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Intro To Commodity Trading

commodity_trading

This course is a broad overview and discussion of the salient subject areas that one will need to navigate to fully understand the commodity space.

  • Entering Orders
  • Common Mistakes
  • Rules and regulations
  • Markets and Exchanges
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Fundamental Analysis

fundamental_analysis

Students will be introduced to what makes each of the commodity sectors tick from an international economic standpoint.

  • Grains - corn, wheat, rice
  • Metals - gold, silver, copper
  • Energies - crude oil, gas
  • Softs - coffee, sugar, cocoa
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Technical
Analysis

technical_analysis

This course sets the record straight about what is a predictive indicator and what is a lagging indicator in the commodity markets.

  • Studies in Price
  • Volume & Open Interest
  • Technical Indicators
  • Markets in Backwardation
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Trading
Psychology

trading_psyc

This course investigates why certain traders become great and why others blow up. Be prepared to journal extensively and learn about your strengths and weaknesses.

  • What You've Learned About Money
  • How Personality Shows Up in Trading
  • Ego and Self-Esteem in Trading
  • Self-Awareness
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Blog

Michael Martin On Trends

View Comments January 15 2010 | 1:00 am

In Broke: The New American Dream, Michael Covel has taken on anyone and everyone who is taking advantage of the little guy. This was one of the first questions he asked me.

Trivia: Maria Bartiromo and I were to be filmed on the same day. She – in the morning, me – in the early afternoon. She canceled, and Michael was basically there double-clicking his mouse until I showed up at about 1 pm.

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Not enough is written about spreads, and over the course of this year I’m going to change all that. In the commodity space, spreads are the lifeblood of the floor community. Fundamentally, they are relative value trades. They also set up well for commodity traders, because as such, commodity traders are ready to go long as well as short.

Not so for the typical equity trader. Even the talk of an equity pairs trade takes 6 levels of approvals from your compliance department. [Then you have to call 45 friends to figure out that there is no rebate on a commodity short sale, but I digress...]

Besides giving you more ways to be right, and potentially lower margin requirements than outright directional trades, spreads can be used as leading indicators. Take for example, the relationship between Gold and Platinum. Gold is a precious metal (and an industrial metal) and most readers will associate it with jewelry, it is involved in many electronic devices. Here’s a look at the April 2010 COMEX Gold chart.

comexgold

April COMEX Gold

Platinum is used for jewelry too, but it is mostly an industrial metal in refining petroleum products and in catalytic converters. Here’s a look at its chart – the April 2010 NYMEX Platinum.

nymexplatinum

April 2010 NYMEX Platinum

The idea being if the economy is expanding, platinum should outperform gold, relatively speaking. So if you thought inflation was at bay, you could have bought Platinum and sold Gold using the April 2010 contracts shown above. [Whatever you do to the platinum contract is what you do to the spread. In this case therefore, you would have bought the spread.]

Here is what the spread looks like through tonight’s settlement:

plgcspread

April Platinum - April Gold Spread

What you see here, is that platinum (as you expected) outperformed gold over this period of time, and especially in the last few weeks. Buying the spread in this case would have netted the trader approximately $2,600 per spread (Buy 1 Platinum/Sell 1 Gold) Here are the calculations:

spreadcalcs

Spread Calculation

You’ll see that you made all your money due to the Platinum position. You lost on Gold, but the gains on the Platinum more than covered the losses in Gold. Very rarely will you make on both legs, as they’re called. Sometimes in certain grain spreads, but don’t count on it with the PL/GC trade.

Don’t employ excessive leverage b/c you may be afforded lower initial margin on a trade like this. Take advantage of the long-term view here and let the economics evolve. Follow the trend of the spread. Here is a 15 year seasonal view of this spread, courtesy of Jerry Toepke at Moore Research (Used with Permission).

15Y 300x231 The Gold / Platinum Spread: A Leading Indicator On Inflation

15 Year Historical Study

You buy a spread when you want it to widen, or increase in value. Can you come up with all the ways this spread can widen? I’ll send a free copy of Broke: The New American Dream to the first one who emails me the solution. [Hint: I just came up with 5 ways.]

This particular spread shows what can happen when the EXPECTATION of the economy is/was favorable. You can use this spread as a leading indicator on INFLATION. Once the spread starts to narrow, or decrease in value, you reverse these positions and sell the spread. Even if this spread trade is not for you, watch its trendline b/c once it’s broken, it will indicate that the market’s perception and outlook on inflation is a worry. And that is information you can use across all your asset classes.

I will have a full course on spreads and seasonal trades for the Certificate Program called, appropriately, Spreads and Seasonals. This course is one of the Electives and will only be available for those who’ve taken the 4 Core Courses.

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The CFTC today opened its 90-day window of discussion on proposed position limits for certain commodity futures, . The suggested level is set high enough they can claim a political victory without actually doing anything valuable (nor harmful in this case).

That’s the problem with Legislators. So much time and money wasted on something like this. Wait until the first big price spike, or the existing uptrend challenges the Peak Oil highs. There will be lots of red faces, hiding and “taking a good hard look at this again.”

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Play
jim rogers 300x253 Jim Rogers Podcast #2

Jim Rogers

My mentor and I speak about Gold, commodity bubbles, Bernanke, Geithner, and I get him to answer a reader question about Market Timing.

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Not a day after I posted one of his best scenes ever, Alec posted a story on HuffPo called Put A Major Oil Company Out Of Business.

I left a few comments, which as an HP Blogger, I cannot do anonymously. You’ll have to scroll through – right now they are on Page 4 of the Comments. You can leave a comment too, anonymously or not.

My guess is he’s frustrated about our energy policy. I can identify with his frustration, but his conclusion is not a solution.

For the record, I am a fan of his, and I genuinely like his acting – regardless of his politics.

This is the second reason why he may not be on CNBC anytime soon…

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