Saturday, November 19, 2011

From John Mauldin's 'Print or Perish' post

From John Mauldin's 'Print or Perish' post (italics are mine):

"...Germany is in a game where the costs of leaving the euro, or a real euro break-up, are extremely high. But the costs of bailing out the profligate members of the Eurozone are also extremely high. Either way the cost is formidable. It is not a choice of whether they will bear a huge cost burden, but just what form that burden takes.

The Germans would like the rest of Europe to get their budgets and deficits under control BEFORE they have to accept those costs. Not getting those agreements means that there will be no end to the amount of money Germany will have to pay. It will all too soon be enough that it would put their own credit rating at risk. They can envision how that works out. Without real spending controls, what disciplines a nation to not spend as much as it can get away with?

What Germany wants is for some mechanism to insure (and assure their voters) that the rest of Europe will control their deficits. And that means some type of European-wide control on spending and for governments to give up their sovereignty in exchange for the backing of Germany and/or the ECB. Otherwise, go ahead and default and see how that works out for you.

That is a perfectly rational position. But it is a huge gamble, as allowing the crisis to go a “bridge too far” would mean an economic crisis of biblical proportions, from which the recovery would be long and brutal.

But what does Germany have to lose by pushing it? Simply giving in without some sort of real controls in place for national deficits is not a solution from the German taxpayer point of view. Allowing the ECB to print without real fiscal guarantees from the various beneficiary governments simply postpones the inevitable and means a great deal of cost in the meantime..."

Disclosure: Long FAZ.

***remember this is an illustration of what i am trading and my thinking...it is not a recommendation for you or anyone else to buy or sell this or any other security...trade at your own risk...my positions my change at any time without notice***

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Added to my FAZ position.

On Wednesday, my entry stop was triggered in the FAZ. I am now long 2 units (out of a possible 10), at $43.71.

I am offering out 1 lot in the high $60s and 1 lot in the high $70s. I will watch the chart and the headlines out of Europe for opportunities to add to or to lighten up my current position.

I will become interested in FAS in the $20s.




















Disclosure: Long FAZ.
***remember this is an illustration of what i am trading and my thinking...it is not a recommendation for you or anyone else to buy or sell this or any other security...trade at your own risk...my positions my change at any time without notice***

Articles of Interest, 11/17/11

Words of a euro doomsayer have new resonance

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Somethingness

Two weeks ago there was nothingness, and tonight there is somethingness. Back then I did not like the setups in FAS or in FAZ. Tonight I do.

Last Friday, I began to feel that the headline risk out of Europe was going to increase, so I took a very small position in the FAZ. The daily chart had bounced off support around 37, but there was really nothing else going on. I want the market/stock to confirm my fundamental or macro view, and since it didn't I exited that small position on Monday for a slight loss of 0.1% to my account. Sometimes, I get in because my head tells me to, but the market had not given me enough information to confirm my view. This is something that I have become more aware of, and I am glad that I realized this had occurred again, so I got out.

With the Italian sovereign debt issues increasing today, the markets got smashed. FAZ has recently put in a higher low, and if it can break above 45.24 then it will make a higher high, which is one definition of an uptrend. Today's upward move also generated a solid green bar. If you were to draw today's bar from yesterday's close instead of today's open, then the bar would be even bigger and could be considered an Elephant bar in Oliver Velez's world. The FAS put in a big red bar today, and the shorter term moving averages are on the verge of rolling over.

The Italian sovereign debt issue is more serious than the Portugal, Ireland, Spain and Greece issues, primarily because Italy is considered by many experts to be 'to big to bail'. Since the charts are starting to confirm my bearish longer term view, tonight I have put on a very small position in the FAZ (1 lot out of a possible 10). As long as the negative news flow out of Europe continues, and the chart responds positively, I will trade the FAZ. If things begin to get too pessimistic and FAZ roars back to recent resistance around $80, then I will consider lightening up on the FAZ, and getting long FAS. The FAS would have to get into the $3-7 range though for me to really get interested in it. I do not believe that the financial system is going to collapse, but I believe the odds are increasingly that the market is going to fear that, and take the financials out to the proverbial woodshed. Ultimately, I want to be a buyer of that deep pessimism.




















Disclosure: Long FAZ.

***remember this is an illustration of what i am trading and my thinking...it is not a recommendation for you or anyone else to buy or sell this or any other security...trade at your own risk...my positions my change at any time without notice***