Tuesday, 31 December 2013

RULES FOR 2014

Technical analysis is a windsock, not a crystal ball. It is a skill that improves with experience and study. Always be a student, there is always someone smarter than you!
• “Thou Shall Not Trade Against the Trend.”
• Let volatility work in your favor, not against you.
• Watch what our “Politicos” do, not say.
• Markets tend to regress to the mean over time.
• Emotions can be the enemy of the trader and investor, as fear and greed play an important part of one’s decision making process.
• Portfolios heavy with underperforming stocks rarely outperform the stock market!
• Even the best looking chart can fall apart for no apparent reason. Thus, never fall in love with a position but instead remain vigilant in managing risk and expectations. Use volume as a confirming guidepost.
• When trading, if a stock doesn’t perform as expected within a short time period, either close it out or tighten your stop-loss point.
• As long as a stock is acting right and the market is “in-gear,” don’t be in a hurry to take a profit on the whole position, scale out instead.
• Never let a profitable trade turn into a loss and never let an initial trading position turn into a long-term one because it is at a loss.
• It’s not the stocks that you sell that go higher that matters, it’s the stocks you don’t sell which go lower, that do.
• Don’t think you can consistently buy at the bottom nor sell at the top. This can rarely be consistently done.
• Don’t buy a stock simply because it has had a big decline from its high and is now a “better value;” wait for the market to recognize “value” first.
• Don’t average trading losses, meaning don’t put “good money” after “bad.”
• Your odds of success improve when you buy stocks when the technical pattern confirms the fundamental opinion.
• We can’t control the stock market. The very best we can do is to try to understand what the stock market is trying to tell us. As I like to say, “Overweight Statistical Probability. Underweight Emotion!”
• Understanding mass psychology is just as important as understanding fundamentals and economics.
• When investing, remain objective. Don’t have a preconceived idea or prejudice. Said another way, “the great names in our business … the Paul Tudor Joneses; the Steve Cohens; the Andy Halls; the George Soros’…all have this same trait: the ability to shift on a dime when the shifting time comes.”
• Any dead fish can go with the flow. Yet it takes a strong fish to swim against the flow. In other words, what seems “hard” at the time is usually, over time, right.
• Don’t make investment or trading decisions based on tips. Tips are something you leave for good service.
• Where there is smoke, there is fire – bad news is usually not a one-time event, more usually follows.
• To the best of your ability, try to keep your priorities in-line. Don’t let the “greed factor” that Wall Street can generate outweigh other, and just as important, areas of your life. Balance the physical, mental, spiritual, relational, and financial needs of life.

Saturday, 28 December 2013

RISK MANAGEMENT

1.)Overcome fearRisk Management
2.) Remain flexible – When you don’t know what’s going to happen, the best strategy is to be ready for anything.
3.) Take reasoned risks – reasonable exposure and positive edges only.
A Reasoned risk is more like an educated guess rather than a roll of the dice.  A Reasoned risk limits exposure so that one or a few trades will not affect the trader’s account too adversely should the trades turn out badly.  Great traders aren’t gamblers.
4.) Prepare to be wrong
5.) Actively seek reality
6.) Respond quickly to change – When a trader determined a place to get out of the trade, a competent trader will respond quickly.

Wednesday, 25 December 2013

COAL MINISTRY ISSUES NOTICES TO TATA STEEL, HINDALCO,

The Coal Ministry has issued show-cause to eight firms including Hindalco Industries and Mahanadi Coalfields, and sought explanation from five firms such as JSW Steel, Tata Steel and Power Finance Corp, for delays in commencing production from mines allocated to them.
“You are hereby called upon to show cause, on each milestone separately to this ministry…as to why delay in the development of the coal block(s) should not be held as violation of terms and conditions of the allocation…and why the block should not be deallocated,” the coal ministry said in show-cause notice letter to firms.
The ministry further said that if the companies fail to give reasons for the delays, “it would be presumed that the company has no explanation to offer and action as appropriate would be taken against your company(ies) for deallocation”.
The eight companies issued show-cause notices include Mahanadi Coalfields Ltd, Hindalco Industries, Neyveli Lignite Corp for Talbira II and III coal blocks. In the case of the Talabira coal block in Odisha, CBI had in October lodged a case against industrialist Kumar Mangalam Birla and former Coal Secretary P C Parekh for alleged irregularities in allocation of mine eight years back.
The notice has also been issued to Ispat Godavari Ltd, Ind-Agro Synergy Ltd, Nakoda Ispat, Vandana Global, Shree Bajrang Power & Ispat Ltd for delaying the production from Nakia I & II coal blocks.
In letters to five firms — JSW Steel Ltd, Bhushan Power and Steel Ltd, Jaibalaji Industries, Tata Steel and Power Finance Corp — the coal ministry said “You are hereby called upon to explain…the reasons for slow progress as well as the efforts made by you in development of coal block (s) failing which it would be presumed that your company(ies) has no explanation to offer and action as appropriate would be taken.”
The ministry sought explanation from JSW Steel Ltd, Bhushan Power and Steel Ltd, Jaibalaji Industries for slow progress in respect of Rohne coal block, Tata Steel for Kotre-Basantpur and Pachmo coal blocks and Power Finance Corp for Meenakshi, Meenakshi and Dipside Meenakshi coal blocks.

Tuesday, 24 December 2013

TO TRADE OR NOT TRADE

In trading activity alone does not make money, the right activity at the right time is what makes money. Many times the right thing, is to do nothing.
In your actual trading you have to do four things very well to make money.
You have to know when to get in.
Only enter trades that have the highest probability of success and the best risk/reward ratio. Buy the best monster stocks during up trends. Short the fallen leaders when the game changes and they are under the 50 day. Buy the monster stocks at the gift of the 200 day moving average. Short down trending junk stocks. Go where the trends are.
You have to know when to get out.
When your trade reverses through a key support get out. When the market trend changes get out of your long positions. When your stop loss is hit, get out. When the stock reverses and hits your trailing stop, get out.
You have to know when to stay in.
If you enter a stock with the potential to trend let it run as far as it will go. Do not set a target, just trail your winner with a stop. Let the stock tell you when it is done running. Do not cut your winners short. 
And most importantly you have to know when to stay out.
If you do not know what to do, do nothing. If the charts confuse you, stay out. If the volatility is escalating and you are losing in every trade, stay out. If you are a trend trader and you see no potential trends, stay out. If you want to go long but all the stocks you want are going down, stay out.

8 TIPS FOR TRADERS

1. CONFIDENCE: absolutely essential in an environment that feeds on emotional    instability.
2. TRUST: if you cannot trust yourself who can you trust? Trust your rules, trust your edge, trust that you will do the right thing-no matter what!
3. FOCUS: you will never learn all there is to learn about the market.  Push your ego aside and focus on one market and one edge.
4.  ACCEPTANCE:  you have to accept what the market is willing to give or you will give the market what it wants to take.
5.  RESPONSIBILITY: you and you alone are responsible for the money you lose and the money you make.  Take the credit for both.  Either way you deserve it.
6.  PATIENCE:  The market is not the place to learn patience, it is the place to practice it.
7.  RULES:  the market has no rules and no one else will do it for you. Develop rules for entering AND exiting trades before trades are made.
8.  RESPECT:  you have to respect the market for what it is not for what you want it to be.  The market has a logic all its own.  You may not like it but you have to accept it.

Monday, 23 December 2013

FITCH ON TATA MOTORS

Fitch Ratings has affirmed India-based Tata Motor Limited’s (TML) Long-Term Foreign-Currency Issuer Default Rating (IDR) at ‘BB’. The Outlook is Stable.
KEY RATING DRIVERS
Robust Financial Profile: TML’s consolidated financial profile remains robust. The company’s consolidated net leverage remained low at 1.09x in FY13 (FY12: 1.24x) while EBITDA interest cover was 6.91x (FY12: 7.95). The strong credit metrics largely reflect strong sales and profitability at TML’s UK-based subsidiary Jaguar Land Rover Automotive PLC (JLR; BB-/ Stable).
Fitch expects TML’s financial profile to remain robust despite its large capex plans. The company invested INR187.6bn during FY13, which is likely to increase further during the next three years as it spends on product development and new technology, and on expanding production capacity at JLR. The agency expects capex to be largely funded from operational cash flows. TML’s strong financial flexibility, and the large cash balances (2QFY14: GBP2.7bn) and undrawn committed facilities (2QFY14: GBP1.3bn) at JLR also contribute to the robust financial profile.
Strong Performance of JLR: JLR’s strong sales and profitability momentum in FY11-13 have been underpinned not only by buoyant underlying demand for premium vehicles, but also by a strengthened product portfolio and a number of successful model launches (including the Range Rover Evoque, Range Rover Sport, and Freelander 2). JLR’s January-November 2013 sales volume increased across all regions, including in Europe, despite an overall decline in sales given the weak market conditions. Fitch expects the performance of JLR to remain strong over the medium term with stable profitability and rising sales volume supported by its strong brand positioning, favourable operating environment and new product launches.
Weak Standalone Performance: The standalone performance of TML continues to remain weak. The company’s sales volume continues to be impacted by weak auto demand in India on account of high fuel prices, high borrowing costs and weak consumer sentiment given the economic uncertainty. The domestic sales volume of TML’s commercial vehicles fell by 23.7% and that of its passenger vehicles dropped by 36% during the April-November 2013 period.
TML also faces rising competition across all its segments. While the company has maintained its strong market position in the commercial vehicle segment with over 50% market share, its share of the passenger vehicle market declined. Fitch expects demand to continue to remain weak in the near term, but an improvement in economic growth and TML’s plans for new product launches could support a turnaround in the company’s performance.
Linkages with Tata Group: The FC IDR of TML continues to benefit from a one-notch uplift on account of potential support from the Tata Group. Fitch assesses the linkages as moderate in line with its Parent and Subsidiary Rating Linkage methodology. Any weakening of linkages between the group and TML, and/or the group’s inability to provide support would likely affect the ratings negatively.
RATING SENSITIVITIES
Negative: Future developments that may collectively or individually lead to negative rating actions include:
- a weakening of linkages between the Tata Group and TML
- consolidated financial leverage (excluding TML’s auto financing subsidiary Tata Motors Finance Limited) exceeding 2.0x on a sustained basis due to reduced sales or profitability (at TML, JLR or both), or due to higher than expected debt levels
Positive: Future developments that may collectively or individually result in positive rating actions include:

- strong growth in sales volume for TML (standalone) and JLR through increased geographic and product diversification, while maintaining strong profitability

Saturday, 21 December 2013

TRADING QUOTES

“I think successful trading, or poker playing for that matter, involves speculating rather than gambling. Successful speculation implies taking risks when the odds are in your favor. Just like in poker, where you have to know which hands to bet on, in trading you have to know when the odds are in your favor.” – Sperandeo
It is interesting that Sperandeo makes a point to define the difference between speculating and gambling. He discusses how he never viewed playing poker to be gambling in the same respect that slot machines are gambling. In poker, he had the knowledge  of which hands had the highest probability of winning and the option to only play the highest probability hands. This draws a direct correlation to trading. We know from our study of historical winners what qualities make up stocks that go on big runs and we have the option to only play those key stocks
Looking at trading in this respect breaks it down into two important goals. We have to know which kinds of stocks have the best odds of going on huge runs. We also have to have the timing skills and the guts to play those stocks when we encounter them and the patience to sit on the sidelines when when there aren’t good options.

“Trading the market without knowing what stage it is in is like selling life insurance to twenty-year-olds and eighty-year-olds at the same premium.” – Sperandeo 

Again here, we see Sperandeo drawing a real world comparison to stock trading. He discusses that you just as the odds would be better if you sell life insurance to a twenty-year-old compared to an eighty-year-old, the same can be said when trading a young trend compared to trading an extended trend. He doesn’t necessarily say you should trade a new trend or shouldn’t trade an extended trend, but that you should strongly factor that in to your timing decisions. 
“To be a successful trader, you have to be able to admit mistakes. People who are very bright don’t make very many mistakes. In a sense, they generally are correct. In trading, however, the person who can easily admit to being wrong is the one who walks away a winner.” – Sperandeo
It is fairly obvious at this point that the most common advice from all of the Market Wizards interviews is that you absolutely must cut your losses quickly. The reason that many traders are unable to do this is that they are not good at admitting that they are wrong. Sperandeo suggests that many extremely intelligent traders suffer from this inability to admit that they are wrong because for most of their lives they have always been right. It goes against human nature to admit a mistake.
This is an area where I think that a lack of self-esteem can be a tremendous asset to a trader. Being unsure of yourself may be difficult to deal with in real life, but in trading, it can make you a winner just by keeping you from being a loser.
“Ty Cobb once was asked why he never had slumps. He said that whenever he felt himself getting into a slump, he wouldn’t try to get a hit, but he would simply try to make contact with the ball. To relate that concept to trading, when you’re in a slump, try to be patient and wait for a trade that you feel very confident about and keep the bet size small. Your goal should not be to make lots of money but rather to get your confidence back by making correct decisions.” – Sperandeo
I love baseball references, and this one has a strong relation to trading. More than a few of the Market Wizards have advocated cutting back the size of your trades while suffering through a losing period to take the pressure off. This sums up the reasoning behind that advice really well. 
“Being involved in this business requires tremendous dedication and desire. However, you shouldn’t make trading your whole life. You have to take time off. You need to spend time with loved ones. You need to balance your life.” – Sperandeo
I felt like I had to include this in the top five quotes simply because it struck me as the exact opposite of how I perceive most of the Market Wizards. It caught me off guard to see someone point out that you shouldn’t let trading consume your entire life. There have actually been interviews that led me to believe that letting trading consume my life would be the only way I would ever be successful. It was refreshing to hear someone as successful as Sperandeo point out the need for a balanced life. 

LEVELS FOR NIFTY & BSE

SENSEX (21,079.7)

In the midst of key events and volatility, the Sensex zoomed 1.7 per cent or 364 points for the week. However, it is now testing a key resistance at the 21,000-level. A robust start to next week can emphatically surpass this resistance and take the index higher to 21,206 and then to 21,500 in the coming week. Failure to move higher can find base at the important supports of 20,700; 20,300 and 20,137.

The index can confine itself to trading in the band between 20,000 and 21,500 for a few more weeks. This sideways movement will be a positive sign from a long-term perspective.

For the index, the medium-term trend is up. This trend will remain in place as long as the index trades above 19,850 levels. A fall below this level will threaten the medium-term trend. As mentioned in this column last week, the next key supports are placed at 19,405 and 18,955.

NIFTY (6,274.2)

The Nifty rallied 105 points or 1.7 per cent in the previous week. It managed to rebound from its 50-day moving average and close well above this average line. However, it is now facing key resistance at 6,300-level. A strong breakthrough of this resistance can take it northwards to 6,350 and on to 6,415 in the ensuing weeks. But, any inability to surpass this resistance level can see it slip to find supports at 6,166, 6,050 and 5,973. The next important support below these levels is at 5,905.


The index can prolong its sideways movement for some more weeks in the zone between 5,950 and 6,400. This move will be positive for long-term prospects. The medium-term trend is also up for the Nifty, and as long as it trades above 5,920 this trend remains in place. A tumble below this level can activate supports at 5,770 and 5,618 levels.

PANIC IN NIKKEI ON MONDAY

The Japanese government forecast on Saturday that real gross domestic product will grow by 1.4 % instead of 2.6 % growth for the current year as a planned sales tax increase is seen dampening consumption.
The forecast is part of the annual budget review. The government projects about Y50tn ($480bn) in tax revenue for the coming fiscal year based on the growth forecast.
While higher sales tax is expected to curb consumption, the government expects positive economic growth thanks to the effects of a fiscal and monetary stimulus.
The national sales tax is set to rise to 8 per cent in April and could rise to 10 per cent in 2015 if the government of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe goes ahead with its fiscal consolidation plan.
The government also forecast that consumer prices will rise by about 1.2 per cent in the 2014 fiscal year, without considering an impact from the sales tax hike. Consumer prices are expected to show a rise of 0.7 per cent in the current fiscal year. The Bank of Japan launched a massive monetary stimulus programme aimed at pushing the inflation rate up to 2.0 per cent in two years, in a bid to wrench the country out of a long phase of deflation.

BRITAIN - FASTEST GROWING G-7 ECONOMY

Advanced economies will get their “mojo” back in 2014 as the UK retains its crown as the fastest-growing major European economy next year, according to analysts.
PwC, one of the world’s “Big Four” audit firms, said Britain’s brighter growth prospects could also put it in line to be the fastest-growing economy in the G7.
Richard Boxshall, an economist at PwC, said the UK, which is expected to grow by up to 3pc next year, would be “level pegging” with America for the title of the strongest-growing advanced economy in the world. “It’s too close to call,” he said.
Advanced economies such as America, Japan and Britain are expected to contribute about 40pc to global GDP growth for the first time since 2010 next year, up from levels closer to 30pc between 2011 and 2013. Improving consumer confidence will feed through to higher business investment among advanced economies, PwC will say in its annual predictions this week.
“It’s been quite a long, slow recovery from the crisis, and for the first time in what feels like an awfully long time — about five years or so — low-growth advanced economies are really starting to pick up, and that it is increasingly self-sustaining,” said Mr Boxshall. “It’s coming through private sector growth, rather than relying too much on government fiscal support.”

Sunday, 15 December 2013

LEVELS FOR NIFTY IN THE COMING WEEK

The Nifty too, hit a new life-time high 6,415.2 in the opening hour of Monday and then lost ground rapidly to end the week 91 points lower.

The index is following the script given as the first option last week. This could be the third part of the correction that began from the 6,342-peak in the index. This wave has the targets of 6,187; 6,046 and then 5,905. There is thus, a slight possibility of the correction ending at these levels. But if the decline continues, the index can head towards the next levels.

There is a strong likelihood of the index moving in the band between 5,950 and 6,400 for a few more weeks before it attempts to move higher. The medium term view will turn negative only on close below 5,920. Subsequent supports are 5,770 and 5,618.


A rebound next week can make the Nifty head higher to 6,262 or 6,323. The inability to move above the first resistance will be the cue for traders to initiate fresh short positions. Downward targets are 6,046, 5,973 and 5,905.

TEN WAYS TO BE A TRADER

1.       Trade based on the probabilities NOT the potential profits.

2.       Trade small position sizes based on your account NEVER put your whole account at risk of ruin.

3.       Trade a plan NOT emotions.

4.       Always enter a trade with an edge that can be defined DO NOT trade with entries that are only opinions.

5.       Trade based on quantifiable facts NOT opinions.

6.       Trade after extensive research on what works and what does not. Don’t trade in ignorance.

7.       Trade with the correct position sizing since risk management is your number one priority and profits are secondary concern.

8.       Trade in a way that eliminates any chance of financial ruin NOT to get rich quick.

9.       Trade with discipline and focus DO NOT change the way you trade suddenly due to winning or losing streaks.


10.    Trade in the present moment and DO NOT get biased due to old wins or losses.