by selling the positions. So I "lost" 18.5%% of possible profits. That is acceptable to me.

    At about noon Friday, I opened ~1.3% positions in the +200% ETFs DDM, SSO, QLD, and UWM. My bet being that there is going to be a bounce upward hopefully before I should get stopped out of these long positions.

    As I wrote
    Originally posted by Jim Nickerson View Post
    Thursday
    a lot of indicators were oversold and that remains the case using daily and weekly closing data. I wrote a note last afternoon detailing more about how oversold some of these things are, and then I "blew" it away into cyberspace. Woe is me. I cannot generate the enthusiasm to do it over.

    Suffice it to say some of the indicators are at levels not seen since the markets lows between October 2002 and March 2003.

    I have noted elsewhere the assessments of others about what may lie ahead, short and longer terms. None of these men do I consider to be crackpots; however, they all are wrong sometimes.

    Originally posted by Jim Nickerson View Post
    Carl Swenlin
    Originally posted by Jim Nickerson View Post
    Sy Harding
    Originally posted by Jim Nickerson View Post
    Mike Burk
    Below is my current allocation. If there is a rally in here somewhere sooner rather than later, I expect I'll sell my -200% SKF (Financials) and SRS (Real Estate) with anticipation of buying some of them back at lower prices.

    I am short-term bullish but remain bearish longer term.

    1/18/2007 ALLOCATION %GAIN/LOSSPERCENTAGE
    SRS 3.54%6,58320.0%
    SKF3.83%9,46028.4%7.37% -200% INVERSE ETF'S
    DDM1.26%1671.2%
    QLD1.37%-156-1.0%
    SSO1.35%1340.9%
    UWM1.35%1501.0%5.33% +200 ETF'S
    CEF0.72%2,04133.8%
    GLD2.35%4,90523.0%
    SLV1.43%1,80112.7%
    GTU1.21%3,86240.2%5.71% PM'S
    RJZ0.87%500.5%
    DBA0.98%1,08010.9%
    RJA0.92%1801.8%2.77% COMMODITIY
    FXY10.06%10,50210.3%
    RRPIX2.01%-2,571-10.3%
    HSGFX18.47%3,9882.0%30.54% OTHER
    TOTAL51.72%42,1767.87%
    CASH48.28%
    100.00%











    Last edited by Jim Nickerson; January 20, 2008, 04:06 PM.

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  • GRG55
    replied
    Re: HOW ONE iTuliper IS INVESTED?

    Originally posted by Jim Nickerson View Post
    Don't give into envy, it is a really bad thing, makes people do things they would not otherwise do, sort of like easy credit. Thank you.
    I paid a high "tuition fee" learning that I am not much of a trader. Although I largely gave it up years ago, and try hard not to forget those expensive lessons, occasionally I lapse like a reformed gambler walking by a slot machine...

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  • Jim Nickerson
    replied
    Re: HOW ONE iTuliper IS INVESTED?

    Originally posted by GRG55 View Post
    Nice profit Jim. You've got a nice trading touch and a damn fine feel for the charts. Not being much of a trader I'm envious!
    Don't give into envy, it is a really bad thing, makes people do things they would not otherwise do, sort of like easy credit. Thank you.

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  • GRG55
    replied
    Re: HOW ONE iTuliper IS INVESTED?

    Originally posted by Jim Nickerson View Post
    Four days since the note above, and no rally.

    I mentioned above John Hussman's observation/warning that investors should not be surprised to see a big one day upward move ("clearing rally") in the markets. I jiggered that "one day" into the big move off the intraday low of 1/9 to the intraday high of 1/10 and when the market moved down ~225 point from the 1/10 intraday high, I added to my six -200% funds: SRS, SKF, DXD, SDS, QID, and TWM.

    Then I read Hussman's note from the this past Monday in the section Market Climate: http://hussmanfunds.com/wmc/wmc080114.htm



    My reaction to reading that was, "Oops!" Shoot, I thought we had one--a clearing rally, but not apparently by whatever Hussman makes his judgements. Nevertheless, things are even more conducive now to the possibility of such a scenario as Hussman has described. No one should take it that I am betting my life's savings on this observation of Hussman's. I'm not. I think smart people who look at a lot of things about markets, both technically and fundamentally, see things that those of my ilk do not see. I still am willing to be prepared for such a move as Hussman has expressed as a possibility.

    I considered selling all my long inverse fund positions today, then 50% of them, and ended up selling right at a fourth of each of the six positions. Told wife if I sold all them, surely the market would crash in the next several days. So I think I have protected all investors from a crash in the next several days. Maintaining 75% of the inverse funds, probably insures a rally--joke, nothing is certain.

    The II bull bear numbers from Wed. are still neutral, and certainly not indicative of any serious bearishness amongst investment advisors.

    The 19day EMA of the $XVG, Value Line Geometric Index is the lowest it has been since 10/10/2002. It was lower a few days at those Oct. 2002 lows, and unfortunately for me, I don't have these data all the way back to 2000 tops. All I can say about the present reading of -7.62% below the index is that it is rather oversold and suggests a bounce in here--which of course may not happen.

    The McClellan oscillators on NYSE and Nasdaq are both < -100 and in the territory where some upward market movement could be at hand, but they have at times been much more negative than the actual reading now of -122 for NYSE and -119 for Nasdaq. Everything I look at says the markets are oversold here, but the fact is they could still become moreso, nothing is certain.

    There have also been put/call ratios for Equity Options of 1.05 on 1/15 and 0.99 today 1/17. Those are aligned for there to be some upward market action.

    12/11, 12/27, and 1/15 have all been days in which the volume and points down for the NYSE were 90% or more negative. Such reading have not been recently (last year or so) infrequently reversed by the occurence of up-moves with 90% of the volume and points being positive. Generally periods of negative market action after such -90% readings go on for some period of time. If we were to get an up-move with positive 90% readings in volume and points on the NYSE, I would vacate my inverse fund positions. In fact if there seems to be some strong up-move off today's intraday DJI low of 12089.38 say to the tune of +200 points early in the market day, I'll probably close them out and wait for another re-entry point to the downside.

    I booked a profit of 28.7% on the partial positions I closed today using first in-first out accounting, but I could turn around and lose that much in several hours of strong up-action.
    Nice profit Jim. You've got a nice trading touch and a damn fine feel for the charts. Not being much of a trader I'm envious!

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