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 It's
been a tricky environment for sector relationships since the July
bottom. The U.S. dollar has turned sharply higher, particularly against
European currencies; commodities have fallen significantly; U.S. stocks
have bounced; and the shares of emerging markets have lagged. You
couldn't ask for a more thorough unwinding of themes from earlier in
the year. Just in the last few days, we've seen housing stocks break
out to multiweek highs (bottom chart), while energy shares languish
near their lows (top chart).
Once these themes unwind, they go
further than one would expect from a normal correction, shaking out
large numbers of participants. Conversely, those who catch the turn in
themes can make significant money in a relatively short period. While
in London, I read an interesting piece in a financial publication that
noted that the sharp down move in gold was initiated and sustained
almost entirely in the futures markets by large participants who were
trading an algorithmic relationship vis a vis the U.S. dollar. Gold may
be classified as a commodity, but it trades as a currency when these
algorithms dominate.
All of this makes it difficult to be a
classic trend follower or a fundamental, longer-term participant
waiting for relatively undervalued assets to return to (or overshoot)
their fair value. The normal way of trading those approaches is to wait
for markets to confirm your views and then gradually add to positions
as the markets move your way. When themes unwind, however, such a money
management scheme almost ensures that a trader will be running the
greatest risk just as markets reverse.
I'm not sure there's an
easy answer to this dilemma. Either you stick to long-term views and
prepare yourself for considerable noise and retracement, perhaps by
hedging markets that have moved sharply in your favor, or you
supplement your longer-term core positions with more active trading to
lighten up risk as markets have moved your way and add risk on the
large pullbacks. Either way, the investor is prodded to become more of
a trader if for no other reason than money management. You can't afford
to be scaling into positions just as markets are ready to make violent
turns.
For the more active, shorter-term market participant,
it's a different challenge. The idea that you are trading just one
instrument or asset class is seemingly increasingly outdated in a
global financial environment. You may choose to express your market
views through a single instrument--an potentially inefficient way of
deploying capital in a literal world of alternatives--but to not know
how your instrument is affected by others is to run the race for
returns with at least one leg tied. Many stock market moves, for
instance, are intimately tied to what we're seeing in the U.S. dollar,
commodities, and interest rates. Trading without awareness of those
relationships leaves traders in the dust when those markets turn,
taking stocks with them.
Does this mean you have to become a
macro-economic fundamental trader? I don't think so. It does mean,
however, that the playing field has become wider and faster as
increasing capital chases a finite number of markets and market
relationships. The speed with which you manage positions and the
breadth of markets you track change as a result. Many failures that I'm
seeing and reading about among traders are the result of experienced
traders trading new markets in old ways. The traders that are thriving
are broad of vision, fleet afoot; they've adapted to changed realities.
It
all reminds me of changes in communication technology. Back in the day,
the letter sent by parcel post was a primary means of communication.
With the advent of the telephone, communication became more immediate.
Now, some people continue to rely on telephones. Others ground their
communication in email. Still others are instant messaging and text
messaging. Yet others are joining multiple communities and aggregating
instant communications across them. Harder, faster, better, stronger?
I'm not sure of all those Darwinian consequences of shifting markets,
but recent markets *are* different: not only in their extent of change,
but also in their rate. And they leave few countries for old men.
Originally posted at: http://traderfeed.blogspot.com/
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