Tag: Commitments of Traders

  • New funds to trade

    All traders look for an edge, an ideal way to enter, manage and exit a trade.

    It is crucial that a chosen edge suits us individually too.

    The time-critical stress of the day traders world is probably not for everyone. Nor, for others, the weeks or months of being out of the money, as in the longer time frame deals.

    However, if we have the time, the knowledge and the inclination we might be comfortable trading in both disciplines.

    More than this, one helps to condition the other. In day trading we have learnt the art of the identification of a likely trade. In longer-term trades, we appreciate the need for trade management and a requirement to ignore emotion and the uncanny ability to hit targets when we are not necessarily observing the trade moment to moment.

    A big supporter of the commitments of Traders (COT) report, not everyone is as it is infrequent in its signals and notoriously broad in its message. However, with longer bets, as a ‘conditional’ trader, the COT provides arguably the only edge that is not in itself related directly from the price.

    Day trading has provided us with skills that can be coupled very well with the longer term charts and this, in conjunction with the COT, offers an exciting way forward.

    With additional funds coming in to trade, we looked at what would complement our day trades but not emotionally or otherwise interfere.

    Significant commodities and a selection of currencies traded from weekly charts in unison with the COT is our chosen direction.

  • Slow Trader Trades

    In our fund (Slow Trader) we recently invested short – that is to say, we want the price to go down – in Gold, Silver and Copper. (This strategy is a one to three-month trade, but varies slightly for each commodity). 

    Fund exposure is currently £70,738 (we are leveraged)

    Silver stop risk is £1,953 – between 4 trades.

    Silver target is £4,633 – between 4 trades.

    Gold stop risk is £1,252 – on one trade. (A limit order is in place to short more if gold price rises).

    Gold target £2,518 – on one trade.

    Copper stop risk is £1,929 – between 2 trades.

    Copper target £2,918 – between 2 trades.

    We use the Commitments of Traders (COT) report to give us a small edge. The COT is, other than cyclical analysis, probably the only indicator that is not price based. And, therefore, an independent view-point. We combine the COT with our own technical analysis of each commodity.

    Here is an example of the COT released last night. The same information is available for each of our commodities. My attention is on what Commercial is doing.

    Snip20160319_6

    The importance of getting the technical analysis right is due to the COT being in lag by nearly 2-weeks. Which, based on our strategy, is between a half and a quarter of the expected trade duration. In other words, we need to use a good amount of interpretation (and rely on technical analysis) for a significant chunk of the trade time.

    More specifically, COT figures are from each Tuesday but are not available until late evening (UK time) on the following Friday (i.e. 10 days). As the markets are closed till Sunday night (UK time) it puts the COT information nearly 2 weeks old. But even with that considered it’s still the best, broad, indicative information we have – other than our own technical analysis.