Thursday, September 25, 2008
Interest rate caps must be a price the banks pay for bailout
However, now that government is buying "bad" mortgages, they can implement rate caps as condition of bailout. Once interest rates go down and through refinancing mortgages become more affordable it will benefit not just the troubled mortgage holders, it will benefit everyone. It will reduce cost of housing significantly for vast majority of people, making more money available to purchase other goods and services thus stimulating broader parts of the economy and promoting job growth. It will bring new buyers into the housing market increasing demand for homes and reversing price decline. Reduced mortgage payments, reversed housing price declines, and increased employment will finally bring the foreclosures rate down.
I think Paulson and Bernake think that bailout will cause banks to lower interest rates voluntarily. However, if I was putting up this much money, I think I would be entitled to a guaranty that it will actually happens immediately and not at some future point and at bank's discretion.
Tuesday, September 23, 2008
Best Market Chances - Suspended Again
Monday, August 25, 2008
What is common between banking and trading systems and how to fix housing slump
First of all bank lending is defined by certain rules and regulations. For example when you submit an application for mortgage bank checks you credit score, your tax return, verify you debt to earnings ratio, verify value of property. (Obviously, I am assuming standard procedures and not what are considered "bad" practices). The procedures are collective wisdom of previous years of banking which were designed to make sure that the bank makes money. In a trading system, there are a number of rules in place which designer of the system thought would generate positive return for the system. These rules are often tested on historical data and then by real live trading.
As we have already observed, even systems that have worked well in the past can blow up. Something may have changed in the way the markets or commodities work and the system that worked well in the past no longer works. Same thing goes for banking. I believe the single most important error in banking rules was that price of real estate will go up. Therefore all these other rules that were in place may have been relatively less important as the more important assumption of rising prices. As soon as prices began falling, buyers stop buying, fearing future declines. Since most home sales are made with leverage of 5 to 1 or higher, even small decline in value of real estate creates a huge decline in invested capital. The opposite is true also: small increase in price results in large investment return.
So it seems our banking system has blew up just like any other trading system. Even a huge spread between Feds rate and what banks are now charging for mortgages which normally would result in windfall profits for the banks are not motivating banks to help resolve the situation.
In order to solve their own problems banks must be aggressive in reversing housing price declines and get customers back into their own doors. They must reduce the mortgage rates by no more than 2% over Feds rate. They must unilaterally and across the board reduce existing mortgages by !-2% so that foreclosures stop or drastically reduced. It is time to recognize that the previous system the banks have devised to make money is simply not working when the prices are falling!
Friday, August 22, 2008
Bernanke is right on
"Although we have seen improved functioning in some markets, the financial storm that reached gale force some weeks before our last meeting (in Jackson Hole in August 2007) has not yet subsided, and its effects on the broader economy are becoming apparent in the form of softening economic activity and rising unemployment," Mr. Bernanke said.
I think Bernake is right on. Keep on top of it Ben!
Wednesday, August 13, 2008
Greenspan - immigrants help getting out of housing slump
Interestingly;y, he suggests that immigrants account for 1/3 of new households and therefore liberalization of immigration laws would help significantly in depleting unsold inventory thus reversing housing slump and getting economy out of malaise. I would assume converse to be true as well.
Friday, August 8, 2008
Best Market Chances - re-subscribed
So far I like OpenECry - you can get someone to talk to before the typical "interrogation" that you get at every other broker.
Tuesday, July 22, 2008
International Brokers TWS, Tradebullet Set Up.
Here is my trading log for Have Fun as shown on C2. For the purposes of this discussion it is close enough to real results. (Click on the picture to zoom in).

It is difficult to tell what caused the trades to miss. It could be DSL line interruption, it could be Tradestation (TWS) API, it could be Tradebullet, it could be IB server, it could be c2, it could be one of my kids messing with computer, it could be Windows OS doing something it's not supposed to, it could be that I did not set up Tradebullet correctly (there are a lot of options to choose from). Everybody thinks that they are not the problem. I do want to specifically comment on very good and responsive tech support I received from TradeBullet.
But I have to look at the facts: I have tried unsuccessfully for many months to make it work which cost me not an insignificant amount of money. At the end of the day, the only thing I know for sure it is not working FOR ME.
I am hoping with OpenECry is will be easier to find the culprit if something goes wrong. But will see that if I find a system to trade. Any suggestions?
Sunday, July 20, 2008
Have Fun - Suspended, Best Market Chances - Unsubscribed, Trade Bullet - Cancelled
I started with jumping back into Best Market Chances hopping that it stabilized. Bad mistake - $2500 gone in one day. I am so sad about this one - I really liked it and the developer - Helmut Fuchs. I forgave it two long strings of losses. I will back off for a while to see if performance gets back on track. I have stopped subscription in the mean while.
Have Fun is my other darling. However, I have missed a lot of trades with it because of International Brokers / Trade Bullet set up I have been using. However, for some reason lately the set up missing trades. I have been working with Francis - Trade Bullet's technical support to resolve the issues; however, I can not make it work. I do not know if it is me of software, but if you look at the log of the trades with have fun, you will see that lately most of the trades did not go through.
I have convinced myself that I can not make the client side solution work. It also does not help that there are too many parties involved and at every stage something can go wrong - the system vendor, c2, trade bullet, trade station, communication link, the international broker's server. The failure can occur at every stage and then you are left troubleshooting the entire chain. So, I have shut down Trade Bullet and Tradestation and opened OpenECry. This is one solution that reduces number of places where things go wrong. C2 should be sending data to OpenECry with no intermediaries. So now I am ready...
This brings me to the last point. Have Fun has suffered 3 consecutive losses. Normally, it would not be a problem; however, in this case it is. According to C2 stats, win/loss ratio for this system is 75%. Since the system is only trading 4 times per month we should not be seeing 3 consecutive losses very often (less then once every 16 months). In other words, this should be a very rare event. I also did not like the last trade was handled. System was profitable at least twice during this period however vendor went for extremely risky move of leaving the system open overnight. Since the system trades Russel index futures, large overnight moves are possible. Because this system is discretionary, I am afraid that the previous two losses clouded the vendors judgment wanting to bring home a big win, but instead resulting in the loss.
At this point I am set up to trade however, I do not have any system to trade!
Looking at the history I see a lot of systems that blew up. At this point I do not feel that by looking at a previous performance it is very likely to pick out a system that will not blow up.
Gold Survivor $10k portfolio, Ruby look like the blew up. DeltaHedge, Index Spreads are dying. The only one which is still ok is Dgmma and Gold Survivor Energy. This means that only 2 systems out of twelve did not blew up in the last 8 month of me using c2. This is very scary.
Past returns does not guaranty future success. I have found this to be true in simulated results (Beware of Fidelity / Wealth Lab - I lost a lot of money trying to make that work too). It is now turning out to be true in real life trading. If you playing with your only money please stop - this is not the place for you!
Wednesday, July 2, 2008
Best Market Chances - Suspended Trading
I am still continuing to have computer issues with TWS/TB set up. Vendor is saying that it is due to my DSL connection and it well could be true. But seems like this is a real world condition that is faced by many. I know I am very frustrated at this point and I do not want to be blaming anyone. However, the set up that I currently have I am very unhappy about. The only saving grace is some of the missed trades were real losers.
Friday, June 27, 2008
Have Fun, Best Market Chances and CHF Vola(tility)Breakout

I am still trading Have Fun and Best Market Chances. Total gain for May and June is about $11,200 or about 16% with bulk of it due to Best Market Chances. I like that system vendors are responsive to questions and try to help where they can. This is as good of an endorsement as I can make, because at any time any system can blow up and go south and then my endorsement will look silly. Second, I do not really want too many people signing up for these systems and ruining it for me. Sorry, I am am human and a little bit selfish.
It is very difficult to judge when the system becomes broken versus when it goes through a natural draw down. I had to suspend trading Best Market Chances and CHF Vola Breakout when I saw a highly improbable string of consecutive losses. I resumed trading both when I saw win/loss ratio get back to normal. However, I had to urgently bail out of CHF Vola Breakout when losses resumed. Now, it is clear that bailing CHF VolaBreakout was a good move as the system completely fell apart. However, at the time it was not so obvious. All in all loss on the CHFVola.Breakout was about $2500 or 3.5% of my trading capital. You can see my actual trades in the picture above. The other thing I discovered is that trading Forex with IB and TradeBullet is a major hassle, because you end up accumulating CHF in your account and then have to manually take it back to USD. This is not easy unless you are a pro - liquidate position function does not work with Forex very well and you still end up having foreign currency in your account. I tried this using Traders Work Station and Trade Bullet - I still have 3000 CHF in my account which I need to get rid off.
Jumping back into BestMarketChances was a good move with significant profits during the month of June.
If you would like to subscribe to any of the systems that I am currently trading, please send me your email and I will send you a warning whenever I feel there is something wrong and I am either suspending or stopping trading the system.
Finally, I have to say that although I like a common pool of money to allocate to multiple systems and IB is the only vendor that advertises support for stocks, options, futures and forex, the reality is quite different. Forex trading did not work for me at all. Trading futures is much better; however, I had a large number of technical issues where trades were lost due to either a bad connection, software, my computer or a combination there off. If you go this route - please use a dedicated machine that does not do anything but runs TWS and TB, never log off the account, never go to sleep, never run any screen savers and never allow any automatic updates unless you set the time to off hours on the weekend, never get your kids to play games on that machine. Even then make sure the system is responsive and not locked up every day before the trading starts. It is very touchy and unless you are willing to learn about all the quirks - you should not be using this system. It is not one of those things where you sign up and forget.
Sunday, May 18, 2008
Best Market Chances
Thursday, May 15, 2008
Heed the warning - Past performance is no guaranty of future results.
Since, I have came upon c2 web site I have tried to use all tools at my disposal to select winning systems, however, the track record is not encouraging. Out of 4 systems I have tried, I had to discontinue or suspend 3: mwz, best market chance and CHF.volabreakout.
Then there were 7 systems that I thought looked pretty good but collapsed since I began tracking them Slow and steady, Spy options, Team aphid bird, Trendsensor II Jumbo and Golden Index, Grain Analyst and Fundamentals Only. In this sample I have a pretty wide range of trading styles and underlying instruments represented. I guess, the only saving grace is that I did not subscribe to them. It's a small consolation - but I will take what I can.
There are still 5 systems that I am watching that has not collapsed: DeltaHedge, Dgmma, Gold Survivor $10k portfolio, Gold Survivor Energy, Index Spreads, Ruby NQ100 M. So, 5 out of 12 not collapsed rate so far.
I am still subscribed to Have Fun however, performance has not measured up to what it was previously.
To get to next level it is really critical that C2 brings together in one place all the early warning signs that the system is about to collapse and signs that system is already collapsing. Right now, it is still too hard.
I would be interested to hear from anyone who has successfully traded portfolio of systems for longer than 3 months.
Best Market Chances

Subscribed since May 1
Suspended May 14: Encountered a highly improbable long string of losses inconsistent with previous performance. Average performance before this string of losses was about $288 per trade per contract and trading as often as it does is likely to result in phenomenal returns. Until it no longer does what it did in the past...
Trading costs of this system are high - about $400 per month at a current trading frequency . There are also some issues with Interactive Broker / Trade Bullet set-up that I am using. Orders are sent to exchange right after it is closed resulting in rejected orders. C2 log seems to contain a lot of errors - for example slippage of >$100, which may or may not affects statistics.
This system is trading night and day from Sunday to Friday. Do not try it until you have autotrading set-up one way or another.
Thursday, May 8, 2008
I suspended trading of CHF.VolaBreakout

I am suspending my trading today. Likelihood of 5 consecutive losses in a loosing streak, given it is a loosing streak, is only couple of percent. This chart is created using last 6 month of trading data as available on Collective2 web site. This is first time in 6 month 5 losses in a row has happened. According to system's vendor max loss run since inception is 8. I will be watching if the system returns to a more reasonable win/loss distribution.
Very high likelihood that the system is broken.
Friday, April 18, 2008
CHF.VolaBreakout
The technical goodies for selecting CHF.VolaBreakout were consistency of return, length of track record (9 months), Sharp above 2, APD above 0.3 (although I am still not sure if I trust APD, I like the concept in principle), and last but not least last 90 days of return and annualized return. And a huge bonus is a low $49 subscription fee. This allows me to try with smaller allocation of $7k.
In addition, I am not overly concerned about huge spike one way or another in CHF to USD exchange rate. Having written "I am not concerned" I feel like I am jinxing myself. So actually I am concerned about it.
Which brings me to the last reason why I like it. It has very small "duty factor". Average trade duration is only few hours and it generates about 10 trades per month (at least according to system vendor). In other words, most of the time it is in cash and only short time it is exposed to market risk. So probability of major negative event happening is reduced by the "duty factor".
So why do it? In one word - diversification. I want to reduce correlation between different strategies and FOREX is one way of doing it.
This is my first foray into FOREX trading and I am proceeding cautiously. Actually, I am quite nervous about round the clock trading and I am very worried about IB + Tradebullet set-up being reliable enough and a lot of mindless daily maintenance that goes into it. In fact, I am going to see if I can replace it with server based solution.
My second concern is that lately dollar was going only one way - down. So you could say there is almost a perfect correlation between CHF.VolaBreakout and CHF to USD exchange rate. Because the return was generated both through short and long sales I do not really think that correlation is there, but if the exchange rates become more volatile or starts trending in the opposite direction will CHF.VolaBreakout strategy continue to work? Suspense is killing me...
My original choice for FOREX TeamAlphapid was abandoned, replaced with Team Aphid Daily. Very Disappointing.
Tuesday, March 18, 2008
Finally new homes supply is in line with demand
Of course, I would much prefer the builders cut back production by another 50% but there are way too many "greedy" builders for this to happen. So at this rate it will take a few years to work through the inventory. But at least with supply being less then demand, inventories will start coming down.
Why do you care?
If you want to buy a cheap house - now is probably the best time to do it.
If you are worried about your wealth loss because of so much of your money is tide up in the house - then probably you can start seeing the light at the end of the tunnel.
Wednesday, February 13, 2008
Configure Automatic updates to avoid problems with autotrader.
This morning by the time I made it to my computer it was already close to 7:30. Looking at my laptop I noticed a Windows log in screen, rather than a familiar auto trader screen. As I logged in I saw a "friendly" Windows pop up which informed me that windows installed system updates and a restart was required. I scrambled to log on to Collective2 web site to see if I missed any trades and sure enough I missed a trade signal. It is just my luck that the reset happen to occur today rather than the previous 5 days when there were no trade signal generated at all.
Trying to guess if I should enter the trade, I decided that the price level was close enough so I fired up the trading application and I was in. I felt a little reassured as immediately my profit was starting to build up. When I returned to my laptop at the end of the day I was sad to find that the trade ended up being unprofitable after all.
So, if you would like to avoid this type of emotional roller coaster please make sure that automated processes on your machine are not going to wake up some time in a middle of the day or at night before the trading session. There are two control panels you should check. Go to start menu, then select control panels. First one is Automatic Updates. Second one is Program Updates. Go through every program listed and schedule updates in a way where you are not going to be interrupted during trading hours or at night before the trading session. I have set mine for Saturday night. Now if you forget to leave your lap top fired up on a weekend, you may still have problems come Monday morning. If you really paranoid about this, you can set it for manual updates, but then you have to deal with the hassle of overseeing the update process which will sap a lot of time out of you.
Another pitfall for laptop users - do not plug in your laptop into a switched outlet! Even if it is turned on at the time you set your system up, does not mean that someone will not turn it off and cause your laptop to be off during trading hours. Seems obvious, but... been there, done that, have a T-shirt.
In any case, consider yourself warned and happy trading!
Tuesday, January 22, 2008
Banks - please lower you lending standards now!
While US markets were on holiday for King’s Birthday, stock markets in Asia dropped like a rock. Trading was halted in India. Japan and China were in free fall. It joined US market in panic selling. We are talking about thousands of stocks moving together. So the old ideas of diversification do not work any more. Big caps, small caps, foreign techs they all move together. Diversification will reduce you risk - but the remaining risk is still too high.
(This is what makes me so interested in the fast trading strategies which show low degree of correlation to overall market on Collective2).
The second big news today was Fed’s unexpected lowering of the interest rates by ¾ of a percentage point. I like the idea of lower interest rates. I would like to pay less on the mortgage that I pay. But, I do not see this helping me any time soon.
1) Mortgages rates have not followed feds rate closely at all during the last decade. Seems like banks were profiting handsomely on the spread (my heart goes out to them now). A good web site that I found which tracks all these interest rates is mortgage-x.com.
2) Banks will not lower their lending standards as a result of this cut – so if your home value dropped, you lost your job (er – between jobs), or if you are a small business owner whose tax return will laugh you out of the banker’s office, or you live in the high priced regions of the country – most likely you will not be able to refinance to lower your burden. It seems counterintuitive that in order for everyone to benefit, lending standards have to be relaxed. I am not saying let’s not have any standards, let’s have standards that make sense and that allow people to refinance homes or sell them if they can no longer able to live in them.
Banks – please lower your lending standards. We all need it now!
The third big news both democrats and republicans are close to an agreement on stimulus package for the economy. Must be elections are coming… that’s right elections are coming! They even determined a level at which it will make an impact. This level turns out to be 1% of GDP.
Wait a minute… isn’t 1% by definition is something that is insignificant? Let’s say I buy gas at $3.33 per gallon here in California, now I will pay $3.30 per gallon. Am I supposed to be excited?
Don’t get me wrong, if someone will give me 1000 bucks, I will take it. I will even be thankful to the guy who gives it to me. But let’s not fool ourselves; it will do absolutely nothing for the economy.
Politicians - please do not try to buy my vote. If you don't know what to do with 1% of GDP, please give it to poor starving children.Wednesday, January 16, 2008
Jumping into Futures - started trading "Have Fun" on Collective2
My worst fear of futures comes from the fact that commodity prices are much more volatile than Gaussian statistics predict and large price moves happen much too frequently. (This is sometime referred to as "fat tails" of the distribution). In those cases it is possible to wipe out many years of gain in a few days or even hours. So, I was looking for a system that makes few very high probability bets and does not stay in the market for too long. Based on that, "Have Fun" was the system I felt most comfortable with.
This system trades futures of Russell 2000 stock index which is a very broad indicator of the US stock market. The reason for my selecting this system is consistency of returns, high realism and reduced exposure to market reported on Collective2 web site. I also like relatively short trade duration of 1.9 days and no significant correlation to stock market.
I began auto trading "Have Fun" system with $35k account. The system is scaled so most of the time only a single contract is traded. The underlying value controlled by one contract is about $70k. So with 1 % change in the underlying security value of my account changes by 2%. So if instead of futures, I was trading the index, I would have to margin 100% to get this leverage. And this is only a single contract. Bottom line, if you only have traded stocks before, trading futures is quite nerve racking. If this is the only money you have - don't do it!
In this system trade signals come very infrequently and you need to be ready all the time. Case in point - last night my kids "hi-jacked" my computer for playing Warcraft and I forgot to set it up for auto trading. Being on the west cost, I did not wake up at 6:30 AM for the beginning of trading and just like that - missed a profitable trade... That's it! No more Mr Nice Guy!
But seriously, if you are auto-trading, equipment malfunction can also destroy many years of gains if you end up on the wrong side of the trade while your DSL line is down or Windows decides to install some type of patch and cause system reboot. These types of things don't happen too often, but realistically they may happen more often then large market moves. So be careful - and if you can help it keep your kids, your spouse, your buddies away from the machine, make sure machine is plugged into unswitched outlet and make sure that there are no screen savers and no other programs running that can interupt the auto-trading program (Trade Bullet) to route orders to your broker.
