Archives of “January 12, 2019” day
rssBaltic Dry Index Slides 5% To 14 Month Low, 30th Consecutive Day Of Declines
After slumping 4% yesterday to close at 2,127, the Baltic Dry has plunged yet another 5% today, to close just above 2,000 at 2,018. This is the lowest level for the index in 14 months since May 5 of 2009 when it last traded by 2,000 and a reason for all Chinese trade “resurgence” bulls to reevaluate their thesis. Did China outsmart everyone, with the Yuan “reval” coming at a time when planned foreign trade would be de minimis? In the meantime, this is bad news for Australia and Brazil, and especially the AUD and the BRL, but who cares about facts anymore.
From Reuters:
The Baltic Exchange’s main sea freight index .BADI, which tracks rates to ship dry commodities, fell to its lowest level in over 14 months on Wednesday as weak cargo activity continued to take its toll.
The index, which gauges the cost of shipping commodities including iron ore, cement, grain, coal and fertiliser, fell 5.12 percent, or 109 points, to 2,018 points in its 30th consecutive decline to remain at its lowest since May 5 last year when it fell below the key 2,000 point level.
A combination of slower iron ore activity, weaker coal imports into China and South America’s grains export season ending have put pressure on freight rates in recent weeks.
“Despite more incentive to buy spot iron ore, transactions are slow and most (Chinese) mills are reported to be destocking steel inventories and reducing production, putting continued downward pressure on the dry bulk freight market,” Arctic Securities said in a report.
Easing port congestion has also freed up vessels, adding a further drag on the overall dry freight market.
The Baltic’s capesize index .BACI fell percent 7.17 on Wednesday, while the panamax index .BPNI fell 5.02 percent.
More broadly, industry concerns over the pace of global economic recovery could hit shipping, given that about 90 percent of the world’s traded goods by volume are transported by sea.
Important Dow Milestones
Thought For A Day
Stoploss
I’m sure everyone has been presented with the following logic: put in a ‘stop-loss’ at some arbitrary amount, say losing 1%. Then, your payoff distribution is tilted towards infinity, as shown above. It’s like the idea of going to Vegas, and saying you will stop when you lose $500, so you think that you still have an equal chance of generating those +$500 and up numbers, and the bad outcomes are just truncated at -$500. Alas, it doesn’t work like the graphs above. Instead, it generates the graph below, with a lot of probability mass at the stop-loss point:
TRADERS AND THEIR IRRATIONAL BELIEFS
- What goes up must come down and vice versa. That’s Newton’s law, not the law of trading. And even if the market does eventually self-correct, you have no idea when it will happen. In short, there’s no point blowing up your account fighting the tape.
- You have to be smart to make money. No, what you have to be is disciplined. If you want to be smart, write a book or teach at a university. If you want to make money, listen to what the market is telling you and trade to make money — not to be “right.”
- Making money is hard. Nope. Sorry. Making money is actually easy. Statistically, you’re going to do it about half the time. Keeping it, now that’s the hard part.
- I have to have a high winning percentage to be profitable. Not true. How often you are right on a trade is only half of the equation. The other half is how much do you make when you’re right and how much you lose when you’re wrong. You can remember that with this formula: Probability (odds of it going up or down) x Magnitude (how much it goes up or down) = Profitability.
- To be successful, I have to trade without emotions. That is both wrong and impossible. You are human so you have emotions. Emotions can be a powerful motivator to your trading.
"Time is more important than price. When time is up price will reverse." – W. D. Gann
95% of Traders …..Doing this and Losing Money everyday
Trading Wisdom
The stock market, just like life, can change on a dime. In the market, just as in life, we must learn to adapt to change. What separates the great trader from the rest of the crowd is his or her ability to change based on current market conditions. In other words, NO EGO ALLOWED. Mark Douglas, in his first book entitled The Disciplined Trader writes,
“There must be a difference between these two types of traders-the small majority of winners and the vast majority of losers who want to know what the winners know. The difference is that the traders who can make money consistently on a weekly, monthly, and yearly basis approach trading from the perspective of a mental discipline. When asked for their secrets of success, they categorically state that they didn’t achieve any measure of consistency in accumulating wealth from trading until they learned self-discipline, emotional control, and the ability to change their minds to flow with the markets.”
We trade the current market conditions as they unfold with a plan to trade one way or the other. To do otherwise would be to fight an undefeated foe.
Buffett builds Munich Re stake
Warren Buffett, the US investor, has expanded his reinsurance holdings by becoming one of the largest shareholders in industry giant Munich Re. Buffett has built a stake worth €660m ($934m) in the German reinsurer, according to a market announcement triggered when his stake rose above 3%. It makes him the second-largest investor in Munich Re, after US asset manager BlackRock with almost 4.6%.