Feb 18 – update

The FOMC minutes are out in about 12 minutes. They may give clues to whether the fed will increase rates in June

This should have an affect on TLT obviously. Let’s see what happens.

The little relief bounce was nice this am. Maybe it’s found some support?

Positive news from the minutes. Dovish.

Portfolios recovered a lot today. Good day.

It was an inside day today for TLT. Maybe we have some real hopes at a rebound? Would be greedily nice 🙂

A good quote below:

“The least amount of decision
making you have in your process
the more likely you are to make
money.” – Richard Chignell

Feb 18 – Trade Plan (MIC analysis and thoughts)

I’ve looked at a few new adjustment parameters to the MIC trade

Adjustments on the Upside:

First two weeks of trade

1. Delta @ 25 = Roll up debit spread 10 points

2. Short Call doubles in value = Remove 1 unit or roll up 10 points

Next 1.5 weeks of the trade

1. Short call reaches 1.5x value = remove 1 unit

Last portion of the trade

1. Short call reaches 1x value = remove 1 unit

The basic tenet is that the first two weeks we want to give the trade a little room to breath. If Delta of the entire position hits 25, we’ll roll up the debit spread portion by 10 points and we’ll monitor with an alert when the short call doubles in value. If it doubles in value, we’ll either roll that up 10 points or close off 1 call spread unit.

During the next 1.5 weeks we’ll be a bit more aggressive on upside adjustments. Why? Well Gamma starts to play a big role when we’re halfway through the trade. We’ll have an alert on when the short call reaches 1.5x value and we’ll close a spread.  Our upside risks at this point will be drastically reduced. We’ll sacrifice a bit in whipsaw markets but we’d likely still end up with a profit at the end of the month. That’s the goal.

 

Upside is the toughest part of the trade to manage. It’s what crushed me in October. If I had managed the trade THIS way, I’d be out for a profit.  I don’t necessarily hate how I managed October, it just turned the trade into a high variance one and that was not really the intent.  It was the same way I managed the trade successfully before and I was profitable while other guys were -8%.  I would push the upside with rolling calls (instead of removing them).  It adds profit and for the most part, it’d work like 95% of the time, the other 4% you’d lose and 1% you’d get absolutely annihilated like what happened in Oct/Nov. The only way I would run into trouble at that time is if we broke all time records in all sorts of metrics, and if SPX marched 220 points in very short order, which it did :). It was the most pronounced V recovery.  I think the market rose 220 points (SPX) in like 9 trading days.  Annnyways, not to dwell on the past, but the changes above would allow for a much lower variance way of achieving similar results over time.  It’d generate an average of 3% a month with a positive rate of 97%.  It has been backtested with similar parameters in all market types since 2007. We’re going to manage the upside in such a manner that worst case we should end up positive regardless of how the market goes.  The downside is/was easy for me to manage. I don’t mind downside/bear markets with the MIC. I successfully navigated the early October fall (10%) with ease.  The upside is what ALWAYS hurt the trade with the way I managed it.  I’ve given the trade a 2 month break and I’ve thought about how to manage it.

 

Adjustments on the Downside:

Like I’ve mentioned a few times, I used to manage the MIC like a job, I’d be making small adjustments throughout the trade and at times felt like I was playing the market like a fiddle. Eeking out 4%-5% returns until the small adjustments got me killed in October. There’s a trade off to everything. I am convinced normal moderate adjustments based on a trading plan is much better. It removes discretion, it removes yourself as an enemy and it keeps the stress low. This is how I trade now. (Well it’s getting better and better!).

Here’s some things I’ve found that I’d like to continue to explore

1. Instead of buying the monthly disaster (black swan) put (which loses effectiveness towards end of trade as time value shrinks and effects of Vega are reduced). Why not use long dated puts which are packed full of time value (and hence Vega effects are pronounced)? Then I thought, why not use the same disaster insurance method we use for the protector portfolio? It’s perfect. We’d likely end up paying for the long puts over time reducing the costs of the trade AND we’d be much more protected in any correction/flash crash or what have you. The risk profile with a monthly put vs a year put with increased volatility is astounding. The trade would always be profitable in a flash crash or large correction.  Using the protector portfolio method of buying long dated puts (130%) and selling against each week (30%) to pay for it.  Needs more exploration. On my list of to-dos.

2. On downside movements add butterfly spreads as a hedge method. We used to just add either a debit spread or a long put but a butterfly spread could be a lot cheaper. Obviously, there trade offs here.  A long put will be very expensive in whipsaw but very effective if the market keeps falling. A debit spread is the second best, it’ll be less effective in a downward market than a long put but it still helps, and you can keep adding them with less cost if it ends up being a whipsaw movement. The next is a butterfly spread which is the least effective in a downward movement but much less costly and hence less harmful if a reversal should occur.  So we have three things in our arsenal

1. Buy long put

2. Debit spread

3. Butterfly spread

On the downside, I’d like to adjust @ delta 25 for the first two weeks and delta 20 for the last 1.5 weeks.

 

How were my latest results

May: 5.69%

Jun: -2.65%

July: 1.01%

Aug: 7.24%

Sep: 4.8%

Oct: 0.78%

Nov: -9.7%

Dec: 2.01%

 

I skipped January and February.

November was a very difficult month. On the up trend I was rolling my calls forward on large up days. I started the trade when SPX was @1820 and it ended at @2060.  If it was anywhere close to say 2020 or 2030, it would have worked out. But it didn’t. I find that lately anythign that can go wrong with a trade will often go wrong 🙂  In November it was this trade, in February its the TLT trade. Things often go way past what you think they can.  It’s protecting against that and yourself and that is the key.  I mean, hey, in November this affected my portfolio quite a bit but this month with the equally annoying move in the TLT trade, I am so diversified, that I am still up overall.  That’s the key, diversification and proper sizing and proper allocations to a variety of strategies.

 

Feb 17 – Trade Update

TLT continues to wreak some havoc on some of the portfolio. TLT fell another 1.5% reaching a critical support line. It’s fallen 10% this month. Just 9 trading hours ago TLT was around 131 and our SPY/TLT pair trade was negative but still OK. Now the TLT/SPY pair trade is down over 20% and our momentum trade is just above break even for the year. TLT rose 9.9% in January only to fall the same in February. Quite volatile for Long term treasuries.

Screen Shot 2015-02-17 at 10.30.06 PM

 

The 10 year yield is up 50 bps this month and if it ended here today it’d be the largest 1-month increase since 2009 (Dec).    We should hopefully see support on the B line above.

Frustrating that through the last 6 weeks we’ve navigated well despite a volatile environment and were profitable in month 1 only to be quite affected in month 2 by a pretty large and RARE drawdown in TLT (10% in 15 days?) Bonds? Really?  Anyways, I digress, we’ll see how the month ends. The accounts are up but they’d be up a ton more if we didn’t have this insane 15 day relentless fall in treasuries. Not only that, I personally just got out of watching my US equivalent balance collapse because of the EURO (I keep about 1/3rd in EU because I live in EU). Always something 🙂

Any positive news? The protector portfolios are doing well, especially the alpha portion. Fucking love this hedged portfolio. It’s truly brilliant.  I get tempted to just do this and some MIC and cut the other bull shit.  I especially love the use of the alpha quant signals and the results it brings.

I am not sold that the SPY/TLT correlation will remain as it was for the past 5 years (which we back tested). We’ve had a 30 year bond bull market and treasury rates are very low (I know in EU some are negative) but I just don’t ‘trust’ in the strategy as a main element of the portfolio and I don’t trust that US rates will necessarily drop. I don’t trust the correlation is present in all market types and I don’t trust that the correlation has to continue. Though the backtests for the last 5 years are fantastic, I want (and have) downsized the allocation. This month I did about 1/3rd the amount.

I’ve re-analyzed the old annoying MIC (modified iron condors) trade and have added a small amount earlier this month, it’s doing v. well. I’ve changed the adjustment parameters and have set it to be strictly non-discretionary and alert based. I am comfortable with it, especially with proper sizing and I’ve rethought how to handle the upside risks. This method produces a 97% win rate (anything above 0%) with an average of 3% per month with a max loss of 7%. It works in any market type. I swore away from getting back into it, but it’s sort of like home for me. I’ve got so much experience running the things albeit I ran it very discretionary which causes an insane amount of stress. The only way to run it is with proper position sizing within the portfolio and with alerts and a proper trading plan. No discretion. So far I’ve got one alert this month, loaded up the application, adjusted my debit spreads. That was that. No thoughts, no checking, no discretion. 

 

Weekend commentary

Everyone seems focused on the Greek situation but I don’t think any near term news will be a large market moving event. Obviously if contagion goes above and beyond expectations or if it leads to other PIGGS wanting to exit then yah, of course, but I refer to the immediate upcoming news. Everyone knows about it, everyone expects it and recent headlines aren’t really moving the markets. In 2008, most people didn’t know what (CDS and MBS) stood for and surely had no idea the risk it could pose to the financial system. That’s more of a blindside that causes down moves. With the grexit you have everyone and their mothers uncle talking about it in coffee shops. It’s priced in. Any banks with exposure to Greece have long ago hedged their risks. So we have the market at all time highs again leading into the weekend (a long weekend at that) where Greece news is expected. It looks like No one seems to care about the risks Greece poses. At least not yet.

I am surprised by TLT, it continues down (as rates increase on the long term treasuries) despite continuing downward and, for the most, part negative rates in EU. That should help keep a base in TLT and set it up for a bullish move up.  I’d like to see it find some support around 127.5/128 range. Else, it’ll continue to put pressure on our overall portfolio.

Feb 12 – Trade update

We did great yesterday. Our momentum portion (happens to be Treasuries, bonds and REITs) held its own while the market roared which allowed us to gain some significant ground. Today we are seeing a bit of downside in the momentum portion and even more gains in the equities.

The alpha portion is doing well. The pair trade is still suffering but time could heal that.

I wanted to post a review of our portfolios

Protector (Alpha + Standard):  This is the all-weather portfolio. It’s a completely hedged equity portfolio. We purchase year-out ATM spy puts in the amount to 100% insure the equity and then we purchase about 30-40% in additional puts of which we sell against on a short term basis with enough extrinsic value to pay off the hedge over the course of 1 year. In essence, we purchase 140% 1-year out ATM puts, sell 40% short term puts with enough extrinsic value on a weekly basis (approx 65c) to cover the entire cost of the 140% long puts. It’s been backtested to death and works well with a very very low max draw down. A great strategy that can take on a little leverage. In essence, our portfolio is completely protected and performs in any bear markets though does slightly under perform in a prolonged bull market. Essentially, It performs in all market types but does have challenges in an on-going whip saw environment. The way I sell the puts is quite complicated and combats the whip saw weakness. This method took a few years to fine tune. All the complication is in how the weekly puts are sold. The secret sauce.

Further ,We do a split where we have the regular old market via RSP and another half of alpha generating equities that do have correlation to the regular market so as to be protected in any bear market. The alpha generation is based on a variety of quantitative analysis strategies. In general the alpha comes from some momentum analyis, quantitative analysis (mechanical trading) and even some 13F cloning.

Momentum: This component rotates through 15 ETFs (bonds, equities, treasuries, some commodities and REITs) by selecting the top 3 of the lot based on some relative strength analysis amongst other things and further the three must be above the 200 DMA and rotating on a monthly basis. It has a max draw down of 10-15% and expected to return 15-18% a year. It naturally avoids bear markets by selecting non-equity ETFs like TLT and VNQ during those environments. We’re currently in TLT, VNQ, LQD.  Those three have provided a 8+% return in January alone but are down 6-7% in February.

SPY/TLT pair trade: This is an option based strategy where we do a pair trade of credit spreads of SPY and TLT which are negatively correlated.  We did well in January and are still in the February trade. This is the highest variance portion of the portfolio and does have a smaller allocation.

Earnings Volatility trades:  We’ve done a few earnings volatility trades this year (GOOG, TSLA, SCTY, NFLX, FB, MSFT, BABA).  These are volatility based trades and are completely unrelated to any of the above.

Feb 11 – Trade Update

Yesterday was a pretty good day for our portfolio despite the fact that TLT just fell another big chunk to 129 ish. It seems to have found some support with interest rates on the 10 year being around 2%. Obviously our momentum portion is down about 6%-6.5% for the month. That’s about 25% of our portfolio.  However,  Our alpha portion is having a great month and is kind of making up for some of that loss. We’re down on the month but we’re inching closer and closer to break even. We had a good Jan so if we can eek out a small gain in Feb with all of this crazy volatility, I’d be v. pleased. I mean, the S&P is up 5%, down 4%, up 5% down 5%. The TLT is up 10% then down 6.5%. It’s not easy an easy environment especially with our pair trades of which haven’t been all that negatively correlated lately. Both SPY and TLT were moving down in sync. That causes pain in a pair trade. However, we are still doing well and we’re positive so I am happy about that.  With a little bounce in TLT/REITs we’ll be very profitable over all.

I read a relevant article today. it starts off with “I got crushed last week. The accounts that I manage (for the most part) suffered losses and were down for the week. “.

Rough Week For Bonds: Why I’m Staying The Course

That was us with our TLT/REIT portion. Luckily we have a well diversified set of strategies that work to offset each other in extreme times. The volatility this year is astounding and it’s a roller coaster ride watching our balance move.

 

 

Feb 10 – Trade Plan

I was jut reviewing yesterdays protector results.  The market closed down -.45% and our result across both alpha and standard was -0.12%.  Doesn’t say much but it does give some indications to how the protector portfolio behaves overall.

TLT crashed after hours going down from about 131 to about 130.16.  The high of the day was around 132.  I don’t love seeing that but it should find support around 129/130 area.

Feb 8 -Trade Update

We just had a fantastic blow out jobs report that has contributed to the fall in TLT, VNQ and LQD.  The basic tenant is that good numbers will prompt the fed to increase rates earlier rather than later and this pressures REITs, Utilities and Treasuries. Unfortunately this is the bulk of our momentum portfolio! However, I mean, the global situation is deteriorating (bad Chinese data, Greece, Ukraine etc) so who knows where the month will end.  Despite the positive numbers, many experts don’t see a reason for the fed to increase rates this year.  Alas, the market reaction (OVER-reaction) was a sell-off in anything affected by higher interest rates. This affects our momentum portfolio.

Momentum Portfolio (February)

In the momentum portfolio we still hold TLT (+.06%), VNQ(-0.33%) and LQD(+0.06%).  The momentum portion of our portfolio is suffering this month. It’s not overly surprising as we did just have an epic month in this portion of the portfolio, I guess we’re just reverting to the mean.  I mean, we’re probably still up 4% overall on that part. So no complaints! Though I post these sorts of short term results, we shouldn’t really be taking them so seriously.  The momentum strategy will average 14-16% a year (if we leverage 1.6x it’ll be 22-25%) and we’ll have periodic draw downs of 10-12% ( 16-20% leveraged). That’s what it is. There’s no discretion, nothing we can do to beat it, we’ve trusted in the strategy and we are along for the ride. My hope is that these various strategies will work together to make this ride as stable as it can be.  My aim is to remove all discretion from trading and follow the systems set forth.  Every 1st day of the month we rebalance the portfolio and take the top 3 of 15 ETFs and hope for the best. No discretion.

Pair Trade (February)

The pair trade for March is suffering as the massive drop in TLT over the past few weeks (nearly 6%!) hasn’t been accompanied by a big rise in SPY overall.  So basically, they are both declining. Not ideal but over time it’ll work out. We can expect 15-20% declines at times with this trade. It’s high variance. It will happen.  You can’t get 10-15% months without that sort of volatility.  Right now, after a successful month of the pair trade, well we’re kind of experiencing the dreaded volatility. We’re down probably about 5% as of right now on this trade. We did about 10% the month before (I still need to calculate everything).

Protector Trade (February)

The protector is doing fine and as expected.  It’s down as of today because well, its the start of the year and we’re still paying for the hedge. Down movements will bring the trade into a negative situation temporarily. We have to let the year ride out. I believe we’re probably down a few % on this one.  As the year goes on and as the hedge gets paid for, it’ll start turning a profit.  This is a full year portfolio and we expect it to do 12-15% a year (14-18% leveraged at 1.6) and it’ll have very low drawdowns even in crashes.

The alpha portion seems to be doing good this month compared to last. OCN has rebounded a bit and QCOM as well. We’ve got some winners as well, despite the market being down.

 

 

Feb 7 – Trade update

Sorry for lack of responses. I was at a very busy conference that was chalked full of meetings upon meetings and some socializing. The conference went very well and was a great opportunity for internal team building and realignment of the company goals. Was happy to be there.

Volatile times. Since December, SPX has lost 5%, gained 6%, lost 5%, gained 4%, lost 4%, gained 4%, lost 4% and now gained nearly 5%. The whipsaw isn’t great for our protector portfolio but it’s not doing too bad despite.

TLT -5.44% on the week which really hurts our momentum and pair trades for February. Let’s see how it does next week. A strong January for the portfolio is leading to a weak February at least so far. That’s mainly due to a terrible day for VNQ and TLT which is 66% of our momentum portfolio. They were down 3% and 2% on the day. A bit of a rebound in Both would do fantastic for the portfolio.

I’ve decided to invest a small portion of capital into the covenant optimal fund. It’s a 5x version of their classical fund and operates on 80% volatility. It’s a managed futures fund and would complement my portfolio very nicely especially as crisis alpha. I’d highly suggest listening to some podcasts of Scot Billington the founder. The thing I like is the low tied up capital required to obtain high return (with high risk of course). Remember it’s a 5x version (5x leverage essentially). You’d use 50k to represent 250k of risk. Lower tied up equity etc

Results for 2014:
*note: this is a very volatile version of the classical fund which returns approximately 14-15%. This version is extremely high volatility but you assign an equally lower amount of equity.

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Some pics of London Town

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