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Posts by Themes
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Review Of Jeffrey Cohen's Strategy For Selling Put Options
Click here for my review of Jeffrey Cohen's strategy for selling Put Options. This was published at Benzinga.com because Seeking Alpha no longer publishes Options strategies.
Quoting from the article:
Included in the article:
Article About Starting Hedge Funds Posted At Benzinga
My latest article has been published by Benzinga.com: "The Possibility of Starting Hedge Fund Coops."
This article was rejected by Seeking Alpha editors as, "Interesting idea, but not appropriate for our audience." Presumably this is because it contains no "buy-this" information. It is mainly theoretical. Sort of like an article predicting the emergence of inverse ETFs in 2004, before they existed. The article does however contain ideas and research sources for anyone starting or investing in a hedge fund.
I understand that Seeking Alpha needs to limit the number of articles it publishes. However it does publish its share of fluff. Moreover I have to wonder if my articles on long-short investing and trend-trading would have been published, had they not included "buy-this" information?
Since I am interested in out-of-box and possibly ahead-of-time ideas, I will be contributing mainly at other sites which are open to such material. I could of course post my more mundane articles at Seeking Alpha and my more theoretical articles elsewhere. I might end up doing so. However I believe in developing a strong community presence. It would be ideal to publish mainly at one site which welcomes my entire range of thinking.
Krystof's Financial Miniblog.
I leave brief notes here as I come across interesting investment ideas to remember or to look into.
2013.04. Using LEAPS In A Synthetic Covered Call Write. An interesting article found at Investopedia. Especially since leap-buying, covered-calls and writing-puts seem to be the top three basic strategies with the strongest fundamental advantage, according to a 2006 study by an associate professor of the University of Florida: "Is There Money to be Made Investing in Options?"
2013.04. Elliot Wave Theory vs. Fundamental Market Timing. Robert R. Prechter convincingly argues that traditional assumptions are completely wrong about the stock market having any direct correlation to fundamental values such as earnings, oil prices, interest rates, gold prices, etc. Prechter concludes that the only significant factor driving stock market trends is a "herd mentality." His promotional video is worth seeing and can be found at elliottwave.com/club/how-market-losers-think-prechter-video.aspx. However, this video basically lists disjointed excepetions to rules under the assumption that exceptions disprove the rules of fundamental market timing. There is also no mention of backtesting to indicate that Prechter's "Elliot Wave" theory might be any more effective.
A highlight of Prechter's presentation was in the following fact: that just before the 2008 crash, the average broker, managed account and hedge fund was maxed-out in investments--and at the valley, the same top-notch experts were all maxed-out in cash. This is interesting but somewhat one-sided. Another way of looking at this data is that the existence of above-average maxing-out is simply what makes market peaks into market peaks. If the maxing-out were less the peak would be less or if more the peak would be more. Nonetheless I essentially agree with Prechter's conclusion that whether the rational capability is high or low, the "herd mentality" triumphs. Where I disagree is in allowing myself to be herded into an Elliot Wave subscriber on such scant rational evidence.
2013.02. StockFetcher technical analysis screener. I came across this suggestion in a review of VectorVest at ReviewOpedia.com.
2012.03. FAQs for Short Selling and InteractiveBrokers. See Fool.com Short Selling FAQs for an introduction about the basics of short selling-including the specifics about the 'short squeeze.' Most books today seem to have the opinion it is better to use futures or options than traditional short selling, and even then, no more than 1/20 of a speculation account per position. Otherwise, one single incident of a stop order failing to process might set your entire portfolio back for a year. By the way, in case anyone is wondering how to short sell at Interactive Brokers: you simply sell something you haven't bought, that's all there is to it. You can look it up on an availability chart, but the interface automatically lets you know if it is not available. And you need to use the Trader Workstation (TSW), not the Webtrader, if you value your sanity. TSW is at first confusing-but simply open the 'Advanced Order Management' screen. This may take a few days to figure out, but in spite of the "advanced" denotation, the end result is far easier than the Webtrader. (Voice of experience.)
P.S. I strongly advise against any kind of short-selling for the average investor. I do some short-selling but if you want to take chances, focus on short-term small-cap long-buying. It has the same basic high-risk parameters without the open-ended risk. Merely by choosing stocks that are buy-rated by major fundamental analysts, and adding a few technical indicators, the raw odds are in your favor instead of against you 3/4 of the time. The best way to make money from a market crash is not by short-selling during the crash but by long-buying immediately after. On top of everything just mentioned, you never know when the crash will happen, but you always know when it has just happened. So you never really know when to short-sell, and the false starts will easily cost more than the eventual success. And for each time that the good time has finally happened for short-selling, that is a time when you do really know when to long-buy.
2012.02. Profit.ly. This is one of many sites of Timothy Sykes who evidently is a self-made millionaire, star contestant of a stock market reality show, and a day trader on the mirroring site Covestor.com. Profit.ly is supposedly a place to monitor and verify trading performance. But it is unclear to me whether someone can "past post" a trade, and for which the only correction is if others push a so-called "Madoff button"...? Perhaps it's me, but neither this nor anything else seems very clearly explained. You can read about Timothy Sykes at Wikipedia.org. Sykes founded a hedge fund that closed in 2007 after losing a third of its value. You also can study the performance record of Timothy Sykes at Covestor.com. Sykes made +56% in 2011 and +12% in 2010. However his average subscriber lost about -2% both years, because he is using penny stocks which Covestor will not mirror. You can also go to TimTradingChallenge.com and apply to become one of his students. Not for me though.
2012.01. Pros & Cons of ETFs. An informative summary of must-know ETF facts by an independent financial planner Altruistfa.com.
2011.10. Debunking assumptions about China and Saudi Arabia. This Fool.com article by Morgan Housel argues persuasively that China does not manufacture a large percentage of American consumer goods and America does not buy most of our oil from Saudi Arabia. However more clarifications are needed.
2011.10. Steve Jobs Cancer Treatment Regrets. A Forbes article which provides some background for an article I might write myself.
2011.10. Top 3 Best Performing ETFs. This Zacks article awards OTR, QQQ and RPG as being the top three ETFs. I certainly like QQQ, so I think I'd better look into the other two.
2011.07. Can some ETF's predict a plunge in oil prices? An interesting theory goes that XOP tends to drop in price just before oil is going to drop in price.
2011.05. High dividend stocks. (a) Seems a good idea always to reinvest dividends. One writer calls this "putting your gain on steroids." (b) Five Plus Investor specializes in articles about high-dividend preferred stocks. (c) However Motley Fool is posting articles about the risks of overly high dividends and cautioning to monitor the FCF payout ratio. (d) However in October 2011, Mark Hulbert criticized popular dividend investments methods especially the "Dogs of the Dow" concept.
2011.05. Commodities. According to "The Secret to Commodities Investing" at Motley Fool: Focus on the lowest cost producer, and ideally commodities trading below the cost of production. However things seem not so simple. The low-cost gas producers suggested in this article did not hold up well during the post-downgrade panic of August 2011.