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Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Trading Fundamentals

Stock Market Trading - It's a big dream for a newbie to succeed & reach the heights, what the Warren Buffett did. Many people (especially young people of age 15-23) have such dreams, but don't know where start-up. Its Million dollar question for me also, when I have started to think about investing after I received my first salary. Of course people will get an idea of investing when they have their own income in the early stage of their life, unlike the investors trading in markets accumulating funds from the customers.

The collective effort about the investment strategy & boldness for required for a investor is being described here. I surely say it's not the FULL, but a better initiating information what one will be looking for before their start off...go on... All the Best...

Technical analysis:

Should I buy today? What will prices be tomorrow, next week, or next year? Wouldn't investing be easy if we knew the answers to these seemingly simple questions? Alas, if you are reading this book in the hope that technical analysis has the answers to these questions, I'm afraid I have to disappoint you early--it doesn't. However, if you are reading this book with the hope that technical analysis will improve your investing, I have good news--it will!

Some history:

The term "technical analysis" is a complicated sounding name for a very basic approach to investing. Simply put, technical analysis is the study of prices, with charts being the primary tool.

The roots of modern-day technical analysis stem from the Dow Theory, developed around 1900 by Charles Dow. Stemming either directly or indirectly from the Dow Theory, these roots include such principles as the trending nature of prices, prices discounting all known information, confirmation and divergence, volume mirroring changes in price, and support/resistance. And of course, the widely followed Dow Jones Industrial Average is a direct offspring of the Dow Theory.

Charles Dow's contribution to modern-day technical analysis cannot be understated. His focus on the basics of security price movement gave rise to a completely new method of analyzing the markets.

The human element:

The price of a security represents a consensus. It is the price at which one person agrees to buy and another agrees to sell. The price at which an investor is willing to buy or sell depends primarily on his expectations. If he expects the security's price to rise, he will buy it; if the investor expects the price to fall, he will sell it. These simple statements are the cause of a major challenge in forecasting security prices, because they refer to human expectations. As we all know firsthand, humans are not easily quantifiable nor predictable. This fact alone will keep any mechanical trading system from working consistently.

Because humans are involved, I am sure that much of the world's investment decisions are based on irrelevant criteria. Our relationships with our family, our neighbors, our employer, the traffic, our income, and our previous success and failures, all influence our confidence, expectations, and decisions.

Security prices are determined by money managers and home managers, students and strikers, doctors and dog catchers, lawyers and landscapers, and the wealthy and the wanting. This breadth of market participants guarantees an element of unpredictability and excitement.

Fundamental analysis:

If we were all totally logical and could separate our emotions from our investment decisions, then, fundamental analysis the determination of price based on future earnings, would work magnificently. And since we would all have the same completely logical expectations, prices would only change when quarterly reports or relevant news was released. Investors would seek "overlooked" fundamental data in an effort to find undervalued securities.

The hotly debated "efficient market theory" states that security prices represent everything that is known about the security at a given moment. This theory concludes that it is impossible to forecast prices, since prices already reflect everything that is currently known about the security.

The future can be found in the past:

If prices are based on investor expectations, then knowing what a security should sell for (i.e., fundamental analysis) becomes less important than knowing what other investors expect it to sell for. That's not to say that knowing what a security should sell for isn't important--it is. But there is usually a fairly strong consensus of a stock's future earnings that the average investor cannot disprove.

"I believe the future is only the past again, entered through another gate." - Sir Arthur Wing Pinero, 1893

Technical analysis is the process of analyzing a security's historical prices in an effort to determine probable future prices. This is done by comparing current price action (i.e., current expectations) with comparable historical price action to predict a reasonable outcome. The devout technician might define this process as the fact that history repeats itself while others would suffice to say that we should learn from the past.

The roulette wheel:

In my experience, only a minority of technicians can consistently and accurately determine future prices. However, even if you are unable to accurately forecast prices, technical analysis can be used to consistently reduce your risks and improve your profits.

The best analogy I can find on how technical analysis can improve your investing is a roulette wheel. I use this analogy with reservation, as gamblers have very little control when compared to investors (although considering the actions of many investors, gambling may be a very appropriate analogy).

"There are two times in a man's life when he should not speculate: when he can't afford it, and when he can." - Mark Twain, 1897

A casino makes money on a roulette wheel, not by knowing what number will come up next, but by slightly improving their odds with the addition of a "0" and "00."

Similarly, when an investor purchases a security, he doesn't know that its price will rise. But if he buys a stock when it is in a rising trend, after a minor sell off, and when interest rates are falling, he will have improved his odds of making a profit. That's not gambling--it's intelligence. Yet many investors buy securities without attempting to control the odds.

Contrary to popular belief, you do not need to know what a security's price will be in the future to make money. Your goal should simply be to improve the odds of making profitable trades. Even if your analysis is as simple as determining the long-, intermediate-, and short-term trends of the security, you will have gained an edge that you would not have without technical analysis.

Consider the chart of Merck in Figure 1 where the trend is obviously down and there is no sign of a reversal. While the company may have great earnings prospects and fundamentals, it just doesn't make sense to buy the security until there is some technical evidence in the price that this trend is changing.

Automated trading:

If we accept the fact that human emotions and expectations play a role in security pricing, we should also admit that our emotions play a role in our decision making. Many investors try to remove their emotions from their investing by using computers to make decisions for them. The concept of a "HAL," the intelligent computer in the movie 2001, is appealing.

Mechanical trading systems can help us remove our emotions from our decisions. Computer testing is also useful to determine what has happened historically under various conditions and to help us optimize our trading techniques. Yet since we are analyzing a less than logical subject (human emotions and expectations), we must be careful that our mechanical systems don't mislead us into thinking that we are analyzing a logical entity.

That is not to say that computers aren't wonderful technical analysis tools--they are indispensable. In my totally biased opinion, technical analysis software has done more to level the playing field for the average investor than any other non-regulatory event. But as a provider of technical analysis tools, I caution you not to let the software lull you into believing markets are as logical and predictable as the computer you use to analyze them.

Its not the end of the show. Still there is a long way to go in the Investing Strategy. Hope you like it... Do you have any other say? which you feel to be shared..? Then leave your comments here...

Monday, September 24, 2007

Reliance Bangs in the market

It is no surprising news to Reliance analysts who are watching the Reliance activities & changes in the market at the enterprise level in last two years. Reliance Industries Ltd (RIL) has announced an oil discovery in the deep water block KG-DWN-98/l (KG-D4) located in the Krishna Basin. This is the first time an oil discovery has been made in the Krishna deep-water basin. This deep-water block was awarded to RIL under first round of NELP bidding. RIL holds 100% participating interest in this block, which spans over an area of 8100 sq kms.

The oil find in this exploration block marks a new beginning in this basin. The well was located in a depth of 565 meters and was drilled to a target depth of 3595 meters. The well encountered elastic reservoir with gross oil column of more than 20 meters in the Mesozoic section.

During the Drill Stem Testing (DST), the well flowed 596 barrels of oil per day. This discovery namely Dhirubhai - 36 has been notified to Government of India and Directorate General of Hydrocarbons.

Encouraged by successes in the Godavari and Cauvery deeper Mesozoic plays, Reliance continued its exploration effort in Krishna offshore. This oil discovery comes after nearly two decades of exploration history with, more than 30 exploratory wells drilled by various operators in this geologically complex basin. The potential commercial interest of the discovery is being ascertained through integration of additional data and analysis.

Now what else gonna happen ? After a jump start for Reliance shares in the market, what else we can expect ? Any Guesses ?

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Trading Options - Look For Liquidity

If you're interested in trading options, then it's a good idea to always look for options that are highly liquid. What does this mean? Basically, it simply means that there are lots of people all trading the same options as you. That's important, because it means there's plenty of supply and demand. If you need to exit a trade, you want to be reasonably confident there will be someone out there wanting to buy into it - and that's what liquidity gives you.

There are plenty of options that only trade at low levels, and these are generally referred to as "illiquid" options. If you trade in illiquid options, and the market moves against you, it can be very difficult to exit your open positions. You might have to accept an even bigger loss, simply because you had to drop your price so much further before finding a buyer. It's no fun, with a trade going against you, to sit and watch your profit being eroded away minute by minute, because you can't find a market for your position. Unfortunately it can happen far too easily with an illiquid option.

The best way to avoid getting stuck in a losing position is to only trade in liquid options and strike prices. That takes some discipline, because it's very easy to be tempted by the opportunities that regularly present themselves in the illiquid portion of the market. But don't be fooled - restrict your focus and you'll be a more profitable options trader as a result.

It's often a good idea to pick a handful of stocks that have very liquid options, and focus on those. Becoming extremely familiar with just a few stocks and their charts makes it much easier to see the patterns of the stock's price and take advantage of them. Remember, though, to periodically confirm that the options for that stock are still very liquid. Over time the liquidity of individual options can vary enormously, so do an occasional review, just to be on the safe side.

If you want to be even more careful, it can be worth working out the average liquidity for a stock's options, and only trading those that are above average. To do this, add up the open interest levels available for each stock, and divide by the number of options available. That will give you an average.