Swing Trading and Day Trading ETFs – Large Position Sizes Are Not Absolutely Necessary

Contrary to popular belief you don’t need to trade big share sizes to make a decent amount of money in the market.

In addition to trading for a living, I manage subscription based educational service called the Swing Trade Playbook. The idea behind the Playbook and this blog is to educate individuals about ETFs, trading, swing trading and day trading.

Every weekday night my Swing Trade Playbook outlines my trading plan for the next trading day. By doing this, I allow individuals to “peek over my shoulder” and see tomorrows trading plan today!

Today’s lesson, you don’t need to trade large size to earn a good living swing trading. The image below shows the positions my Swing Trade Playbook shared with subscribers about one week ago. As you can see the largest position is only 1,136 shares and if you were to enter the positions your unrealized P&L would be pretty close to $21,000 with an initial risk of approximately $7,000 (a 3 to 1 reward to risk ratio).

I wanted to show this since a potential subscriber emailed and asked how I can make any money trading small share sizes.

If you would like to learn more about my Swing Trade Playbook go to my website http://etfupdater.com/examples.

Mike Matousek, CMT
Portfolio Manager, ETF Updater
http://etfupdater.com

Swing Trading the Best and Worst ETFs

This weekend an individual wanted to learn how we trade ETFs.

I’ll start by saying there is no one Holy Grail in trading and to be successful traders only need to understand a couple of strategies.

The core strategy behind my method is to purchase ETFs during pullbacks and short ETFs during rallies. I feel my method offers less risk than traders buying breakouts and selling break downs since the majority of the trades are entered during either “oversold” or “overbought” conditions.

As many of my subscribers noticed I don’t have many breakout plays in my ETF Swing Trade Playbook and here is why:

Contrary to the “inexperienced” traders’ belief, the majority of breakouts are unsuccessful! Sure, it is easy to look at a chart and identify the best breakout points that happened in the past, but what most inexperienced traders fail to notice is how many breakouts fail – maybe this is why most inexperienced traders are unsuccessful.

Breakouts, the successful ones, don’t happen as often as people think. Realistically, there are only a few times each year an individual sector actually has the opportunity for a good breakout to exist.

Breakouts have greater risk. If a trader believes in trends, support and resistance levels the actual price in which the trend is broken, the stop loss price, is much farther away from the entry price on breakout trades. Therefore, to give the trade the opportunity to work the “wiggle” or stop loss level has to be larger than the “wiggle” for pullback strategies.

The majority of newsletters generally focus on breakouts, since my Swing Trade Playbook focuses on pullbacks and rallies, not only can subscribers diversify their trade discovery tools, but subscribers get see the trades I anticipate doing the day before I do them along with original and uncommon trading methodologies.

Sure, I do trade some breakouts, but they are not my core strategy since, technical analysis research has shown breakout type strategies fail more often than succeed. Generally, wait for the breakout to happen, confirm itself and then I buy the pullback.

I have an educational book called Swing Trade Fundamentals it details the how and why concerning finding trades, determine the correct amount to shares to purchase, determining entry points, exit points and much more.

If you would like to learn more about swing trading, day trading and investing feel free to sign up for our free weekly swing trading educational newsletter at http://etfupdater.com or click here.

Mike Matousek, CMT
Portfolio Manager, ETF Updater
http://etfupdater.com

Best & Worst ETFs

Best Performing ETFs for Friday December 14, 2007

Energy, specifically clean energy and Commodities (Gold) were the only two sector ETFs I track that were positive on the day.

PBW PwrShr WilderHill Clean Energy 1.55%
GLD StreetTRACKS Gold Trust 0.15%

Worst Performing ETFs for Friday December 14, 2007

It seems the heavy selling was in the Real estate and Banking ETFs.

KBE SPDR Series KBW Bank -4.45%
ICF iShares Cohen & Steers Rlty Ma -3.62%
RWX SPDR DJ Wilshire Intl Real Est -3.43%
RWR SPDR DJ Wilshire REIT -2.93%
VNQ Vanguard REIT ETF -2.89%

Mike Matousek, CMT
Portfolio Manager, ETF Updater
http://etfupdater.com

Traders’ Market Update

The BIG story of the week was the FOMC meeting on Tuesday…and the market’s disappointment in ‘only’ 25 bps cuts on the Fed and discount rates. The Fed then surprised investors the next morning, in a coordinated plan with other global central banks, by injecting up to $40 billion in reserves into the financial markets in order to improve liquidity.

November PPI came in higher at 3.2% versus 1.5% (core at 0.4% versus 0.2%) on Thursday, and November CPI at 0.8% versus 0.6% (core at 0.3% versus 0.2%) on Friday. A better than expected Advanced Retail Sales (1.2% versus 0.6% expected in November) failed to impress investors, especially as reports that online sales for November and December are running below the 26% pace of a year earlier.

The major indices finished the week lower:
Dow Jones -2.10%
S&P500 -2.44%
Nasdaq -2.60%
Russell 2000 -4.02%

The US Dollar rallied 1.5% as investors pared down expectations for further rate cuts on the back of the biggest increase in consumer expectations in two years. Gold finished the week at $798, down $2.20.

Check out next week’s calendar at:
http://www.bloomberg.com/markets/ecalendar/index.html

Amaury
Contributing Author, ETF Updater
http://etfupdater.com/

ETF – Professional Technical Analysis and Money Management Organizations

I believe, to stay on top of their game, money managers must constantly evaluate new market concepts, revisit old trading journals and network with their peers.

To accomplish this task, I belong to a few professional organizations. One of which is the Market Technicians Association (http://mta.org/) and I joined for a few reasons:

1. To learn more about technical analysis to improve my personal trading
2. To meet other professional Market Technicians
3. To help promote the use of Technical Analysis

To Learn more about the MTA click here and to learn more about what a market technician does click here.

Another organization I belong to is the National Association of Active Investment Managers (NAAIM) to visit the organizations website click here.

Each organization has a different focus, but together, they combine the knowledge, insight and camaraderie I feel a money manager needs to succeed.

If you have any questions or would like my opinion about how you can benefit, feel free to contact me. For our contact information click here.

Michael Matousek, CMT
Portfolio Manager, ETF Updater
http://etfupdater.com/

ETF Swing Trades – Swing Trading Playbook

Contrary to a lot of individual’s beliefs, traders using a swing trading approach do not need to make trades everyday to be successful.

For example, the image below shows the ETF symbols that triggered a possible short sell signal (we emailed this list to subscribers to the day before a swing trade signal could be generated). If you are following the markets and our posts closely, today was the first time any of the ETFs had a net positive day since the signal was generated. This is good, since the ETF Swing Trade Playbook showed these as a short sell opportunity. That means if they go down we were correct in our directional bias.

Here are the ETFs that didn’t get stoped out since the “playbook” was issued on December 10, 2007.

If you want to know what ETFs and swing trades I’m planning for the next trading day visit us at http://etfupdater.com/. We have a trial offer for $19.99 until the end of the year, then it goes to $49.99 per month.

Mike Matousek, CMT
Portfolio Manager, ETF Updater
http://etfupdater.com/

Swing Trading and Day Trading, Unknown and Overlooked Differences

I’ve been asked numerous times, what do Swing Traders do and how are they different than Day traders. First, I should start off by saying there isn’t one best way to trade, but it seems almost everyone has an opinion about which way they feel is best.

In the past I would either day trade or swing traded exclusively, but now 90% of my trades are swing trades and the other 10% are day trades. My experience as taught me that combining the two styles offers me the opportunity to capitalize on different market opportunities other traders may pass up.

There basic differences between day trading and swing trading are:

o Time in Trade
o Risks
o Margin Advantages

I’ve been asked numerous times, what do Swing Traders do and how are they different than Day traders. First, I should start off by saying there isn’t one best way to trade, but it seems almost everyone has an opinion about which way they feel is best.

In the past I would either day trade or swing traded exclusively, but now 90% of my trades are swing trades and the other 10% are day trades. My experience as taught me that combining the two styles offers me the opportunity to capitalize on different market opportunities other traders may pass up.

There basic differences between day trading and swing trading are:

o Holding Periods
o Risks
o Margin Advantages

Time in Trade

Swing Traders generally hold positions for days or weeks and the holding period is generally determined from the stocks trend as opposed to the market’s hours for day trades.
Day traders generally start and end the day without any positions in the account. In doing so, the risk of holding overnight positions that open adversely to the trader is mitigated, which is true, but there are a few other risks many day traders don’t think about.

Many people think day trading is less risky since they do not hold positions overnight. In my opinion, this is far from reality since most of the day trading proponents never talk about “commission risk”.

Commission Risk
The risk that the cost of commissions can significantly impact the traders account. I’ve been in this business quite some time and have seen individuals gross $250,000 per year trading and pay $300,000 in commissions producing a net loss of $50,000 for the year. So, if you are going to day trade, keep in mind the risk least talked about, COMMISSION
RISK.

Opportunity Risk

The risk that a better opportunity may present itself after a decision has been made. Traders need to realize if they are going to swing trade, which generally requires more capital than day trading they are more susceptible to opportunity cost. I can find quite a few swing trades per day, but since capital is limited I need to reduce my opportunity risk by screening all possible swing trades for the best opportunities.

Margin (What is Margin)

Day trading does give some traders an advantage, buying power. If an account qualifies to be a day trading account the broker dealer may offer the trader 4 to 1 intraday leverage instead of the industry norm of 2 to 1. Keep in mind, depending on the day traders experience and profitability this can help traders produce greater returns or losses.

Feel free to send me an email if you have any questions.

Until next time take care and trade smart.

Mike Matousek, CMT
Portfolio Manager, ETF Updater
http://etfupdater.com

Leveraged ETFs – The Leverage Mix-UP

I’ve come across many market participants believing if they purchase a leveraged ETF and held it for an extended period of time, the ETF’s performance should double the index or sector it’s benchmarked against.

Please understand this is not the case. The majority seek to provide a 200% DAILY return on the underlying index they track.

Notice I typed “DAILY”!

Noted in the ETF providers prospectus, which I’m sure we all read quite diligently. It is stated the leveraged ETF is designed to double the Daily return, not the total return for time periods greater that one day.

I noticed this while I was helping a hedge fund that trades ETFs quite heavily. The were using the leveraged ETFs to hedge the portfolio and noticed the hedge was not delta neutral. The hedge was actually appreciating more than what the underlying portfolio was depreciating.

So, why does this happen? Why doesn’t it track properly if market participants hold positions overnight? Compounding! Just as we all like compound interest you get the same effect here, except since the ETF can depreciate in price it can work adversely too.

Over time the effect of compounding and leverage can have a significant effect on the total return of the ETF.

Here is an example assuming a $10,000 investment.

Day 1:

The underlying index increases 1%
The leveraged ETF increases 2%

The first day = 200% return, just as we thought, and we outpaced the market, great!

Day 2:

The underlying index decreases 1%
The leveraged ETF decreases 2%

Underlying Index Value: $9,999 (An increase of $100 and then a decrease of $101 on day two)

Leveraged ETF Value: $9,996 (an increase of $200 and then a decrease of $204)

As you can see the index decreased in value $1 over two days and the leveraged ETF decreased $4 over the two days (this is four times the cumulative index loss as opposed to two times the loss).

Hopefully, I’ve explained this in detail enough for you to see how over a longer period of time the cumulative percentage change of the leveraged ETF has the ability to vary significantly from the underlying index.

Here are a few popular Leveraged ETFs:

QLD
DDM
SSO
MVV
SAA
UWM

If you would like to learn more about leveraged ETFs visit my home page http://etfupdater.com or http://proshares.com.

Mike Matousek, CMT
Portfolio Manager, ETF Updater
http://etfupdater.com

Financial ETFs – Today’s Hot Sector

The Fed’s “jawboning” seems to have helped the market over the past few days, but only time will tell if it is enough to keep the economy from going into recession.

Today, as of this writing the Dow is up about 380 points or approximately 2.93% and the S&P 500 is up about 2.9%. This is the largest one day percentage gain all year. I don’t believe we are out of the woods quite yet so I wouldn’t load up on speculative sectors or margin just yet.

The financial ETFs (Exchange Traded Funds) XLK, IYG, IAT & IAI are the strongest up 5% plus and today’s price action is indicating one of two outcomes. Either Wall Street thinks the anticipated fed rate cut will be the subprime solution or most investors are having short term memory loss concerning the environment of our financial sector. I’m not sure what they are thinking, but I seriously doubt in two days the financial issues are resolved.

Again, only time will tell.

Our portfolio is only 50% invested on the long side and our model still signals defensive ETFs are the place to be. If you would like to learn more about our defensive stance, an ETF update, our swing trading picks or our model portfolios visit http://etfupdater.com.

Our most recent addition to the portfolio was XLU. This energy ETF provides exposure to companies involved with water and electrical power along with natural gas distribution industries.

Mike Matousek, CMT
Portfolio Manager, ETF Updater

http://etfupdater.com

How ETF Sector Rotation Strategies Can Outperform the Market

It seems with latest buzz about ETFs and the ease of trading individual sectors within an index, sector rotation strategies are becoming increasingly popular. So the question I’m frequently asked is “how can your sector rotation strategy increase the odds of outperforming the market?”

The answer is quite simple. A positive outlook for the economy surely helps the broad market, but many times during the economic cycle some sectors will outperform the market and respond more favorably than others due to various external factors. The intent of a sector rotation strategy is to increase exposure to the sectors anticipated to outperform and reduce exposure to the sectors anticipated to remain flat or under perform. In doing so, the portfolio manager can capitalize on market fluctuations with the opportunity to benefit from sector expansions and sidestep sector declines.

Keep in mind there are many ways to formulate a sector rotation strategy. Here are the most popular:

Technical Analysis, the analysis of price action, trend lines or other quantitative factors enabling technical analysts quantify a trend change

Top-down Analysis, the theory that changes in the economy can signal imminent changes in sector movement

Fundamental Analysis, the approach of evaluating company financials within a specific sector

Therefore, if a portfolio manager monitors the general health of the economy, the various external factors that have the ability to drive a specific sector and has a solid money management strategy they have a good opportunity to outperform the broad market.

To learn more about the sector rotation strategy I employ for my clients or how we swing trade visit my website http://www.etfupdater.com/

Mike Matousek, CMT
Portfolio Manager, ETF Updater
http://www.etfupdater.com/