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Straddle

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Posts posted by Straddle

  1. Your reasoning is correct, but keep in mind the premium for these options will be expensive and highly correlated with the implied volatility in the EUR/USD currency. Intuitively I would say the premium on those currency options will immediatly cause a cost for you which then needs to be set off by a move of the spot price (EUR/USD).

     

    A far better (and simpler) hedge here is to just enter into a forward contract today with expiration date next year (the date you need to pay the salaries). This will be far cheaper (you just pay the forward points) and the pay-off for your firm is 100% certain (and the currency risk is eliminated).

  2. I use a spreadsheet similar to the one showed here:

     

    http://trading-journal-spreadsheet.com/wp-content/gallery/default/trading-journal-spreadsheet-trading-log.jpg

     

    Selling European style options on American stocks? Not that I know off, the only options I've ever bought or sold were American. I suppose you could ask a bank to buy a custom made OTC option from you, but that will becoma expensive. I would stick to the general American style options.

  3. I personally don't use with technical analysis. Burry used it a bit though. Buffett once used it but he later said "I realized that technical analysis didn't work when I turned the chart upside down and didn't get a different answer."

     

    I used to trade based on technicals. Mostly moving averages cross over systems and also based on the MACD indicator. It always looks good in hindsight, but I doubt if anyone can make money using technical analysis over a period of 10 years.

     

  4. I've read One Upon Wall Street several times, one of the better books on investing. The only problem is that Lynch stays it bit too general on how to select stocks and which criteria he uses. The most helpful from the book are the P/E line charts plotted next to the growth of the stock and the growth of the earnings over 5-8 years. I use the same charts in excel now to compare the stock growth to the earnings growth.

  5. Montier has been bearish for quite a while now. In my opinion he doesn't like the current economic situation and the Fed policy and then concludes stocks are overpriced.

     

    They drive the returns on all assets down to zero, pushing everybody out on the risk curve. So today, nothing is cheap anymore in absolute terms. There are pockets of relative attractiveness, but nothing is cheap or even at fair value. Everything is expensive. As an investor, you have to stick with the best of a bad bunch.'

     

    I don't follow his reasoning. Most stocks are still solid, fundamentals are improving and big stocks like AAPL, BAC or XOM are not overpriced based on their fundamentals.

  6. Nice, thanks for the link.

     

    You don't need to be an expert in order to achieve satisfactory investment returns. But if you aren't, you must recognize your limitations and follow a course certain to work reasonably well. Keep things simple and don't swing for the fences.

     

    Games are won by players who focus on the playing field -- not by those whose eyes are glued to the scoreboard. If you can enjoy Saturdays and Sundays without looking at stock prices, give it a try on weekdays.

     

     

  7. Cash. Too frothy for me. if you know the train will crash in the next ten stations when do you get off?

     

    I had that feeling throughout 2013 all the time but I have just hold my common stock in BAC and WFC all the same. Now in 2014 I'm also thinking about taking my gains, but I haven't sold one stock yet. Both stocks can still rise with double digits and they're  not overpriced, so I'll try to stay in stocks this year as well.

     

    My bet for 2014 stays the same as in 2013: banking stocks.

  8. I had a bad experience with investing based on quantitative tests. 2 years ago I read the Ivy Portfolio (still a good book) which presented a very (very) simple trading system in which you would invest your money in 10 different asset classes (through the etf's). You would simply allocate the largest part of your money to the asset class with the strongest momentum and next moment you would sell it and then buy the asset class with the strongest momentum. Backtesting was simple and the results were simply excellent. I added 2 things to the system based on the backtest results: a stop loss order at 8% and I would use leverage to buy more once a position was up 7%.

    After 8 or 9 months I threw in the towel. I lost almost 46% of my account and was getting sick from the disappointing results. Just buying SPY would have been much better.

     

    Maybe other investors have more luck (or are better at it) than me, but I surely haven't met people making money this way. It seems appealing and simple once you read a book from Greenblatt or O' Shaughnessy, but in reality it tends to go wrong badly. I also know a few traders who had the same experience with investing in the magic formula as presented by Greenblatt.

  9. Just finished reading this book. Easy/quick read. Great primer for anyone interested in learning about the high yield market.

     

    Thanks for the recommendation.

     

    Sidebar: Is it a rule that any book with association to Joel Greenblatt has an awful title.

     

    "How to Make Money with Junk Bonds" by Levine, Forward by Greenblatt (thank god he was not the author or the title would have been worse)

    "You Can Be a Stock Market Genius" by Greenblat (great book, but definitely embarissing to read in public)

    "Little Book that... "

     

    It gets even more humiliating when you try to explain to others you've red a book about a guy who has a magic formula and how you can apply his magic formula to get rich ..

  10. I red the book a few years ago. Really bad book and no link at all with Wall Street.

    Lots of stuff over his drugs addiction, his whore visits, how he cheats on his wife, how he deals with auditors and how he tries to transport his money to Switzerland.

    Maybe DiCaprio can save the movie still.

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