Top Performing ETFs

Discussion in 'ETFs' started by investics, Feb 17, 2009.

  1. <b>Market View - 29.Mar.2010</b>

    <b>NYSE Percent of stocks above the 50 Day MA: 78%</b>

    Buy Aggressively
    Buy Cautiously
    Hold
    Sell Cautiously
    <b>Sell Aggressively</b>

    (the highlighted option is my current sentiment)

    There is no reason to take any risk here. We will now wait for the market to pull back. I will be looking for a sell exhaustion day to get back in.

    The last three times I did this i was able to time the entry very very close to the short term bottoms.

    And all of the three times I made my buys after 3:45 PM.

    My short position <b>DRV</b> is still in the red, but I feel confident that it is going to recover soon.

    I am mostly in <b>CASH</b> right now.
     
    #211     Mar 29, 2010
  2. wellsley

    wellsley

    Hi investics...

    Your plan to wait and see sounds like a good one. It would seem risky to go all in with a short position at this point. It appears that the market, after trading in the same range for the past 7 months or so, is well in the process of migrating to a new HIGHER trading range. We will have to wait to see what that range ultimately will be but there is a possibility that the prices we're seeing right now could be the lower end of the new range.

    Good luck... wellsley
     
    #212     Mar 29, 2010
  3. Investics, I'm perhaps a little fuzzy about the research. Do you really need a rank percent to tell the percent of stocks near their low? Visually, I can see 30 and 80 appearing optimal, yet I get the sense that this is a curve fit most likely but certainly not purposely, and the bet against has enough temporal time to physically move the price to a different level beyond what you expected it to do.

    What is anymore causal about a strength ranking that tells more about where we're at than where we're going? At least, that's one of the problems I have with it fundamentally, but in real time taking small positions should reduce your DD.


    If this was a strategy and I wanted to do it, I would create this dataseries and watch the RSI. Theoretically your indicator would be correlated with it.

    The 30-80 rule I believe is the same as the trend is your friend argument when the 50 day is above the 200 day. Tops are hard to call, and, truthfully mathematically complex and quantitative. I think a little more quantitative than this. Try RSI on this percent price chart and see if you don't get a more robust result.

    Without doing anything, that was my first impression. I know any input is good.
     
    #213     Mar 29, 2010
  4. <b>wellsley</b>

    Thanks for your comment.

    I like to call myself a <b>Early Reactor</b> than a <b>Speculator</b>.

    We will just follow the trend of the market with minimal risk.

     
    #214     Mar 30, 2010
  5. <b>bwolinsky</b>

    Thank you so much for taking the to time to analyze and post.

    Kindly note that, this is not the only indicator I use to enter or exit the market.

    I have never used a technical indicator to make buying or selling decision. I am a strong believer in quantitative approaches.

    The goal of making traders/investors aware of this method was to give them some idea about the overall breadth of the market which many seem not to take into consideration.

    But I do think it is worth a shot to test the RSI.

    Hope we hear from you again....

    Cheers!

     
    #215     Mar 30, 2010
  6. A Strange coincidence occurred yesterday.

    <b>S&P 500 Index ($SPX) at close

    03/31/2010 - 1,173.27
    03/30/2010 - 1,173.27 </b>

    A pretty flat day yesterday.

    Below Average volume.

    I am beginning to see the money flow outward.

    Could this be the beginning of the pull back????

    My short position in <b>DRV</b> is finally in the green.
     
    #216     Mar 31, 2010
  7. Even though the market closed in the RED.

    The sell off was not strong enough to conclude the beginning of a down trend.

    Money did flow out. But sellers don't seem to be active.

    My short position(DRV) was in the green at close.

    <b>Status: Mostly in Cash waiting for a pullback, a small short position.</b>
     
    #217     Apr 1, 2010
  8. <b>Top 10 ETFs according to their one month performance with at least $5M in daily average dollar volume.</b>

    Symbol One_Week_Performance Two_Week_Performance One_Month_Performance*
    FAS 4.74 10.25 33.55
    DRN 2.45 3.12 30.54
    EDC 17.96 18.37 25.96
    URE 1.48 3.14 19.48
    UYG 2.98 6.8 18.73
    TNA 3.78 8.01 17.88
    UPRO 4.32 6.67 17.39
    AGQ 14.87 16.25 16.25
    UCO 14.12 15.66 15.66


    * copy paste into Excel to see the table
     
    #218     Apr 2, 2010
  9. <b>NYSE Percent of stocks above the 50 Day MA: 85%</b>

    Buy Aggressively
    Buy Cautiously
    Hold
    Sell Cautiously
    <b>Sell Aggressively</b>

    (the highlighted option is my current sentiment)

    My opinion hasn't changed in the last two weeks. The Market is over bought to be making new buys. This is too risky for my taste. I did leave some money on the table due to my early exit, but I feel very comfortable with my decision.

    <b>Have a FANTASTIC WEEK!</b>
     
    #219     Apr 5, 2010
  10. <b>Market View - 06.Apr.2010</b>

    <b>NYSE Percent of stocks above the 50 Day MA: 87%</b>

    Yesterday was a solid green day across the board, but the volume was below average.

    Money flow has been decently inward the during last two trading days.

    My short position in the bear ETF <b>DRV</b> is below the line at -4.93%, I am still holding for now.


    Cheers!
     
    #220     Apr 6, 2010