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A bear market may last for a week, a month or even a few years, but it can take only a day, an hour or even a few minutes for the value of an investment portfolio to be slashed to half of its former value. Some bear markets start with a bang, like the crash of ?7, others creep up slowly so that investors do not realise they are in a bear market and carry on as if nothing has happened. Of course, not even the experts can accurately forecast what the market will do. However, there are signs that can indicate a bear market is approaching and, if recognised, give prudent investors time to take steps to safeguard their portfolios. The first part of this book describes how to recognise the signals that might precede a bear market, and how to watch the various indices for sell signals. The second part deals with methods to help both investors and traders to survive by understanding what changes in volume represent, when to use a moving average and how to stay ahead of the pack. Chris Tate guides the reader step-by-step through his methods, as well as using examples from his own extensive trading experience. He uses charts to explain what to look for in the market and what action to take. This is written in his usual easy-to-understand style.
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Seitenzahl: 157
Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2012
Table of Contents
Cover
Title page
Copyright page
PREFACE
PART I: BEAR SPOTTING
1: THE PSYCHOLOGY OF BEAR MARKETS
THE BULL/BEAR MARKET CYCLE
REASONS FOR PRICE REVERSAL
THE REVERSAL PROCESS
WHAT HAPPENS IN THE MINDS OF TRADERS
2: HOW TO IDENTIFY A BEAR MARKET
MARKET PHASES
MARKET VOLUME
LOOK BEYOND THE MAJOR INDICES
3: CAN WE PREDICT CRASHES?
A HISTORY LESSON
HINDSIGHT AS AN INVESTMENT TOOL
TREND AND SENTIMENT ANALYSIS
PART II: BEAR TAMING
4: THE BIG PICTURE
MARKET CYCLES IN THE UNITED STATES
THE MYTH OF OCTOBER
5: DESIGNING A BEAR MARKET TRADING SYSTEM
TRENDLINES
MOVING AVERAGES
RSI DIVERGENCES
SRSI DIVERGENCES
BREAK-OUT TRADING SYSTEMS
CONCLUSION
6: INDEX TRADING
THE SPI
BEAR TRADING THE SPI
EXIT RULES
7: USING OPTIONS TO TRADE THE SPI
RANGE-TRADING TECHNIQUES FOR THE SPI
8: PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT FOR BEAR MARKETS
RULES FOR PORTFOLIO TRADING
9: PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT USING DERIVATIVES
WARRANT TRADING FOR BEARS
PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT USING OPTIONS
RANGE TRADING
10: THE PERVERSITY OF MARKETS
11: The Bear Market Trader’s Survival Guide
APPENDIX A: NCP DIVERGENCES
APPENDIX B: APPROVED COMPANIES FOR SHORT-SELLING
GLOSSARY
Index
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© Christopher Tate 1999
This book is copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without prior written permission. Inquiries to be made to Wrightbooks.
National Library of Australia cataloguing-in-publication data:
Tate, Christopher
Taming the bear: the art of trading a choppy market
1. Stock exchanges. 2. Stocks. 3. Investment analysis. 4. Portfolio management
I. Title
Includes index.
ISBN: 1 875857 80 X
332.642
Cover design by Rob Cowpe
The cover image was obtained from IMSI’s MasterClips/MasterPhotos© Collection
1895 Francisco Blvd. East, San Rafael, CA 94901-5506, USA
The charts in this book were created using SuperCharts
PREFACE
IF ASKED TO define a bear market, most investors would say that it is a period of continually declining prices in the entire market. Such an answer would be only partly correct. A bear market may encompass the entire market, but it can also affect a subsection of the market, such as gold stocks (as in 1997), or an individual stock, such as BHP.
Furthermore, a bear market may not actually entail prices falling; prices may just drift sideways in a narrow band for a period of time.
Our definition of a bear market, therefore, is any period when prices are not trending up. This period may be a week, a month or several years. To some extent we are not concerned with time, merely the opportunity to profit from a recognisable period of either price decline or consolidation.
It is important for market participants to realise that the markets are not merely an elevator that goes one way, although this is a view held by many investment advisers, journalists and various “gurus”. Prices spend as much time going down as they do going up, and they spend the bulk of their time drifting in broad consolidation patterns. In fact, it has been estimated that the prices in all markets – be it shares, commodities or currencies – spend as much as 80% of their time going sideways. Traditionally, such a situation would be extremely frustrating for average market participants, since they would, through a lack of knowledge, be unable to recognise that prices are going sideways. And if they did recognise this, they would lack the techniques to trade and profit from these sideways moves.
SUN TZU, THE ART OF WAR, 6TH CENTURY B.C.
This book hopes to address both of these problems by demonstrating how to recognise bear markets as they emerge and how to trade both the sudden whips down and the broader consolidation patterns that they can represent. If you only have the intellectual or emotional capacity to trade bull markets, you are missing out on a whole range of opportunities offered by the market, and it will be a long time between drinks for you.
Christopher TateMelbourne,January, 1999
PART IBEAR SPOTTING
“In individuals, insanity is rare, but in groups, parties, nations and epochs it is the rule.”
NIETZSCHE
1
THE PSYCHOLOGY OF BEAR MARKETS
BEFORE BEGINNING AN exploration of the various techniques and methodologies of bear market identification and trading, it is necessary to understand something about the psychology of the market. This chapter will set the tone for the rest of the book in that it will attempt to distil many of the motivations of traders during market swings.
It has always been my contention that trading is primarily a psychological endeavour, and as such we need to understand our fellow traders. Once we understand what drives others to make decisions, our understanding of market dynamics is greatly enhanced. We will know why volume spikes at either the top or bottom of ranges, and how we can use this as a trading tool. We will know when to anticipate a change in market sentiment and how far this potential change is likely to go.
The bull/bear market cycle is the broadest definition we can possibly have regarding the cyclical nature of the market. Put simply, the market is initially dominated by the bulls. This is followed by an uneasy interregnum, followed by a swing in sentiment towards the bears. It is obvious that at any one point there will be a successful group, whose market view is confirmed by the current market trend, and an unsuccessful group, whose view is contrary to the trend.
Each of these groups will have differing characteristics. The successful traders will be motivated largely by greed, and will tend to congregate in groups with other like-minded traders. This grouping together reinforces the prevailing opinion of the herd, thereby further driving prices in a given direction and further enhancing the success of the group. This is largely why trends, when started, continue: they exist on a limited-feedback loop that is reinforced for an indefinite period of time. If you want a practical example of this, take time to visit the market display area outside one of the exchanges. During bull markets, you will notice very large congregations of amateur traders – in effect a small, rather directionless herd. Take time to watch the reaction of the crowd. The mood is generally buoyant, everyone is talkative, and positive opinions about the market are reinforced.
The unsuccessful group – whose opinions and strategies run counter to the prevailing market direction – has a different set of characteristics. Each member of the group is isolated and fearful. The members of the unsuccessful group are somewhat fragmented and disassociated from others. Again this can be seen in the market display area. Generally those by themselves during periods of peak market activity are those with a differing view to the majority. They may be long when it is time to be short, or vice versa. They might be attempting to counter-trend trade. This disassociation from the main group is to be expected. Within crowds, contrary opinions are not tolerated, and only become accepted when the opinion of the crowd changes. Consider the scene outside exchanges when market sentiment swings bearish very quickly. The majority of market participants never consider this to be a possibility. As such, their mood is pensive and withdrawn. There is no celebration, as everyone feels isolated within their own cocoon of fear.
Within any market cycle, there will be those who are successful and those who are unsuccessful. There is no discrimination as to whether you are successful during a bull or a bear market. The characteristics of each group remain the same. The successful move as a group, reinforcing prevailing opinions, and the unsuccessful are isolated and withdrawn.
This leads me to recommend some homework for traders. Spend a few days in the market display area of the stock exchange, observing people and how they react to changes in the market. Watch their facial expressions, their mood and the general level of noise. Such an experience will give you an insight into the psychology of crowds. Consider this little exercise to be the first step in understanding a subject I call “Trader’s Anthropology 101”. If you can gain insights into crowd behaviour, the indicators we will look at later will have more meaning, and they will provide you with a much greater intuitive sense of what is happening in the market.
Trading is about spotting trends as they develop. Trends naturally arise out of price reversals, but the question is: why do prices reverse and new trends become established? The traditional answer to this question is that there is a change in underlying fundamentals, and this change is transmitted into the price. This argument is inherently flawed, since fundamentals often have no impact on price whatsoever, and whatever influence they do have is filtered and distilled by the perceptions of the traders who make up the market.
There is a simpler, more efficient answer as to why trends persist and then change. A trend will continue in a given direction for as long as there are new market participants to give it impetus. Quite simply, a trend will continue as long as there is new money. This is why reversals come at extremes of sentiment. Markets become bullish when everyone is bearish, and vice versa. As an example, consider the following chart.
FIG. 1.1 – MARKET REVERSALS
One point is immediately apparent – market reversals occur as sentiment peaks in either a bullish or bearish direction. In the case of swings from bull to bear markets, the market becomes bearish when everyone is bullish. If you consider this, it is extremely logical. Investor expectations are simply irrational in respect to the potential gains left in a given move. As such, these expectations are easily deflated and are prone to wild swings. Such a development is quite easy for the average market participant to imagine. Consider the last time you had a trade that was profitable. It is most likely that your mood was positive and optimistic. You probably assumed that the move would go on forever. Now contrast this mood with how you felt when this trade started to go bad. Your mood probably swung from wildly positive to the depths of despair. Trading can be an extremely emotional endeavour, and many treat a reversal of fortune as if the love of their life had just left them. This is the behaviour of crowds, and it is replicated in each individual who makes up the crowd.
If you think such behaviour is only the preserve of the amateur trader, consider the following table (Table 1.1).
TABLE 1.1 – “FORECASTING” RECORD OF MUTUAL FUNDS BASED ON CASH-TO-ASSETS RATIO
This table tracks the performance of mutual funds in the United States for the period 1956 to 1988. It analyses the cash-to-assets ratio of the funds, and then uses this as an indicator of whether the fund is bullish or bearish. This investment stance is then reviewed to see if the funds’ predictions were correct.
In a sample period of 32 years, the fund managers got it right on only four occasions, and these four instances can be put down to coincidence. What was found was the funds were most bearish, i.e. fully invested in cash, as the market became bullish, and they were most bullish, i.e. fully invested in equities, before markets peaked. These funds displayed exactly the same irrational behaviour as the majority of market participants. There is no reason to believe that these particular observations regarding fund managers do not apply in Australia.
In returning to the reasons why trends change, there is an even simpler explanation than the psychological characteristics of traders. Trends simply run out of steam when there are not enough new market entrants to sustain a move. Prices reverse when the investment community is fully committed to a given point of view.
This can be illustrated with an analogy. Imagine there is a group of people pushing a car up a gradually-steepening hill. Each time the gradient increases, a new member is added to the team at the back of the car. This would not be a problem if the gradient was increasing at the same rate with which fresh pushers were arriving. Imagine, though, that the gradient is increasing at a rate greater than that with which fresh pushers are arriving. Sooner or later, simple physics wins. The team are no longer able to maintain forward momentum. Their efforts stall, and the car begins to move backwards, despite frantic efforts to move it ahead. These last-ditch efforts can be seen in the terminal phases of price moves, as traders attempt to push prices higher. Such activity shows up as volume spikes, and is referred to as “climax” or “blow off” volume. I prefer to think of it as the bulls going under for the final time.
What we have examined so far has provided a broad overview of the behaviour of crowds when markets pivot through their broadest of cycles. The next step is to apply this to a real-world example and to see what sort of insights this understanding can bring us. More importantly, we want to see how this knowledge can help us to be more profitable in our trading.
The chart on the following page (Fig. 1.2) is of BHP, and was chosen because of the sustained bear market BHP endured after attempting to move to a new high. As such, it is ideal for examining the reversal process and how this process influenced traders to change their opinions. This, in turn, changed prices and the prevailing trend.
FIG. 1.2 – BHP REVERSAL PROCESS (1997)
Three points are noted on the chart: the reversal point, the retest and the confirmation of the new trend.
At the reversal point, the majority of traders involved in BHP held the same opinion. This opinion roughly went along these lines: good shares always make new highs, my broker says it’s going to reach $30, we are in the middle of a bull market, good shares never go down, etc., etc. Each one of these phrases is designed to confirm the prevailing opinion, and imagery such as saying a share is cheap or undervalued is very powerful. Crowds are susceptible to very simple phrases, since, as we have seen, the market is a very emotional place, and reason dissipates in the face of positive emotions. These powerful phrases also have the added weight of being elucidated by someone in a perceived position of authority: a broker. As such, many in the market take these pronouncements to be some sort of mysterious divinity that should not be questioned. The power of the expert should not be underestimated in shaping the beliefs of the investing public. These beliefs are also reinforced by the fear of missing out on future gains.
However, as we have seen, there is simply not enough money to sustain continual moves in a given direction, and momentum will falter. This faltering can be seen in the first part of the move away from the high. It is important to note that this initial move down is the reversal point. The underlying sentiment in the market is beginning to change.
Some astute traders will have seen this change in tone and will begin to sell. Prices are now in an uneasy equilibrium between bullish and bearish. This unease is beginning to filter into the mood of market participants, since prices are beginning to slip against positive expectations. The successful group – who have ridden BHP up – are now in danger. Despite this, they will cling to their positive expectations, even in the face of mounting evidence against them.
This phase is the last attempt by the bulls, who had been very successful, to reassert themselves, and momentarily their beliefs are confirmed, as the stock rallies. Their fear of missing out on potential gains is somewhat assuaged. This is a classic bear trap, and it constantly catches the unwary. It is at this point that technical indicators will contradict the move up. Astute traders with a good trading method will now be getting extremely powerful sell signals. Sentiment has swung the way of the bear. The bears are about to become the successful group, and the bulls are about to feel the pain of unrealised expectations. Fear starts to raise its head among the bulls, as expectations diverge from reality. Traders have gone from expectations of a never-ending series of highs to the unpalatable truth that prices may actually decline. The interesting point to note is that this fear does not translate into action, as we will see in a later chart. Fear among market participants is initially manifested as paralysis, as they face mounting evidence that their opinion is wrong.
Crowd sentiment changes at this point. The downward spikes in price shake more of the bulls from their positions, and they join the bears. The crowd now starts to look for justification of its opinion in the underlying fundamentals of price. Note that price comes before fundamentals. Fundamentals serve merely to reinforce existing feelings about a move.
In the case of BHP, it was easy to find fundamentals to justify the decision to be short. Commodity prices were poor, senior management seemed incapable of running a hot bath, BHP was being squeezed in all its markets, the Asian economic crisis meant a general downturn in business. Yet these factors took hold in the minds of traders only after prices began to slip, and in the minds of some in the market-place these factors held no sway at all, and they continued to buy on the way down.
Those who bought all the way down are eternal bulls, and are myopically optimistic and generally lacking a sense of reality. It should also be noted that there are eternal bears, who are consistently negative in their trading stance. Neither group is successful.
