Keep INVESTING Simple and Safe (KISS) ****Investment Philosophy, Strategy and various Valuation Methods**** The same forces that bring risk into investing in the stock market also make possible the large gains many investors enjoy. It’s true that the fluctuations in the market make for losses as well as gains but if you have a proven strategy and stick with it over the long term you will be a winner!****Warren Buffett: Rule No. 1 - Never lose money. Rule No. 2 - Never forget Rule No. 1.
Thursday, 7 February 2013
If the stock market is so volatile, why would I want to put my money into it?
In this question, volatility refers to the upward and downward movement of price. The more prices fluctuate, the more volatile the market is, and vice versa. Now, to answer this question, we must ask another one: is the stock market really volatile?
The answer is, "Yes, it is … sometimes." The market is volatile, but the degree of its volatility adjusts over time. Over the short term, stock prices tend not to climb in nice straight lines. A chart of day-to-day stock prices looks like a mountain range with plenty of peaks and valleys, formed by the daily highs and lows. However, over months and years, the mountain range flattens into more of a gradual slope. What this implies is that if you are planning to hold a stock for the long term (more than a few years), the market instantly becomes less volatile for you than for someone who is trading stocks on a daily basis.
And in some cases, short-term volatility is seen as a good thing, especially for active traders. The reason for this is that active traders look to profit from short term movements in the market and individual securites, the greater the movement or volatility the greater the potential for quick gains. Of course, there is the real possibility of the quick losses, but active traders are willing to take on this risk of loss to make quick gains.
A long-term investor, on the other hand, doesn't have to worry about this day-to-day volatility of the market. As long as the market continues to climb over time, as it has historically, your good investments will appreciate and you'll have nothing to worry about. Because of this long-term appreciation, many choose to invest in the stock market.
Read more: http://www.investopedia.com/ask/answers/03/070403.asp#ixzz2KBrWomXz
Volatility and the Stock Market
http://www.nasdaq.com/article/volatility-and-the-stock-market-cm191664#.URNAFB11_wM
Thursday, 17 June 2010
The VIX Indicator: Beat the Crowds to Big Profits with the Ultimate "Fear Gauge"
Beat the Crowds to Big Profits with the Ultimate "Fear Gauge"
June 17th, 2010
Investors are motivated by two things and two things only: Fear and Greed. It's just that simple.
So more often than not, investors turn quite bullish when they think a stock is headed higher and quite bearish when they fear that all is lost. The trouble with this strategy is that during these extremes in sentiment they often lose their shirts.
While conventional financial theory suggests that markets behave rationally, not accounting for the emotional aspect of the trade often leads to the wrong entry and exit points.
And believe me when I tell you this: It's hard to turn a buck on the Street when you're constantly getting one or both of them wrong.
That's why successful traders often rely on the VIX indicator to assess whether or not the current market sentiment is excessively bullish or bearish... which helps them plot their next move.
You see, the VIX is a contrarian indicator. That is, it tells you whether or not the markets have reached an extreme position. If so, that tends to be a sure sign that the markets are about to stage reversal.
The idea here is that if the wide majority believes that one bet is such a sure thing, they pile on. But by the time that happens, the market is usually ready to turn the other way.
Of course, "the crowd" hardly ever gets its right.
It's counter-intuitive, but it's true nearly all of the time - especially in volatile markets.
And that's why the VIX indicator is a trader's best friend right now.
Saturday, 29 May 2010
Friday, 7 May 2010
US stocks plummet, then recover some losses
May 7, 2010 - 6:56AM
US stocks plunged 9 per cent in the last two hours of trading overnight before clawing back some of the losses as the escalating debt crisis in Europe stoked fears a new credit crunch was in the making.
The Dow suffered its biggest ever intraday point drop, which may have been caused by an erroneous trade entered by a person at a big Wall Street bank, multiple market sources said.
Indexes recovered some of their losses heading into the close but equities had erased much of their gains for the year to end down just over 3 percent, the biggest fall since April 2009.
"We did not know what a stock was worth today, and that is a serious problem," said Joe Saluzzi of Themis Trading in New Jersey.
Traders around the world were shaken from their beds and told to start trading amid the plunge as investors sought to stem losses in the rapid market sell-off.
Declining stocks outnumbered advancers on the New York Stock Exchange by more than 17 to 1. Volume soared to it highest level this year by far.
Nasdaq said it was investigating potentially erroneous transactions involving multiple securities executed between 2.40pm and 3pm New York time.
Investors had been on edge throughout the trading day after the European Central Bank did not discuss the outright purchase of European sovereign debt as some had hoped they would to calm markets, but gave verbal support instead to Greece's savings plan, disappointing some investors.
The Dow Jones industrial average dropped 347.80 points, or 3.20 per cent, to 10,520.32. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index fell 37.75 points, or 3.24 per cent, to 1128.15. The Nasdaq Composite Index lost 82.65 points, or 3.44 per cent, to 2319.64.
The sell-off was broad and deep with all 10 of the S&P 500 sectors falling 2 to 4 per cent. The financial sector was the worst hit with a fall of 4.1 per cent.
Selling hit some big cap stocks. Bank of America was the biggest percentage loser on the Dow, falling 7.1 per cent to $US16.28. All 30 component of the Dow closed lower.
An index known as Wall Street's fear gauge, the CBOE Volatility Index closed up more than 30 per cent at its highest close since May 2009. It had earlier risen as much as 50 per cent.
The mounting fears about a spreading debt crisis in Europe curbed the appetite for risk and put a report of weak US retail sales into sharper relief. Most top retail chains reported worse-than-expected same-store sales for April, sparking concerns about consumer spending, the main engine of the US economy.
That hit shares including warehouse club Costco Wholesale Corp, which fell 3.9 per cent to $US58.03, and apparel maker Gap Inc, which lost 7.2 per cent at $US22.91.
The head of the ECB, Jean-Claude Trichet, said on Thursday that Spain and Portugal were not in the same boat as Greece, but the risk premium that investors demand to hold Portuguese and Spanish government bonds flared to record highs.
Reuters
http://www.smh.com.au/business/markets/us-stocks-plummet-then-recover-some-losses-20100507-uh8l.html
Saturday, 20 March 2010
The many flaws of Wall Street's latest rally
Investors were abuzz this week as the benchmark S&P 500 took out resistance at the 1150 level. Investors see that as clearing a path to a run to 1200. But other important technical metrics are not garnering the attention of the overall average.
The semiconductor index has failed to confirm coincident 19-month closing highs in the Nasdaq Composite index, a bearish development considering technology's tendency to lead the market's advances and declines.
Saturday, 16 January 2010
Why Now's the Time to Get Defensive
By Todd Wenning
January 13, 2010
Do you hear that?
Even though the stock market has charted a steady upward course since last March, I have a hard time believing that all is well enough in the global economy to justify complacency.
- Having cash available to invest.
- Considering options strategies to protect your gains.
- Building a watch list of stocks you'd want to buy at 10%-15% below current prices.
Traditional defensive maneuvers would typically include increasing your bond exposure, though with yields so low and interest rates inching higher, I don't think this is a great place to put new money right now.
Thanks to the government's policy of low interest rates and quantitative easing, there's been (by design) little reason to hold a lot of cash. That's helped fuel both the bond and stock markets, as investors looking for even a tiny profit needed to put their cash to work somewhere.
Market volatility plays a major role in the pricing of options (calls and puts). This is because investors perceive "risk" as volatility and when volatility is low there's simply less demand from options buyers (who have the right to buy and sell a stock) who seek to improve returns with big moves in stock prices.
U.S. stocks have made a huge recovery from their March 2009 lows, and while I don't think they're anywhere near bubble territory, good values have become harder to find. That doesn't mean you should stop researching, though.
Price-to-FCF
Return on Equity
Total Debt to Equity
15.9
38.7%
1.37%
16.0
49.4%
24.40%
18.0
15.2%
25.70%
18.3
17.7%
0.30%
17.1
25.4%
0.70%
When the market grows complacent, you need to get defensive -- no matter where you think it's going. It's only a matter of time before something spooks the herd and volatility once again ensues. By having adequate cash on hand to buy solid stocks at good prices and using options strategies to protect your gains, you can set yourself up for better long-term investment success.
Thursday, 11 June 2009
How high is high and how low is low.
The real question is how high is high and how low is low.
For instance, an investor may have been tempted to buy into the market on Friday, October 16, 1987, when the VIX reached 40. Yet such a purchase would have proved disastrous given the record 1-day collapse that followed on Monday.
VIX: Volatility Index
In the short run, there is a strong negative correlation between the VIX and the LEVEL of the market. When the market is falling, the VIX rises because investors are willing to pay more for downside protection. When the market is rising, the VIX typically goes down because investors become less willing to insure their portfolios against a loss.
When anxiety in the market is high, the VIX is high, and when complacency rules, the VIX is low. The peaks in the VIX corresponded to periods of extreme uncertainty and sharply lower stock prices.
In the early and middle 1990s, the VIX sank to between 10 and 20. With the onset of the Asian crises in 1997, however, the VIX moved up to a range of 20 to 30. Spikes between 50 and 60 in the VIX occurred on 3 occasions:
- when the Dow fell 550 points during the attack on the Hong Kong dollar in October 1987,
- in August 1998 when Long Term Capital Management needed to be bailed out, and,
- in the week following the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001.
All these spikes in the VIX were excellent buying opportunities for investors. Peaks in the VIX also correspond to periods of extreme pessimism on the part of the investors. On the other hand, low levels of the VIX often reflect too much investor complacency.
Friday, 10 October 2008
VIX Index
What it Is:
The Volatility Index (VIX) is a contrarian sentiment indicator that helps to determine when there is too much optimism or fear in the market. When sentiment reaches one extreme or the other, the market typically reverses course.
How it Works:
The VIX is based on data collected by the CBOE, or Chicago Board Options Exchange. Each day the CBOE calculates a figure for a "synthetic option" based on prices paid for puts and calls. The computation of the VIX was changed in 2003 and is based on the S&P 500 option series.
The key question the Volatility Index answers is "What is the 'implied,' or expected, volatility of the synthetic option on which the index is based?" We already know the following variables:
-- The market price of the S&P 500
-- The prevailing interest rate
-- The number of days to expiration of the option series
-- The strike prices of those options contracts
What the equation solves is the "implied," or expected, volatility.
What is volatility?
One definition describes volatility as "the rate and magnitude of changes in price." In simple English, volatility is how fast prices move.
When the market is calm and moving in a trading range or even has a mild upside bias, volatility is typically low. On these kinds of days, call option buying (a bet that the market will move higher) generally outnumbers put option buying (a bet that the market will go down). This kind of market typically reflects complacency, or a lack of fear.
Conversely, when the market sells off strongly, anxiety among investors tends to rise. Traders rush to buy puts, which in turn pushes the price of these options higher. This increased amount investors are willing to pay for put options shows up in higher readings on the VIX. High readings typically represent a fearful marketplace. Paradoxically, an oversold market that is filled with fear is apt to turn and head higher.
Why it Matters:
The Volatility Index works well in conjunction with other "overall market indicators." By studying its message, traders will have a better understanding of investor sentiment, and thus possible reversals in the market.
http://www.streetauthority.com/terms/v/vix2.asp
VIX values greater than 30 are generally associated with a large amount of volatility as a result of investor fear or uncertainty, while values below 20 generally correspond to less stressful, even complacent, times in the markets.
The index is often referred to as the "investor fear gauge".