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The “Trade Sage” Stock Market Calculator

Here’s an interesting tool we came across last week that is worth checking out if you interested in a tool that can help you calculate your gains/losses, your risk to reward ratio, your wave retracement as well as price projections:

According to their website:

The Trade Sage ® is a stock market calculator that allows you to process and calculate a wide range of stock market price information. There are four fundamental calculators compounded within the Trade Sage ® software that allow you to perform four different analyses of any stock price based on the information you have available.

Try out the calculator right now: http://trade-sage.com/TradeSage/Calc.html

The four calculators available are:

  • Gains/Losses Calculator: This allows you to determine how much you stand to gain or lose on a particular trade.
  • Risk to Reward Ratio Calculator: With this tool, you can determine if your potential gains outweigh your potential losses; a clear buy sign.
  • Wave Retracement Calculator: Calculate the percentage one price movement wave retraces another. This is especially handy with Elliot Wave analysis.
  • Price Projections Calculator: Use this feature to predict how much you stand to gain depending on your success given your current investment capital available.

To use the calculator right now, go to: http://trade-sage.com/TradeSage/Calc.html

This is a free online tool that looks like this:

There is also a full version you can use on your computer for $7.95 USD that looks like this:

We have never used this software ourselves – we just thought it looked interesting.

If you do use it leave a comment below and let us know what you think!

The Economic Populist – “Why I’m a little worried about the drop in oil”

Really interesting article on why we should be worried about the drop in oil tying in the drop in oil prices due to Lehman Bros as well as China. You’ll also learn the credo “What’s bad for Wall Street will be made bad for Main Street! Definitely worth reading.

The original article can be found at: www.economicpopulist.org/?q=content/why-im-little-worried-about-drop-oil

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Why I’m a little worried about the drop in oil

Can’t sleep, been thinking about the price of oil, worrying about it to be honest. Now you may be thinking “Venom, what are you crazy? A putz? A drop in the price of oil is a good thing!” And I would reply, yes, under normal circumstances it is. But these days, things ain’t so normal. Actually, right now, oil is up since yesterday, but it’s been in a slide for the past week or so.

A prophetic lunch

A couple years ago, I had lunch with a trading friend/mentor of mine at Hackney’s on Harms Road. He was an older gentleman, made his money in options, in fact was one of the first to trade at the CBOE back in the 1970s. We had just gotten back from one of those sales seminars from Equis, a company that makes a product called Metastock. While gobbling down on Hackney’s infamous onion loaf and later cheeseburgers, topics ranging from the software to commodities came up. This was around 2002, and Enron was still in the headlines.

I commented that a lot of the buy-side got burned by the fraud commited by folks like Kenneth Lay. The stock had collapsed, and the whole idea of trading energy products like electricity now seemed completely discredited. This was a big problem for Wall Street, I said. He then shook his head and said something that has stuck in my mind.

“John, what’s good for Main Street may not be good for Wall Street. What’s good for Wall Street may or may not be good for Main Street. But what is bad for Wall Street will be made bad for Main Street.”

Years later, through all the scandals, and now today’s financial crisis, that quote seems more truer than ever. Tax payers are now bailing out financial gamblers who knew better. From Long-Term Capital Management to Fannie and Freddie, all got cash infusions either from the government or a pool of investors corralled by the Treasury. In the end, even when it didn’t come directly from the tax payer, the tax payer soon paid through special tax deals and such. C’mon, you don’t think they aren’t talking about tax breaks in the halls of Congress for these financial firms that help out?

Lehman, oil, and anyone else holding the bag?

This brings us back to Lehman. For the past month, the price of oil has been dropping. A while back I commented that one of the reasons was that China stopped buying, because they stocked up before the Olympics. Coincidentally, this was also around the same time that Richard Fuld, the company’s CEO, said it was starting to sell assets to raise cash (kinda like what AIG has been saying for the past few days..hrmmmm). Lehman Brothers ran trading operations that dealt with everything from those infamous Credit Derivatives to commodities like oil or financial products based on oil (yes, believe it or not such a thing does exist!). Well whose to say that part of the fall in oil could be attributed to Lehman? That sounds like a good thing at first, that is until you think about it a bit longer. Their pain is your gain..or is it?

What’s bad for Wall Street will be made bad for Main Street!

Back in the beginning of the year, Lehman announced that they had bad earnings, yet Fuld said he would not raise capital. Then in June, the Times reported that Lehman was indeed raising capital. It was then made public that besides the issuance of new shares, that it was beginning to jettison some of it’s other holdings. If this is indeed the case, it would serve as an impetus for the fall in crude. Now as prices fall, other things start to happen.

You see, all these trades with these contracts involve margin. Now margin for futures trading is simply a deposit of a certain amount to control a commodities contract. The latest margin rates at the New York Mercantile Exchange shows that members pay $10,175/contract, while non-members pay $12,488. That’s, rounding them out, 10k-12.5k to control $93,750 (using latest prices) or 1,000 barrels worth of oil. Depending whether you were long or short, the margin maintenance, that is what is required to hold on to your position, could go up or down. If you are in a losing position, expect your margin requirements to increase mark to market.

You have to figure that a lot of folks, from institutional trading desks to pensions, are taking a bath. It has only been recently, in the past two years or so, that everyone has been saying that commodities/futures are now an asset class. Jim Rogers even wrote a damn book on why you should plow cash into commodities! It’s been my experience that when you see everyone talking about getting into something, that that’s often the top. Whether it’s stocks in ‘99, pork bellies in the 70s, real estate in this decade, or even beanie babies, it’s all the same! Crowd mentality, it never changes.

What’s bad for Wall Street will be made bad for Main Street!

Looking at the events transpiring this past week. One could easily come to the conclusion that even the so-called Masters of the Universe aren’t such market mavens. Well, perhaps Goldman Sachs or George Soros, but for a lot of hedge funds and institutional trading desks, this is their last quarter. And this is what worries me.

While we’re rejoicing in the price of crude dropping, margin clerks, the repo men of the financial industry, are also sharing in your joy. There isn’t a trader alive who doesn’t dread that one phone call. If you’re a retail client (like most folks), then odds are your broker will notify you to pay up the difference in margin. You normally got less than 24 hours before they liquidate your account. For larger clients, and I mean big time ones, they often have a risk management department or a guy somewhere keeping tabs on this…well that’s the idea anyways.

Are we going to have to bail out a commodities trading fund next?

Many of these desks, like we are seeing with Lehman or even AIG, were trading with enormous leverage. Often, able to borrow money at a discount, management would often grant the trading desk leverage many times the cash they carried; 40 to 1 was a norm in many places. And to the folks running the company, risk management was in their minds so what was the big deal?

Of course, with oil ratcheting on an ever higher price and research pointing to $100 then $200 price, things only looked good. What was the harm in increasing their position? You look at the volume, a 1000 lots of crude would go in a blink of an eye. And it wasn’t just oil, we saw an influx of new cash into everything from boring ol’ corn to gold. There was even Exchange Traded Funds on the American Stock Exchange and the NYSE that represented positions in these things. You got to figure that behind each new commodities mutual fund or ETF was a trading desk.

Yet, as you can see in that chart above, things didn’t go as high as people predicted. That isn’t to say oil couldn’t go to $200, I’m sure it will, but that won’t help the trader facing a margin call. Some daytrader like myself facing a margin call is one thing, but say a hedge fund with twenty or forty billion dollars worth of commodity contracts is a whole other ball game.

What’s bad for Wall Street will be made bad for Main Street!

Mark my words, you’re going to hear that some pension fund or trading desk or someone big got blown away dealing in futures. There is nothing wrong with futures trading, but despite what Jim Rogers says, this ain’t for everybody. You had smart Street folks who probably were more experienced in say equities or bonds or who knows what, enter something completely alien. Maybe they were familiar, but when you’re told to take advantage of a Goldman Sach’s research saying oil is going to $200, what are you going to do?

We are, as I’ve said already, going to pay for this. CDOs, swaps, corn, defaults, it don’t matter. At the end of the day, you and I will pay for someone else’s mistake. What is needed is more regulation in regards to leverage, that is critical. And if you think I’m making this up, Google the word “Forex” and you’ll see modern day bucket shops saying you’ll make oodles of unbelievable money trading currencies at 100-1 leverage! So yes, we need to reign in leverage. And you can’t be trying to get average folks to play the futures game. I’m sorry, but I’ve seen so many burned by this, it’s almost sick.

Maybe I’m wrong, maybe we should let anyone “play the market”, but then we’d still end up paying. Right now, or at least in this recent past, the financial machine didn’t care who their clients were. And if there was a problem, well you know what my mentor said:

What’s bad for Wall Street will be made bad for Main Street!

Software Tools Revolutionise Retail Investment

Here’s an interesting article from the business section of the “The Australian” discussing the value of using technical analysis software like Metastock to make your trading decisions. Also worth noting that the Australian Technical Analysts Association has a trading software survey that compares more than 50 trading related software packages that can be purchased for $19.95. Go to http://ataa.com.au for details.

The original article can be found at:

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,24335215-5001942,00.html

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“Software Tools Revolutionise Retail Investment”

James Dunn | September 17, 2008

INVESTMENT software packages have revolutionised retail investment. The awesome power of modern computers, the instantaneous speed of high bandwidth and the cornucopia of information available in the blink of an eye over the internet all offer investors undreamt-of ability to choose, track and manage an investment portfolio, from the comfort of their own study — without, if they so choose, ever talking to an adviser.

Most investment software is based on technical analysis — the study of share price and volume charts, also known as charting — and lends itself so readily to short-term directional trading that it is usually known as “trading” software.

The trading software instantly throws up charts and is laden with indicators, studies and overlays to help identify chart patterns that can be used to predict where the price is going.

Software packages are often advertised on the basis of the money that their users purportedly make in the stock market, but they are not a “magic bullet” for share trading success, says Charles Browne, president of the Australian Technical Analysts Association (ATAA). “You can’t buy a trading software package and simply expect it to make you money on its own. They are good tools to have in the toolbox, but they require quite a bit of knowledge and experience to use well.”

For investors who favour a fundamental approach to investing, software programs also crunch the numbers they need — digesting and comparing companies’ reported sales revenue, cash flow, earnings, dividends, assets and liabilities.

Programs such as Stock Doctor, Conscious Investor, Value Gain, Bourse Data, Market Scan, Insight Trader and MetaMarket+ have made it easy for an investor to sift quickly through large numbers of companies to find those that meet their specific investment criteria.

Investors can “screen” the entire market for a list of the best — or worst — stocks on any fundamental number or ratio they choose. But just as with the technical analysis software, while the instant ability to identify, classify and list stocks by any fundamental criterion makes the investment task easier, it doesn’t do it for you.

The ATAA offers a very helpful trading software survey (available to non-members for $19.95, through the association’s website at ataa.com.au), which compares the features of more than 50 trading-related software packages and stock market data vendors available in Australia. The ATAA divides charting software into three categories:

* Tool boxes: (or “white boxes”): Software that creates charts from a database of market prices, volumes, open interest and other specialised data series. A tool box also calculates indicators from the database and draws charts, but doesn’t tell its user to buy or sell shares: the user performs the analysis and makes their own decisions. A tool box describes the reasoning it uses, (that is, the algorithms, or methods of computation, which analyse price and volume data from the market) and allows the user to incorporate their own trading rules, by changing the settings. The ATAA says tool boxes are by far the biggest sellers.

* Black boxes: Software systems that generate buy and sell recommendations through proprietary (undisclosed) algorithms. Investors using a “black box” are relying totally on the program. If the black box reasoning is wrong or unreliable, you won’t know; nor will you have any control over the settings. You will also not be able to properly assess the level of risk in the program, and whether the risk matches your own risk tolerance. The Australian Securities & Investments Commission (ASIC) requires software vendors to be licensed if their program generates buying and selling advice. An ASIC licence means that the people involved meet basic standards, including membership in a complaints resolution scheme.

* Grey boxes: These systems resemble a black box in that they generate trade suggestions from proprietary algorithms, but they provide a general idea of how the formula works and sometimes allow the user to modify the settings or parameters. They may also have an associated tool box component. If they are expensive, they are probably disguised black boxes, says the ATAA, which recommends that they should be evaluated the same way as a black box.

Sean Dostal, managing director of online investment store Moneybags.com.au, says the first step in choosing a package is to decide which features you need. Then, the investor must determine how experienced they are, and what is their investment style.

“You’re a beginner if you have a basic understanding of the stock market and you’re looking for a tool to more easily display information and organise your trading. You’re ‘intermediate’ if you’ve been educating yourself and trading for a reasonable amount of time. You have a trading plan that incorporates a consistent strategy to buy and sell, and manage risk for each trade.

“You’re ‘advanced’ if you have a detailed understanding of trading, and a rigorously tested trading system that you have tested against many different types of markets. At this level, you’re probably looking for customised scans and build-your-own indicators.”

Dostal says most investors fit into either the beginner or intermediate categories, and shouldn’t be fooled into thinking that they need “all the bells and whistles” of the more complex — and expensive — packages.

Before buying a software program, investors must ensure that their computer hardware, operating system, memory and hard drive will run the software, and that their internet connection will handle the data traffic. If any of these elements falls short, you may not be able to run the software, or it may run slowly or be difficult to use.

Whatever software program you buy, it’s useless without the numerical data. The choice of data supply is important: the cost of the data feed can blow your budget easily if you don’t choose the right software. End-of-day data — downloaded after the close of the trading day — is much cheaper than live intraday data.

Most software packages on the market come bundled together with data supply, at least for the first year. Dostal has provided a table of the most popular tool box software packages, with their prices, including one year’s supply of data.

Alex Douglas, chief technical analyst at independent stock market advice firm Fat Prophets, says there is a very real element of “buyer beware” in trading software. “The number one thing is that under no circumstances should you buy ‘black box’ software, or sign up for expensive courses. You shouldn’t have to spend thousands of dollars on a trading system.

“The thing is that most of the trading software packages that you buy completely oversupply you with indicators, studies and overlays. There are literally hundreds on some programs, and most people will find that they’re inundated with indicators that they might not use. Unless they’re a hard-core intraday professional trader, they’ll only use a few of them, and that will be all they need.

“Also, these days most people will get, through their account with their online broker or CFD provider, a pretty good charting package. These vary in quality and features, but for most people, they will be enough.”

And if you don’t have access to a package through your broker, you can get very good programs for not very much, says Douglas. “I use a package called AmiBroker, which was created by a guy living in Poland. It’s fantastic software, its standard version costs $US199 ($250) as a one-time fee (the “Professional” version costs $US279), and you’ve got to add a data feed to that. You can use free end-of-day data from Yahoo, but you get what you pay for. Really, for 97 per cent of retail traders, something like AmiBroker is all they’re going to need.

“You don’t have to spend big amounts of money. You can easily buy something that is well beyond your capabilities, but overcharges accordingly. AmiBroker has all the bells and whistles you could want, it’s very fast, but it doesn’t cost you an arm and a leg,” says Douglas.

Andrew Doig, senior analyst at charting and technical analysis education firm SpiWatch, says investors who want to explore the field beyond what their broker or CFD provider offers still don’t have to spend money.

“There’s a plethora of free stuff available on the internet. I would recommend that the average investor who wanted to look at charting and trading software firstly spends a bit of time on brokerage sites and gets up to speed on the stuff that’s offered for free,” he says.

“There are plenty of websites — dozens and dozens — that investors can go to and learn all about the studies and indicators that might be offered on their brokerage sites. Just plug the name of the indicator into a search engine.”

In this way, says Doig, investors don’t have to spend money to find all they need. “Unfortunately, trading software has a well-deserved reputation as a rip-off area. If you’re not satisfied with what your broker or CFD provider gives you for free, by all means buy something like MetaStock.

“That’s one of the most used software packages around the world: to get MetaStock and an adequate data package, you wouldn’t need to spend more than $1200-$1300. For that, you really would get a system that flies, but bear in mind, there is a bucketload to learn. But don’t get sucked into expensive software packages and courses, because they’re not worth it. You can’t learn technical analysis on a whiteboard.”

But a course can help, says Dostal. “The software is only a tool — it doesn’t tell you what to buy and sell. To say “I’ve bought this software and I’ll just play around with it’ is flying a bit blind. You’ve got to understand the strategies and the reasoning behind the investment you’re doing.

“We recommend to beginners the Interactive Trading course, which is a multi-media course, priced at $440, which gives you some basic strategies in both technical and fundamental analysis, to get you started and give you a bit of understanding about what you’re doing.

“It’s a home-study course, with more than 100 tutorials, on two multimedia CDs that we send out. We think that’s money well spent.”

Doig is especially critical of the diploma of share trading and investment course, offered by market education and investment advice provider Wealth Within.

“The very notion that once someone has completed a pseudo-course and has a diploma of share trading, and they can go off and trade successfully forever, that is a joke,” he says.

Not surprisingly, Dale Gillham, chief analyst at Wealth Within, has a different view. “Ninety per cent of traders don’t make money, because they don’t really understand what they’re doing.

“They learn some really basic things like a moving average or a relative strength index (RSI) stochastic, but they don’t understand trends and movements and confirmation. That’s where our course can really help.”

The diploma of share trading and investment — which will set you back $5795 — is conducted in five modules, taught online, with “webinars” and monthly live teaching by Gillham and Wealth Within’s two senior traders.

Although the course is aligned with the Market Analyst program, Gillham says people can use its precepts with any software program they like.

“Our course is the only accredited share market trading course in Australia. It is accredited through the Australian Training Quality Framework (AQTF) and we’re a registered training organisation (RTO), the same as any technical college.

“The Financial Planning Association (FPA) has also given planners 75 continuing professional development (CPD) points for doing the course and the CPA (certified practising accountants) give their members one CPD point per hour.”

Most of Wealth Within’s students are retail investors, but Gillham says the industry is now recognising the course. “We’re now getting financial planners and accountants and stockbrokers putting staff through the course as part of their job.

“Of the retail element, a lot of them run self-managed superannuation funds (SMSFs) and want to do it so that they can be the investment manager of their fund — they want to know how the market works,” he says.

The FREE MetaStock online users groups is the best thing since … well … MetaStock

If you are a current user of MetaStock then consider joining their weekly user group meeting.

It’s weekly interactive forum for MetaStock users to meet and exchange strategies and ideas. The meetings discuss topics ranging from stocks, futures, FOREX, and options to any other current trading topics. The online users group will be hosted by various MetaStock and trading professionals.

It is held each Tuesday @ 6:30 pm MST (8:30 pm EST)

You can find out more by going to: www.Equis.com/customer/resources/usergroups/

Don’t miss this opportunity to learn from true industry professionals. This users group is a rare opportunity to learn from other MetaStock clients, as well as MetaStock experts… and it’s Completely FREE.

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Check Out The “Money Day Finder”

Our office received a direct mail piece today advertising the Money Day Finder by Copp Clark Professional that I thought was interesting.

It in essence is a trading and investment desk calendar geared to the North American markets and looks like this:

The site lists it as:

Ideal for investment/term deposit administration, treasury and cash management and financial planning. Our year-forward format provides day-counts and thirty-day periods from each businessday and ensures against interest losses due to unanticipated weekends and bank holidays.

It also includes:

  • 10-year Reference Calendar with holidays and day counts
  • Year-forward presentation
  • Instant value dates and day counts
  • Highlighted 30-day periods
  • 10-year mid-term tables for each business day
  • Daily count-back tables to past dates

Cost for the 2009 version is $37.95 CAD and $19.95 CAD for the base.

So if you’re thinking of buying a handy investment calendar for your desktop consider having a look at Copp Clark Professional’s Monday DayFinder.

More information can be found at: www.coppclark.com/MoneyDayFinder.aspx

Announcing The VisualTrader Boot Camps In Fall 2008

VisualTrader Boot Camp

Harness the power of the world’s most innovative trading platform with Nirvana Systems’ new VisualTrader Boot Camp Seminar.

This intensive three day VisualTrader training course will empower you to engage the market like never before. Whether you are a beginner or an experienced trader, this guided tour of VisualTrader will improve your trading skills immediately.

Register

Day 1 – VisualTrader Orientation
Learn the mechanics of the VisualTrader interface and go for a test drive in the powerful VisualTrader Simulator. After a hands-on tour, you will hone your skills with a chart pattern session and learn best practices in money management. The day ends with a one hour live trading session where you can apply what you’ve learned.

Day 2 – Refining our Methods
We will dive right in and trade the markets live for the first two hours, using signals, patterns, transforms and trade plans. We’ll explore the fulcrum tool in this session and observe the phenomenon of Group Rotation. Apply what you’ve learned in a second live trading session, followed by a short review and progress report.

Day 3 – Graduation
It’s you vs. the Market on Day 3 – put your knowledge to work in a morning live trading session, followed by a mid-day review and course summary.

To see the complete seminar agenda go to www.visualtrader.com/VTBootCampAgenda


Seating is limited – REGISTER TODAY!


Check Out “Personal Stock Streamer” 9.2.1

If you’re a MetaStock user consider having a look Personal Stock Streamer to help manage all of your investment accounts, watchlists and holdings all in one place. This is free software download (when using select brokerage accounts).

According to http://softsia.blogspot.com/2008/09/personal-stock-streamer-921.html here is a a quick rundown of this nifty little program:

Personal Stock Streamer (PSS) is a complete stock streamer and trading platform for the active US investor.

With PSS, investors can:

  • Track hundreds of streaming stock tickers
  • Manage multiple accounts and portfolios
  • See intraday and historical charts with candle, line and OHLC types and technical analysis indicators including SMA, MACD, RSI, Money Flow, Bollinger Bands, Momentum, and many others
  • Mark up charts with annotations
  • Produce asset allocation charts
  • Collaborate and share stock tips and live annotated charts in real time
  • Create watchlists
  • Record filled orders in a complete transaction register supporting buy, sell, dividend, dividend reinvest,share transfers, return of capital, sell short, buy to cover and split transaction types
  • Retrieve options chains
  • Execute live trades through US exchanges including the NYSE, AMEX, & NASDAQ
  • Calculate unrealized gain or loss on a lot by lot, ticker and portfolio basis
  • Produce capital gains reports
  • Send expression based alerts to email or mobile phones
  • Exchange data with Quicken(tm),Microsoft Money(tm) and Metastock(tm)
  • Feed live tickers into Microsoft Excel(tm) for custom analysis; create custom asset classes
  • Drag and drop Internet bookmarks
  • Use a currency table and converter
  • Place a light weight stock ticker bar on the desktop
  • Read per ticker news headlines
  • Organize view layouts with any of several dozen data fields including symbol, price, change, high, low, volume, spread, bid, ask, 52 week high and low, P/E ratio, EPS, dividend, yield, beta, market cap, gain, and others
  • Get quick access to online research including EDGAR and finance.yahoo.com among others
  • Use the scripting API to develop custom indicators, reports and extensions in VBscript(tm) or JScript(tm)
  • All for free w/ supported brokerage accounts.

For more information go to: www.PersonalStockStreamer.com

Relative Strength Comparison (RSC) The Key Success Tool In Trading – Part 3

By David Jenyns

In Part 2, of Designing a Trading System in MetaStock I covered how to code the first two of the four major components of a mechanical entry system. I had explained the coding of price and liquidity. In this article, I will cover the steps for coding the remaining two components, trend and volatility, into MetaStock. In the end, you will have the complete codes for a mechanical entry system.

Let`s begin with trend identification. Remember, `the trend is your friend` when trading. You always want to trade with the trend, not against it. Think of it this way, if you were swimming in the sea, and got yourself caught in a rip tide, is it easier to swim with the current or against it? It is the same with trading with a trend.

There are many ways to identify trends, and it`s not particularly important which method you use. You just need to use one. One of my preferred methods for identifying trending stocks is to find stocks that are trading at their current highs. You can do this by stipulating that the highest high price must have been achieved in the last `x` number of days.

Once again, the variables you use will depend on the time frame you are trading. But for this example, you want the highest high price in the last 240 days to have occurred in the last 20 days.

Using the formula reference section in the MetaStock Programming Study Guide, you can find the syntax of the highest high function, and then plug in the details. Then, using the `less than` symbol, you can specify the number of days must be less than 20. In MetaStock language that would be:

HHVBars(H,240) < 20

The final component to our entry system is the volatility measure. The aim of including this formula is to identify stocks that move enough for us to make a profit, yet aren`t so erratic that they keep you up at night. There are a few ways to measure volatility. However, my favourite is the ATR method. The ATR indicates how much a stock will move, on average, over a certain period.

For example, a one-dollar stock might move five cents on average over the last 20 days. You can divide this value by the price of the stock and you will have the average percentage movement of a stock. With these values, you can stipulate a minimum and maximum daily volatility value.

For example: You may want the ATR, divided by the average closing price, over the last 21 days, to be greater than 1.5%. Therefore, the average minimum volatility must be greater than 1.5%.

Additionally, you may want the ATR divided by the closing price, over the last 21 days, to be less than 6%. This sets the average maximum volatility at less than 6%. In MetaStock language that would be:

ATR(21)/Mov(C,21,S)*100 > 1.5 and

ATR(21)/Mov(C,21,S)*100 < 6

Putting all our code together, you see what your entry system looks like:

C>1 and

Mov(v,21,s)*C > 200000 and

HHVBars(H,240) < 20 and

ATR(21)/Mov(C,21,S)*100 > 1.5 and

ATR(21)/Mov(C,21,S)*100 < 6

You now have now a workable entry system. Not only did you construct a robust system, but it also adheres to the KISS principal (Keep It Simple Simon). This system can be cut and pasted into the Explorer within MetaStock. However, the entry is only the beginning of a successful trading system. In later parts of this series, you`ll find the rest of the components that you need to design a profitable trading system.

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David Jenyns is recognized as the leading expert when it comes to MetaStock and designing profitable trading systems. His MetaStock website offers a huge free collection of trading related tips and tricks. Gain free access now.

Click Here ==> http://www.meta-formula.com/subscribe
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Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=David_Jenyns

Designing a Trading System in MetaStock- Part 2

In Part 1 of Designing a Trading System in MetaStock, I had discussed the major components you needed to be able to track to create a mechanical entry system. These were measures of price, liquidity, trend, and volatility. The question now is, how do we code this into MetaStock?

First, let me offer you the most valuable piece of knowledge I have acquired over the years about MetaStock formula writing. This one secret will turn you into a MetaStock master. Do you think I know all of MetaStock`s hundreds of pre-programmed formula and propriety indicators? Well, I`m good, but I`m not that good.

When coding in MetaStock, the key to getting it “right” is to write what it is you are trying to achieve “down in English”. Once you`ve done this, it is easy to convert it into a MetaStock formula.

Let`s look at an example. Our first entry condition is a measure of price. As mentioned in Part 1, you want to set a price minimum to remove speculative stocks. Please note that the values you select will depend on the exchange you are trading. Some markets tend to be more expensive than others. For this example, we are looking to design a long-term trend following system to trade on the Australian Stock Exchange.

In Australia anything under $1 could be classed as a speculative stock. So how do you stipulate that the stocks you want must be greater than $1? First, “write it in English”: You want stocks with a 21-day average closing price that is greater than $1. Now, you can convert this into a MetaStock formula.

Using the formula reference section in the MetaStock Programming Study Guide, you can check the syntax of a moving average. Once you have this information, it`s simply a matter of plugging in the correct numbers. Then, by using the “greater than” symbol, you can stipulate the price to be greater than $1. The MetaStock code will look like this:

Mov(c,21,s) > 1

Let`s move onto the next component, liquidity. This is a measure of how much money a stock trades. It is important to identify stocks that have enough money moving through them so that you`re never caught with a stock you can`t get out of. For this example, let`s say we require the 21-day average of volume multiplied by the closing price to be greater than $200,000. In MetaStock language this would be:

Mov(v,21,s)*C > 200000

In the next article I`ll go through the last two components needed to design a mechanical entry system in MetaStock. With this information, you will be well on your way to starting an effective, and profitable, trading system in MetaStock.

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David Jenyns is recognized as the leading expert when it comes to MetaStock and designing profitable trading systems.

His MetaStock website offers a huge free collection of trading related tips and tricks. Gain free access now.
Click Here ==> http://www.meta-formula.com/subscribe
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Designing a Trading System in MetaStock – Part 1

By David Jenyns

In this three article series, I`m going to guide you through the process I use to design a trading system using MetaStock. I’ll cover the four major components that every successful trading system has in common, and then I’ll show you how to code these components into the MetaStock program. Please note that this is by no means investment advice and any information I cover is purely for illustrative purposes.

I am a technical analyst by trade. It is my belief that all fundamental and economic influences on a stock price are taken into consideration by the market. Therefore, I focus my attention on price action. All my trading systems are based on this understanding of the market, and the rules of my systems are built to respond to price actions. In this article, I’ll cover the basic rules of trading:

  • Entry rules (when you get into a position)
  • Exit rules (when you get out of one)
  • Money Management rules (how much do you put in a trade?)
  • Back-Testing (does the system work historically?)

These four components make up a proven formula for designing profitable trading systems in MetaStock. Let’s start with the first part.

A stock passing through a precise set of conditions creates entry signals before you will enter a trade on that security. I believe the rules set to signal an entry into a position should leave no room for individual judgment. I follow the KISS principal – that is they should Keep It Simple Simon.

Remember, there is no Holy Grail of entry systems. There is no MetaStock formula that will get you in at exactly the right time, everytime. With this in mind, it’s your goal to construct a simple, yet robust entry system.

Even though I always say that the entry is the least important component of any trading system, you still must have some way to enter a trade. Here are the points that I think are important to consider when identifying possible entry points.

PRICE: It is important to set price maximums/minimums because a stock’s price can determine its attributes. For example, speculative stocks tend to be cheaper, and blue chip shares tend to be more expensive.

LIDUIDITY: This is a measure of how much money the stock trades at. You need to set minimum levels of liquidity to keep you out of stocks that simply don’t trade enough. You can risk being trapped in stocks where the market is moving against you if they have a low liquidity.

VOLATILITY: This measurement tells you how much a stock moves. It is important to trade stocks that move enough for you to make a profit, yet aren’t so erratic that you can’t sleep at night.

TREND: This is the cornerstone of technical analysis. Remember that “the trend is your friend” and that you always want to trade with it, not against it. You will need a way to measure trend in your system.

TRIGGER: This is the point that will indicate it is time to enter a trade. The trigger condition occurs only at one point in time and doesn’t hold “true” over extended periods of time, such as with a moving average cross over.

When combined, these components are going to make up your entry rules. But, before we even begin coding this into MetaStock, you need to determine one of the most critical elements of any system. What time frame are you going to trade?

+ Short-term, such as a reversal trader

or

+ Long-term, such as a trend follower

There are distinct differences between these two types of systems and your choice here will have a marked effect on every other decision you make about your system.

Short-term systems tend to require a greater time commitment, and more money. However, the benefit of trading more often is that usually your profits are more consistent, and are realised more frequently.

Conversely, longer-term systems tend to require less time, and less money. However, since you are keeping your positions open longer, you need to wait until positions are closed out before you can collect any profits.

Generally, I steer my clients, particularly those who are just starting out, to a longer-term trend following system. It takes less time, less money, there is less risk and it is easier to do than short-term trading. In addition, trend following systems tend to have a higher win to loss ratios and are psychologically easier to follow because of this.

For the sake of this example, let us construct a trend following system. In the next two articles, I’ll explain how to code the four entry components of a trend following system into MetaStock.

David Jenyns is recognized as the leading expert when it comes to MetaStock and designing profitable trading systems.

His MetaStock website offers a huge free collection of trading related tips and tricks. Gain free access now.
Click Here ==> http://www.meta-formula.com/subscribe

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