Blindfoldedmonkey: October 2013

Thursday, 31 October 2013

GOOD MORNING! THIS IS A BULL MARKET.

In recent days, people started asking me what is now on the market is it a good time to buy some stocks. Yesterday, the bank employee offered me shares to buy. The interesting that in the last two years he never suggested that. So small investors started to fizz on the market, which is a good sign because they supply the buying power on the long side, but it is bad on the flip side. They bring always the nerves to the market, with increases in volatility. What I am expecting the following months. So I told all of them “Good morning, this bull market since 2009. I am happy you waked up”.


Yesterday the U.S. markets plunged slightly from their records after the FED meeting but basically the whole day was neutral. The FED said again its keep the QE further, the bond buying program cited the unemployment rate level. As was broadly expected was no change in the interest rate. Some analysts say FED might taper for the bond buys in next March. We will see. SP500 weakened after four days rally.
  • SP500 -0.49% 1,763. 
  • DJIA -0,40% 15,618.

I remember well in the spring everybody forecasted that the tapering would start in September. And now you see nothing happened. It assures me again Mr. Market is more complex than anybody able to forecast. All of us are only guessing. That is the harsh reality. Most of the predictions were wrong.

Take a look at our Swiss fund and begin to invest with us!

The BFM Assets Team.

Wednesday, 30 October 2013

Mr MARKET IS HIGHER AGAIN

In terms of macroeconomic releases this morning, German joblessness rose to its highest level since June 2011 in October, but the unemployment rate remained close to its lowest level since reunification. Going forward, market participants will get to digest the release of the latest ADP Employment Change, CPI report for the month of September and also await the outcome of the FOMC meeting. On the corporate front, Visa, GM, Facebook and Starbucks are set to report earnings today.

What position you can possible have in this bull market? Very bullish or bullish. Or if you want to burn money sell the rally.


The US market is still in bullish mood. U.S. stocks made another move higher Wednesday. Tuesday both the S&P 500 and Dow industrials scored record closing highs. Eastern time is likely to be Wednesday's main event for investors. Analysts expect no change in interest rates or to the central bank's $85-billion-a-month bond-buying program.

This is how look like a bullish market:


Take a look at our Swiss fund and begin to invest with us!

The BFM Assets Team.

Tuesday, 29 October 2013

ARE WE ABLE TO BEAT THE MARKET? SEEKING FOR ALPHA.

Nobel Prize co-winner, Eugene Fama, the guru of the efficient-market hypothesis, says it is impossible. Personally I am on the other side. I favor the idea of inefficient market theory, but I am always opened to different ideas. Fama proved that not consistently achieve returns in excess of average market returns on a risk-adjusted basis. He started to study the movements of the markets forty years ago and showed how difficult is to beat the market. His recommendation is better to invest in a broad portfolio of shares or buy index CFD’s.

Let’s say he is right. What we have to do in this case as investor? We have to throw the towel and put our money into the index funds and wait and wait.

The New Yorker made an interview with Fama and asked about the recent crises. How looks like his interpretaiton in the efficient market hypothesis (EMH). He responded the following: "I think it did quite well in this episode. Prices started to decline in advance of when people recognized that it was a recession and then continued to decline. There was nothing unusual about that. That was exactly what you would expect if markets were efficient." And added the followings. „I think most bubbles are 20/20 hindsight.”

In the modern times booms are so many, they occur more often. But he only advises put your money in index funds and hope for the best. However, the index returns haven’t been pretty good in the last decade. Since 1999 the major US indexes has been only ranging and delivered only close to zero performance. If you adjust that for the inflation, the results are even worse. Here is below the chart about the „lost decade” which proves the buy and hold strategy has not worked if you were unlucky enough and invested in 1999.


Take a look at our Swiss fund and begin to invest with us!

The BFM Assets Team.


Monday, 28 October 2013

GBPUSD DAILY STRATEGY

  • Direction: long
  • Target: TP1 1,6240
  • Protection: SL 1,6135
  • Our setup: 1,6175


Background: The major trend in the Cable is long and after one week consolidation. The cross builded a plato or flag. The bullish sentiment is still intact and we see first test the 1,6240 the previous top and if it is taken might a very strong upward movement and extending further the strength. The rate is firmly above above 1,6135 and just tested back few times that key support level.

Take a look at our Swiss fund and begin to invest with us!

The BFM Assets Team.

Friday, 25 October 2013

BIG PICTURE ABOUT THE MARKET. BUBBLE OR NO BUBBLE?

I am fully convinced we are not yet in bubble. Doesn’t look like this.


Why? I have some arguments here below:
  • Most of individuals still remain sceptical about the market 
  • On the investors side happens now the following. Investors slowly turn bullish. They see each day in the TV the market is doing new highs again and again. The prices are steadily rising. Pros like analysts and strategists are also get started being "bullish". 
  • We are now at breakout. Look at the chart below. The SP500 was in a huge range area for more than 13 years. Between point 1999 and 2013 the stock market made no progress at all. This summer from that range broke out the SP500. After 13 years of consolidation I wouldn’t say this is a bubble.


What needs to happen to see a bubble. We clearly need to be in the phase 3, which means the followings:
  • The market participants become ecstatic. 
  • This euphoria is driven by rising prices. 
  • The belief will be common that the market is a "no risk opportunity.” 
  • If some fundamentals start arguing with the bullish sentiment, investors say "this time is different." 
  • The media covered by the stock market news 
  • Bad news is ignored 
So my bet is we are still in the phase 2 not in the 3.


Take a look at our Swiss fund and begin to invest with us!

The BFM Assets Team.

  

Thursday, 24 October 2013

WILL DOW BE 20.000?

I found a great article about that question. First I really do believe in that scenario because I so convinced we are in a bull market and that massive mental level 20.000 is going to be taken within 1-2 years. The market wants to see test that level. Before collapse the market and investors needs to the followings:

Everybodwants to buy the stock – grandmas, housewives
Everbody starts talking about the stocks
CNBC watching rate will increase massively
Price movements start to be parabolic
US interest rate needs to be above 1%

So the article by Lance Roberts, from STA Wealth Management states the followings:
The only way Lance can see DOW 20,000 is to see the market as being in stage 3 of a classic 'blowoff' market cycle:
  • Phase 1: What Bull Market? Just A Bounce Before The Next Crash. 
  • Phase 2: I Missed The Bottom So I Will Wait For A Pullback. 
  • Phase 3: Market Is Going Up Forever, Just Get On And Ride.


Recently we are in Phase 3 which is the strong bullish period. But obviously we can’t see what hold the future. This is only one opinion, but smart.

Take a look at our Swiss fund and begin to invest with us!

The BFM Assets Team.

Wednesday, 23 October 2013

SOME CORRECTION IN THE RALLY



After nine days of rally the European indexes opened in negative territory this morning. Asia made also made correction tonight after the disappointing U.S. labor market report. The report provided an unclear outlook about the US economy recovery. Fears of the Fed removing its QE program resulted the drop. The sharpest correction was in Shanghai Composite -1.25%.

I have a historical chart below about the S&P500. Since 1997 seems clearly why was better being on the long side. All in all this is a bull market since that time, included the Credit Crunch period 2007-2009. You could make more money on the long side than sell the market. Most of the traders want to sell the bull markets. Sometimes it works sometimes since 2007 you should be very lucky making money on the short side.


Take a look at our Swiss fund and begin to invest with us!

The BFM Assets Team.

Tuesday, 22 October 2013

EUROPEAN MARKETS ARE GAINING AND GAINING AND...

This is the first time since 2009 July the European markets have risen for 8 days in row. Greece and Spain are outperforming and showing very strong bullish momentum.


The Bloomberg's European 500 index came up to a perfect 61.8% retracement of the 2007-2009 collapse. European stocks have been retraced 61.8% fibo level of their 2007-2009 losses.


In the meantime the Europe's VIX dropped to 9 month lows (below 16%) yesterday. Technically I am more optimistic in short and middle term in the European markets compared to the US markets. I see great potential further in Europe in FTSE and in AEX, the Dutch index.

Take a look at our Swiss fund and begin to invest with us!

The BFM Assets Team.

Monday, 21 October 2013

BULL STAYS FURTHER THIS WEEK?

Mostly all European equity markets are up and down today. The picture is mixed a bit. This could be the 8th gaining day in row.


The Stoxx Europe +0.10%
FTSE +0,88%
DAX - 0,14%
The US market’s sentiment on SP500, DJIA, Nasdaq are moderately bullish.


We are going to have some macro numbers this week like U.S. nonfarm payrolls, unemployment rate, home sales and the Bank of England minutes. The investors are awaited a report on existing home sales in the U.S. to gauge if the country’s housing market remains in recovery mode or not. On Tuesday, the much-anticipated nonfarm-payrolls report from September will come out and the unemployment rate.


Technically the DJIA is still in the range 14,800-15,700. It is lagging behind the Nasdaq, SP500 and Russell 2000. They are on new historical highs. On DJIA we see the potential to hit the new high level above 15,700. For this first need to take out the 15,400 key resistance level today or tomorrow. But the bulls around us with a strong momentum.

Take a look at our Swiss fund and begin to invest with us!

The BFM Assets Team.
 

Friday, 18 October 2013

USDJPY DAILY STRATEGY

Direction: long
Target: TP1 98,80
Protection: SL 97,70
Our setup: 98,00


Background: The USDJPY is now trading at 98.00 after a huge drop yesterday. Technically the long term trend is still intact. This dip, correction level is a good option to buy back the trend. If broken the critical support at 97,70 we have liquidate the position. But this is a good Risk &Reward ratio position. On the target side we are looking up to 98,80 the previous resistance and top level.
Take a look at our Swiss fund and begin to invest with us! 

The BFM Assets Team.


Wednesday, 16 October 2013

GBPUSD DAILY STRATEGY

Direction: long
Target: TP1 – 1,6070
Protection: SL – 1,5920
Our setup: 1,5985



Background: The Cable has established the monthly low yesterday. Namely it built a double bottom on H4 chart. After that back test slightly came up the pair. Current price action can extend further and can be a bullish reversal for longer term. The first key resistance level at 1,6000 if it is taken the final target for this position is at 1,6070. 

Take a look at our Swiss fund and begin to invest with us.
The BFM Assets Team

Tuesday, 15 October 2013

Shiller’s Nobel Win and the markets

Shiller’s method is broadly used in the investment industry and the recent Nobel prize shows his influence on the investment science in the last decade. Many traders and investors prefer what is called the "Shiller P/E," named after the Yale University economics professor. Instead of comparing price and earnings data for the last 12 months, or forecasting it for the next 12, the Shiller P/E relies on the previous 10 years of inflation-adjusted data. "From one year to the next, earnings can vary widely," says John Mauldin, chairman of Dallas-based research firm Mauldin Economics. "The reason you use the Shiller ratio is to smooth out those earnings gaps, and get better historical context."


Now Shiller seems he is our contemporary guru. He forecasted the two biggest bubbles in 2001 the tech one and in 2007 the real estate and credit crunch one. The question is how he could do that? He has an own system. He states the markets are inefficient.  The Shiller P/E ratio is based on average inflation-adjusted earnings from the previous ten years. Major bottoms for the P/E ratio coincided with major lows in 1920, 1932, 1982, and 2009. Breaks above the longer-term downtrend line in the Shiller P/E have preceded market rallies and higher valuations. These downtrend line breaks occurred in 1922, 1945, 1951, 1983, and 2011.


So what is it telling us now? The Standard & Poor's 500's trailing P/E now stands at 23.90, above its long-term historic average of roughly 15.5, but not egregiously so. So the good news is that secular trading ranges lead to better valuations that limit late stage secular trading range pullbacks. So don’t panic – we don’t expect anything like the 2000 or 2008/2009 period. Note that during periods of market consolidation valuation levels as measured by price/earnings multiple reaches extreme cheapness – 5.3x December 1917, 5.8x June 1949, 6.8x April 1980 and so far 13.5x in September 2011. An important point is that the market bottoms before the price-earnings multiple does.
And finally I recommend his two books to read:
-         Animal Spirits: How Human Psychology Drives the Economy, and Why It Matters for Global Capitalism, George A. Akerlof and Robert J. Shiller, 2009.
-          Shiller, Robert J. (2000). Irrational Exuberance. Princeton University Press

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Have a great day!
The BFM Assets Team






Monday, 14 October 2013

The dollar is gonna be reserve currency forever?

Since the second World War the dollar has been the number one reserve currency. Most of the commercial deals are paid in dollar, doesn’t matter it is in China, Brasil, Canada…etc. But there are two challenger, like EUR or Yuan. But the dollar is still the reserve currency simply because foreign countries hold their huge quantity of reserves in dollar.

Historically as you see below on the chart the first reserve currency was the British pound sterling. Toward the end of World War II the US dollar was given this status by international treaty following the Bretton Woods Agreement. During that post war period the Fed did not inflate the dollar and stood ready to exchange dollars for gold at $35 per ounce. After 1971 FED started to evaluate the dollar against the gold.


Recently the FED has been inflating the dollar massively further, reducing its purchasing power in relation to other commodities. There is evidence that China has understood that point. It has increased its gold holdings and has instituted controls to prevent gold from leaving China. Should the world’s second largest economy and one of the world’s greatest trading nations tie its currency to gold, demand for the yuan would increase and demand for the dollar would decrease. 

It means that the world’s great trading nations would reduce their holdings of dollars. If the FED continues the US policy of continuing to cheapen the dollar via QE would mean weaker and weaker dollar. In this scenario the most likelihood that demand for dollars will decline even further, which creates a long side movement on EURUSD in major trend.



Have a great week!

Friday, 11 October 2013

EURUSD daily strategy

 

Direction: long

Target: TP1 – 1,3600
Protection: SL – 1,3485
Our setup: 1,3537

Background: The major trend is bullish in EURUSD. Due to many fundamental facts the greenback needs to weaken further. During the week we saw massive dollar gaining from 1,3600 but for us it seems now is oversold the pair. Our bet for today and for next week is the further upside move and there is why we bought the EURUSD this morning at 1,3537.

Thursday, 10 October 2013


Bulls are back?

After a long-long red sentiment on the indexes, this morning all the indexes turned in recovery mood. Everything is green now. They gained a lot this morning. The news behind that the lawmakers are getting closer to an agreement in Washington. The markets welcome signs that U.S. lawmakers are open to a short-term increase in the debt ceiling.
 
The US futures are in positive territory recently. On Tuesday the market showed to the politicians can do massive fall if there is not any agreement. That was a clear message from the market to the Capitol.
 

Technically as we forecasted yesterday the Dow was grounded at 14.750. We need more confirmation for long side at least a follow through day tomorrow or Monday. The sentiment is still sceptical, 75% is bearish sentiment at twitter on DJIA. Which could help a fast and robust upside movement within few days to the resistance level of 15.200 and then if this taken to the 15.360 area.

Wednesday, 9 October 2013

USDJPY DAILY STRATEGY

Direction: long
Target: TP1 – 97,80
Protection: SL – 96,80
Our setup: 97,33



Background: The yen after a long period started the weaken against the green back currency. This morning made a breakout from the previous level. And our bet for today is a further bullish movement to the first resistance level 97,80. If it is taken might be the next key level at 98,40.

DO YOU WANT EARN OVER 30% PER YEAR?
Take a look into our fully regulated Swiss fund and and invest with us.
Have a great day!
The BFM Assets Team

Tuesday, 8 October 2013

GBPUSD DAILY STRATEGY

Direction: long

Target: TP1 – 1,6160

Protection: SL – 1,6020

Our setup: 1,6095



Background: Yesterday and today the pair strenghened. We see on the pair long side strengh and we bought with a 65 target price. The bull trend is still intact so this position is in favour of the major trend.

DO YOU WANT EARN OVER 30% PER YEAR?
Take a look into our fully regulated Swiss fund and and invest with us.
Have a great day!
The BFM Assets Team

Continues the indexes decline

US stock markets declined again on Monday. More than two weeks weakening by now and SP500 closed at four weeks low. There is no panic on budget ceiling, but the buyers are more cautious, they don't jump in the pool with both feet. It is a good signal if in this bad news period the market not falling like a knife. We only have to wait the sentiment changes for bullish and after the market could go up massively. All Wall Street indexes lost across the board 1% yesterday.

We can be sure about that sooner or later the government shutdown will be over and the worries will disappear as they came, like happened in last December and this January with Fiscal Cliff hype.


Technically on Dow chart clearly seen the 16 days losing day period, hardly to see any long side corrections. It looks like a consistently falling knife. Where is the ground? Might be at 14.820. It is not far from here, so could be tested today. But until the budget issues around us the market can be so volatile with big pulls up and down. Be careful and be protected.

DO YOU WANT EARN OVER 30% PER YEAR?
Take a look into our fully regulated Swiss fund and and invest with us.
Have a great day!
The BFM Assets Team

Saturday, 5 October 2013

Top biases why we are doing stupid things in trading

For a while I am watching why is that doesn't matter you are well educated, having PhD you can be loser too in the market. What I observed in the last couple of years the smarter people capability to lose money on the market is higher. Doctors, professors, CEOs and other super skilled people sometimes lose more money than normal guys. So my question was, must be something common between the super intelligent people and normal educated people why they are acting in same way. Many times the more educated traders acting worse. Why?

The Cognitive Psychology studied in the last 40 years why we are making irrational decisions and why we are still overwhelmingly emotional in decision making. Below I collected some cognitive biases together regarding the investment decisions. Many maybe all of them will be very familiar to you. And if yes try to change that and you will be much better trader. The point is, we are human being with thousands of weaknesses.

If I would be asked what is our biggest enemy in the market. I can only give this answer - OURSELF, OUR MENTAL WEKNESSES...



Normalcy bias
Assuming that because something has never happened before, it won't (or can't) happen in the future. Everything that has ever happened in history was "unprecedented" at one time. The Great Depression. The crash of 1987. Enron. Wall Street bailouts. All of these events had never happened... until they did. When Warren Buffett announced he was looking for candidates to replace him at Berkshire Hathaway, he said he needed "someone genetically programmed to recognize and avoid serious risks, including those never before encountered." Someone who understands normalcy bias, in other words.

Dunning-Kruger effect
Being so bad at a task that you lack the capacity to realize how bad you are. Markus Glaser and Martin Weber of the University of Mannheim showed that investors who earn the lowest returns are the worst at judging their own returns. They had literally no idea how bad they were. "The correlation between self-ratings and actual performance is not distinguishable from zero" they wrote.

Attentional bias
Falsely thinking two events are correlated when they are random, but you just happen to be paying more attention to them. After stocks plunged 4% in November 1991, Investor's Business Daily blamed a failed biotech bill in the House of Representatives, while The Financial Times blamed geopolitical tension in Russia. The "cause" of the crash was whatever the editor happened to be paying attention to that day.

Bandwagon effect
Believing something is true only because other people think it is. Whether politicians or stocks, people like being associated with things that are winning, so winners build momentum not because they deserve it, but because they're winning. This is the foundation of all asset bubbles.

Impact bias
Overestimating how big of an impact an event will have on your emotions. Most people are utterly terrible at predicting how happy they'll be after receiving a raise, or getting a new job, particularly as time goes on. We get used to more (or less) money quickly, but it's extremely difficult to realize that before it happens. Your financial goals might change after coming to terms with this.

Frequency illusion
Once you notice an event, it seems to keep happening over and over. But it's often not; you're just paying more attention to something you were once oblivious to. The 2008-09 market crash was such a memorable event that I think investors and the media became infatuated with today's "volatile market." But the last three years have actually had below-average market volatility. We're just more attuned to normal market swings than usual.

Clustering illusion
Thinking you've found a pattern by taking a small sample out of a much larger one. For example, we know stocks' daily movements over time are random and unpredictable, but you could take a four-day period where a stock went up, up, down, down, and think you've found a trend. Day traders are attracted to clustering like bugs to bright lights.

Status quo bias
Irrationally wanting things to stay the same. People do this in part because they want to avoid costs even when they're offset by a larger gain -- a process psychologists call "loss aversion." You stick with the same bank even though it charges higher fees than another. You hold onto a stock you inherited even when you know little about it. You don't make changes to your portfolio even when it's not designed for your goals. You just want things to stay the same -- a dangerous mind-set in a world that's always changing.

Belief bias
Accepting or rejecting an argument based on how well it fits your pre-defined beliefs, rather than the objective facts of the situation. Pointing out that inflation has been low for the last five years is still met with suspicion by those who believe the Federal Reserve's actions must be causing hyperinflation.

Gambler's fallacy
The belief that future events will be shaped by past events, even when the two have no correlation. A gambler will assume a coin is due to come up heads after flipping a string of tails, but the outcome of the next flip is completely independent of the last one -- the odds are still 50/50 regardless of prior flips. Investors fall for a version of gambler's fallacy when assuming things like economic data, quarterly earnings, and politics will dictate the direction of the market, when in reality the two often move independent of each other. Randomness is hard to accept.

Ludic fallacy
Coined by Nassim Taleb in The Black Swan, the naive belief that the real world can be predicted with mathematical models and forecasts. It leads people astray because models are purposely simplified while the real world is incomprehensibly complex. As author Dan Gardner says, "No one can foresee the consequences of trivia and accident, and for that reason alone, the future will forever be filled with surprises." Ninety percent of stock analysts and economists would disappear if we'd all just accept the ludic fallacy.

Restraint bias
Overestimating your ability to control impulses. Studies show smokers in the process of quitting overestimate their ability to be say no to a cigarette when tempted. Investors do the same when thinking about the temptation to do something stupid during market bubbles and busts. Most investors I know consider themselves contrarians who want to buy when there's blood in the streets. But when the blood arrives, they panic just like everyone else.

Bias bias
The most important and powerful bias of them all, "bias bias" is the belief that you are less biased than you really are. If you read this article without realizing I'm talking about you, you're suffering from bias bias.

My conclusion finally is our biggest enemy is us. So when you realize you are as biased as everyone else, you've won the game.

Have a nice trade

Thursday, 3 October 2013

Now the market is concerned or not about Shutdown?

It seems to me not really. I was asked on Monday that due to this government shutdown would affect negatively or not on the markets. I said no because that news which known by everybody is not a news anymore to the market. And as I see the three-day movements the US market is just ranging, but the Europeans are much stronger, was enough one day to get back close to the historical highs. The sentiment in Europe is more positive now than in US. And another remarkable fact since the shutdown took effect early Tuesday morning the Nasdaq and Russell are much stronger than Dow or SP500. The shows the technology sector is stronger, that is a good marker about the sentiment.

Now it looks the government shutdown continues for a third day on Thursday.
The S&P 500 -0.07% declined 1.13 points, finish at 1,693. The telecom, health care, and industrials as the worst performing sectors.
The Dow -0.39% , which at one point was off by 147 points intraday, closed down 58.56 points, at 15,133.
The Nasdaq -0.08% , at 3,815. Earlier in the session, the Nasdaq had been down nearly 30 points.

Technically I don't see neither the fear on the market. Yesterday during the day the US futures was massively in the negative territory, but by closure they recovered. In the last 2 weeks the Dow lost closely 5%, which is huge. The knife is still falling, but stopped yesterday. Almost 12 days in row falling. Maybe the Dow will test the key support level at 14.800.


DO YOU WANT EARN OVER 30% PER YEAR?
Take a look into our fully regulated Swiss fund and and invest with us.
Have a great day!
The BFM Assets Team