Trend Followers & The Widowmaker

The Natural Gas spread known as the Widowmaker has been getting some press recently in the WSJ and in Bloomberg/BusinessWeek, but unfortunately for you the reader, it has been plagued with poor writing. The WSJ ran one called Hedge Funds Whipsawed By Gas Bets, which I’ll dissect for you here.

Not two paragraphs into the article, the authors “anchor” you by stating that “Morgan Stanley Smith Barney clients invested in a $640 million group of funds that have emerged as some of the biggest losers in the turmoil. Hedge funds known as “trend followers”—which chase market movements, rather than making fundamental investment decisions —also appear to have been hurt on bad trades.”

By mentioning the losses, you are anchored into thinking that these clients lost a lot of money, which is not necessarily the case. Trend Followers don’t chase either: they spend most of their time waiting for their buy and sell stop orders to get hit since most markets do not trend most of the time.

Trend Followers, if they even trade spreads, were likely long the spread, not short the spread. Most trend followers trade individual contracts directionally — that is, they are either long natural gas or short it. Two, Trend Followers as a group are technical traders who don’t make “bets” based upon fundamental data…that is the realm of hedgers for the most part.

You want to sell the spread when it narrows or lessens, or becomes more negative. Conversely, you want to own something that will increase in value. This particular spread is one of several natural gas spreads that are highly liquid. You adjust the position size for the very volatility that the articles mention. The 20-day Average True Range (ATR) for the March 2001 contract is about 12 cents and it’s about 10 cents for the April 2011 contract. The ATR is a measurement of volatility. In the case of this spread, and in all spreads, you’re long one volatility and short the other.

widowmaker

click to enlarge

As you can see, the spread weakened a full 30 cents or $3,000 per spread from $0.45 to $0.15. Then it formed what looks like an inverted Head and Shoulders pattern, which can indicate a change in trend to the upside, which is the case here. I’ve applied Victor Sperandeo’s 123 Trend Reversal rules because anyone can use them and they are easy to understand. The breakout to the upside occurs at $0.20 and then the spread goes parabolic.

My guess is the WSJ is looking for some headline grabbing, but to a trained eye, the writing is poor. It took the spread approximately 4 WEEKS to move a total of $0.03 or $300 per spread from May 7 to June 7. A trend follower such as myself would never have been short once the downtrend was broken, in fact, one might have been long at $0.20.

widowmaker.weekly

March/April 2011 Weekly Chart (click to enlarge)

I’ve written about the March/April before in John Arnold & The Widowmaker back in November 2009 and this past January for the Huffington Post in Portfolio Heat: Brian Hunter Manipulated Natural Gas.

The March/April (of 2007) spread collapsed approximately $2.50 or $25,000 per spread.

widowmaker.2007

The following year’s expiration, the 2008 March/April spread narrowed $1.40 or $14,000 in approximately 5 months. Had you been short, you could have captured any or all of this move. You can trade these spreads many years out on the calendar. Hunter traded against the trend. If he made a bet, it was that the trend would reverse.

widowmaker.2008

To trade something very volatile, keep your positions small or use options to limit your losses.

Any commodity future contract can become a Widowmaker if you want it to. All you have to do is like Brian Hunter did with the “more-on” strategy: trade big in one contract and use a lot of leverage. When it goes against you, you put “more-on.”

S&P500 Still In Downtrend – SPY

S&P500

The overall trend is still down, although day traders have made a killing playing the volatility. Long term trend following and day trading are both profitable strategies, albeit both have different risk preferences.

The June’s can go to 1120 on this chart and be right at the trendline. On a discretionary basis, my preference would be to look to go short if the contract sells off after reversing off the trendline.

How To Trade The Cocoa Trend Reversal

cocoa.reversal
(Click to enlarge)

Cocoa prices have rallied substantially since I wrote How To Marry Fundamental and Technical Analysis in Cocoa.

Besides the spreads, I noted that there was a 1-2-3 Trend Reversal underway in Cocoa. Every trader wants to pick a bottom to go long. While I understand that to be emotionally appealing, you can lose a ton by getting cute. You can see in the FutureSource chart, by following the rules, that the financial rewards can be worthwhile if you can be patient. Let the market activity unfold and act accordingly.

FutureSource Cocoa Settlement prices as of April 27:

cocoa.spreads
(Click to enlarge)

When you compare Cocoa settlement prices from April 1 to April 27, you see that the spreads between contract months have come in also – they’ve narrowed.

spreads.tightening
(Click to enlarge)

If the demand for cocoa rises enough, you may see the market for cocoa change from what’s known as a carry-charge market (aka contango) to an inverted or market in backwardation. That means that the front months will be higher in price than each successive month.

The significance is that backwarded markets demand immediate delivery of existing production as fast as possible. In contrast, carry charge markets suggest storage.

The 1-2-3 Trend Reversal rules were first delineated in Methods of a Wall St. Master, by Victor Sperandeo. The rules are not particular to Cocoa and can be applied to any market.

Everyone is a Trend Follower

Get some religion. Become a Trend Follower.

Get some religion. Become a Trend Follower.

Whether someone is a fundamental trader/manager or not is irrelevant. Trends need to occur in order for a manager to make money. Their orientation might be from a value or a growth standpoint, but that hardly matters. The terms “value” or “growth” as adjectives are like saying I’ve got brown hair and hazel eyes. They help you group things like people and stocks.

Trend Following as an ethos is in our blood. It plays are major role psychologically in how we determine many of our choices – our tastes and preferences. Didn’t you want to have the cool jeans in high school? Didn’t you do everything you could to not have “skippy sneakers” or a bowl haircut?

There seems to be some dissension in the investment world because, at it’s heart, Trend Following is so easy to employ and understand, a sixth grader can get it. You don’t need a Ph.D, MBA, CFA, or CMT to to understand it.

In my experience as a teacher, professionals who are very invested in their intelligence (self-esteem wise) tend to be the most rebellious. Trend Following, they come to learn, completely annuls their need (and ability) to understand very complicated economic issues and the emotional need to make sense of why stocks go up or down. That doesn’t feel good. I can identify with that feeling. I like to be appreciated.

If a trader/manager holds a long position long enough, their “value” or “growth” story will likely come into favor. However, it will be Trend Following that moves a security up or down, and the fundamental story will come “true” – at least that’s what the stock pickers will say. The trend will be underway – new money or new demand can affect the price in an upward manner.

A good friend of mine, when asked about why a stock went up or down, would say, “Don’t know. Don’t care. My stops are in to manage my risk.” And that was his answer. Whatever the actual fundamental was at play didn’t matter. People vote their pocketbooks on election day, and in their trades.

Admittedly, it feels good to figure things out. For that I like crossword puzzles or trying to figure out a new guitar solo that I’ve heard. It’s also entertaining and fun to talk about stocks and commodities and what going on in the world. But a Trend Follower, albeit with many strong fundamental opinions potentially, only needs a buy or sell stop order to be triggered to enter or exit a trade. It is at that point (the price) where they become bullish or bearish.

Trend Followers can miss some of the initial bursts of a move, but they tend to be emotionally reconciled with that being a possibility…as long as they can catch the meat of the move.

Click here to listen to the Trend Follower podcast, or click the icon below.

Your Brain Can Work Against You – While Prop Trading

Despite yoga and meditation, your brain can work against you – naturally. But by knowing the potential dangers, you can increase your awareness and avoid the trappings, according to a study by LiveScience.

To test the effect of dopamine on decision-making, Ray Dolan, also of University College London, and colleagues carried out a test with 14 healthy volunteers under two conditions: once when given a low dose of L-dopa and once when given a placebo. Under each condition, the subjects were asked to make a number of choices consisting of either a “smaller, sooner” option, for example receiving $22 (£15) in two weeks, or a “larger, later” option, such as receiving $86 (£57) in six months.

[The “smaller, sooner” versus the “larger, later” got me thinking about the trade-offs between day trading “smaller, sooner” and long-term trend following “larger, later.”]

Every subject was more likely to behave more impulsively – choosing the “smaller, sooner” option – when levels of dopamine in the brain were boosted. On the whole, the number of sooner options chosen increased by almost a third in the dopamine scenario, although each subject varied on this measure.

“We know that sensory inputs – sights, sounds, smells and anticipation of rewards, or even of neutral cues which have been associated with rewards – momentarily boost dopamine levels in our brains, and our research shows that higher dopamine levels make us act more impulsively,” Dolan said.