Archive for November, 2009

hichefheidi asked:


If one refinery is on fire, the price goes up, if a hurricane hits, the price goes up. If a war happens, the price goes up. So, can we all see that market speculation drives the prices, and not dems or reps? Now I would be all for arguing that the war in Iraq drives the speculation…
yes, and you also have to factor in not mandating fuel efficieny in cars.
mbush, I know what you WANT me to believe, but the fact is that the price of a barrell of oil has gone up, everytime the price of gas goes up. So put on your listening ears and stop parrotting the GOP phrases.
lol…’here’.

How to Invest/trade in Oil?

sncoupons asked:


Crude oil price has dropped a LOT in recent time on per barrel bases and also the fact that it is reflected on per gallon price on gas pump. If I want to put my money on belief that it can not stay so low for too long and want to take advantage of low oil price, what is the best way to invest/trade? Is there any Oil index that I can buy/sell as share/fund? Or do I need to do it as commodity trading and open a commodity account?
Can someone please throw light on it? I am not interested in crude oil explorer companies like XOM etc but more interested to invest something that moves based on crude oil price. Please help :)

granny_sp asked:


According to Michael Greenberger former director of commodities futures and speculation trading is the sole cause of all fuel cost being so high.

Can the President declare war on these perpetrators since they have crippled our economy?
If this is a fact. What does that make all those claiming for the last several years it is supply and demand, weather…?
Why does our government refuse to end the future and speculation, or at least provide the oversight and transparency that would put an immediate halt to this?

I Want to Invest in Commodities ?

mansu asked:


I want to invest in commodities trading in through mutual funds. However, I don’t want to trade directly in commodity futures. Are there any index funds in India that invest in commodities? Also, is it a smart idea to invest in commodity index funds instead of commodities directly? As I understand it, index funds are safe because, I don’t have to invest more money when the commodities do down.

IRev. Albert Einstein asked:


commodity makets ….since the “market maker” sets the bid and ask in a slow market…also has access to view ALL the other bis and ask trades…as well as he can see where all the stops are placed.??

So isn’t that like a guy who is dealing the cards looking at everyone else hand …and ALSO betting? Shouldn’t that be illegal?
“Market maker” also trades for hs own account.
Market maker sees ALL the bids and asks and the stops…not fair.!

La Tahzan asked:


hi i was wondering if anyone could help me.. i want to buy a share in American Lithium and Minerals (AMLM).

how do i do it.? do i go on a trading or a stock platform or do i need to ring directly ..

cheers x x x x

Dina W asked:


Carbon trading worldwide reached $126 billion in 2008. Banks, which profit most, are calling for more. Experts are predicting the carbon market will reach $2 – $10 trillion in the near future. Hot air will soon be the largest single commodity traded on global exchanges.

SHOULD THE AIR EVER BECOME A COMMODITY

http://www.transworldnews.com/NewsStory.aspx?id=104031&cat=12

Possibly the most important aspect to get right in trading is survival. This is number one. Without surviving the bad times we are gone, with no hope. Money management and risk may sound like boring subjects, but read on to see how exciting they can be once you learn the concrete reasons and logic for their use. You may never trade the same way again!

Here’s the harsh reality. On average, many commodity traders trade at perhaps 30-50% accuracy when they hold positions for 2-3 days. That’s a GOOD batting average for this time frame. But, the problem is they think they can take small profits and large losses and still survive. It’s all about probability and doing the correct thing over a long period of time. Probability will eventually catch up if you are trading at 50% accuracy and taking smaller gains than losses. We must work out a trading plan that makes us take profits in proportion to the accuracy of our trading method.

One area that stands out and magnifies this problem is commodity options buying and selling. Generally, selling options far out-of-the-money with a month to expiration can sometimes give you win/loss accuracy runs of 90% + at times. However, the profits are small and that 10% loss is often a big one that can take back much if not all the little profits. Commodity account risk management is more difficult when the profits are small.

And, conversely, buying options way out of the money can yield results as low 10% accuracy. But IF the rare winning option is held for a big gain, it will make up for the many small losses – but not always. This is where your option trading and analysis skills make the big difference and give you an edge to rise above the crowd.

Just a small edge can mean so much. It’s like the difference between a golfer who hits par and one who hits a few strokes under par – who wins the tournaments? Or baseball batting averages of 275 vs: 325 – or pitchers who can throw 85 mph compared to one who can throw 99 mph. It’s like night and day. It’s the same thing with commodity futures trading. A little means so much. It’s worth striving for.

Buying commodity options can be a tough game. Remember, to win when buying an option, the futures contract must move in the correct direction and do it quickly in the time granted. That’s the only way to win. The commodity option will lose if the underlying futures contract price goes nowhere, goes in the wrong direction or even goes it the correct direction, but not fast enough! That’s why 10-20% accuracy is a good average for buying way out of the money, long term commodity options.

To succeed buying commodity options means you need to exploit the trades that work out. Forget about taking small profits, or play another game where you can take smaller profits, like day trading and other methods. The saying, “you can’t go broke taking a profit” does not apply to long term commodity option buying. (And stock option buying)

Conversely, when selling (writing) a commodity option, you will profit if the option simply does not go above a certain point in one direction by expiration time. It’s “easier” to be right when selling a far out-of-the-money option, but the profits are small in comparison and the occasional loss that comes along can sometimes be big. The commodity market really does price things accordingly. There’s no free lunches. That’s why you need to develop your edge or let someone who has one, trade your money.

To repeat, there are three ways to be wrong when buying commodity options, thus the low accuracy rate; and only one way to be wrong when selling (writing) them, thus the high accuracy of the method. The win/loss ratio and the percentage of accuracy reflects this. Call it a wash, if you will. You really need an outside edge to beat this commodity game.

If you do not know what your edge is, then you don’t have one and the market pros with an edge will eat your lunch over time. Maybe not right away, but over a long run of probabilities, they will take your money away.

Part Three of Five Parts – Next!

There is substantial risk of loss trading futures and options and may not be suitable for all types of investors. Only risk capital should be used.

By: Thomas Cathey

About the Author:
Thomas Cathey – 27-year trading veteran heads the managed futures division of Thomas Capital Management, LLC. View his TimeLine Trading market predictions and get his complete 44+ lesson, “Thomas Commodity Trading Course” – they’re all free. http://www.thomascapitalmanagement.com/commodity/welcome.htm Main site: http://www.ThomasCapitalManagement.com
Lemanski’s Ghost asked:


…when historically commodities markets are used by rich elites to dominate others, according to their own political theories?

Amy L asked:


Currently valued at over $30 billion, the carbon trading market may skyrocket to over $1 trillion as the price of carbon becomes more valuable.

Your thoughts?

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