Archive for the ‘Investment’ Category

PostHeaderIcon New Obnoxious Profiteering Blog

Notwithstanding my promises here to blather at a new blog about how and where to obtain and use money-making robots (deep breath), I have sooner begun blathering at said blog about other things.

What things? How is the cure for AIDS as a wowzer? – and the stock ticker for the company that holds the cure? Huge claim, I know. But the sources and the preliminary results are solid. And the company that is doing this is a penny stock right now.

I’m actually more interested in the science and the fact that advances like this are even happening than I am in the investment opportunity. Besides, I’m fully invested elsewhere – nary to spare for this. The deal of a lifetime is always around the corner.

Now, that aside, I really didn’t mean to write magazine-style titles over at that blog. Really.

Maybe I’ve been reading too many of the wrong things. Let’s put something back onto the flight list. Sanity? Check.

PostHeaderIcon Repeat Slam Dunk on the Forex USDCAD!

Okay, those insanely good short trades on the Forex I blogged about two entries ago? These past two hours (early AM) I just did the same thing again, approaching the same amount! – shorting the same pair again!

And.. I’ll stop bragging.

But I’m on fire. I just think I best stop before I burn something down. Or maybe just make sure I have a large fire extinguisher handy.

Good night.

PostHeaderIcon The Russell 2000 MARKET SMACKDOWN!

Things appear to be finally, undeniably set up for a major market move down (in the New York Stock Exchange), probably toward the end of today’s trading, or early tomorrow. A market can only be insanely overbought for so long.

I’ll be all too happy for this, as the sideways market has been driving me crazy to the point of simply not wanting to pay any attention anymore. Nevertheless, a few days ago I set up a moderately small short position against the Russell 2000 Index, by buying the TZA, which aims to produce triple the inverse of said Index. At the moment TZA is up a fair amount from where I bought it.

PostHeaderIcon Slam Dunk Shorting the USDCAD Forex Pair

I woke up early this morning unable to sleep. I booted up my computer and started up MetaTrader, which connects to my live Forex trading account. (The Forex Robots – see my past two entries – have still been doing amazingly well for me.)

Tangent: show

I looked at the chart for the USDCAD pair (US and Canadian Dollars), and their MACD and momentum technical indicators. The MACD showed negative divergence on the 1, 15, and 30 minute charts (blah blah, I know this sounds like Star Trek or something). They all had a lot of momentum. The 5 minute chart showed positive divergence, but I thought it was lying.

I opened a moderately pricey short position on the pair (still very conservative for my entire portfolio balance).

Within minutes the pair took a steep dive (for a short position, this is good). I opened another short position. The fast diving trend continued. I opened another, the trend still continued, I closed the first trade for a profit, and I repeated this process several times until, seeing the persistence and strength of the trend, I opened another relatively fat (for me) position.

I watched the fat position the longest before closing it just recently, for nearly as much profit as all the other closed trades this morning combined.

This morning in two hours, I made roughly nine times the amount of money I’ve made working eight hours at the highest paying job I’ve ever had.

I believe I’ll take a nap.

Last summer, prompted by a Seven Habits class I took at UVU, I wrote a Personal Mission Statement, which includes this line:

I reject the idea that risk is avoidable; I value calculated risk..

My emerging success with the Forex market – mostly thanks to robots! – is a literal and happy expression of that value.

PostHeaderIcon How to get a completely automated investment up and running for $250

[Update February 17th 2010: I'm not sure I recommend the brokers I mention in this post anymore. I probably don't.]

Previous post: Forex Robots. This post: free proxy exchange-trading.

There is this web site that will give you cash back for every trade you place on a foreign exchange through a broker that they’ll sign you up with. One of these brokers is the broker I’m using my robots with (FXDD). They have quite narrow spreads – which basically means, you’ll be able to invest more and therefore return more.

This web site is called Cash Back Forex.

So the how to steps are these:

A) Go to this site (link), and follow steps 1, 2 and 3 at the top of the page. For your broker, choose FXDD. Why? Like I said, narrow spreads – but their minimum deposit is $250, so you can start out investing only that much. If you have $250 to burn, this is a great way to burn it, baby. To sign up with FXDD you’ll need to fill out quite a bit of information (so they know you aren’t a money-laundering terrorist), and it may take a day for your account to be approved.

B) Once you have your FXDD account set up, sign up for an account at Zulu Trade and/or AUTO FX.

Who are AUTO FX and Zulu Trade? Automated buy or sell signal providers. They allow you to select from a wide variety of professional or avocational traders, whose own trading decisions will be automatically sent to your live Forex (FXDD or other brokerage) account. When the pro decides it’s time to buy or sell, they issue the order, and the same buy or sell signal is placed (or mirrored) in your account. To get this started, you officially link your signal provider account to your brokerage (in the case of FXDD, for me that meant signing and faxing a form).

Once you have it set up, the pros run all your trades for you. And if you pick one who really knows what they’re doing (which you can verify with their profit track record), your money will grow, automatically, while you do nothing. And on top of this, since you set up your brokerage through Cash Back Forex, when your account grows enough, you’ll start getting checks cut to you of part of the commission the broker made on every trade you placed.

With a good signal provider you’ll get far better returns than a money market, mutual fund, or other kind of large, “traditional” investment.

This is very much like the robot setup introduced in my previous post, except the buy and sell commands are sent by other people instead of robots. Actually, many of the signal providers (apparently) generate their buy and sell signals with robots.

You can mix this and your own robot-automated trading in your Forex brokerage account. I’m going to.

I haven’t got my Zulu Trade signal provider sending signals to my FXDD account yet, but I’m going to try one or two signal providers with a great track record when I do. I’m going to use the providers “lowestDD” (DD meaning DrawDown – amount lost) and “Smart Forex”. What I look for in a signal provider: 1) They invest their own money using the same orders they’ll mirror to your account – literally putting their money where their mouth is 2) They have a history with the lowest possible Draw Down (losses) 3) Highest possible profit, and 4) Longest possible profitable history.

The position size (or how much money you invest) in any of the buy or sell signals mirrored to your brokerage are automatically scaled up or down to the size of your account and the preference you set. For a micro account starting with $250, you’ll want to find a quite conservatively small “lot size” (and truth be told, I need to figure out exactly what “lot size” means).

PostHeaderIcon Robots Return $1,884 in 5 Days

[Update Feb 17th 2010: the statement mentioned in this post is offline now, for two reasons: 1. the statement provider stinks 2. Um, I'm too much of an aggressively intervening idiot for it to be worth eyeballing anymore. I've been leaving it alone for some time now, just letting the robots do the excellent work they do on the recommended settings without my intervention - but I've also moved brokerages from FXDD (not recommended anymore) to I AM FX.]

It’s time to let this puppy out of the bag.

I’ve blogged a bit here about experiments in the stock market, which I’ve been successful at.. not losing money in. Not losing much money, anyway. Relatively. I’ve had a few astonishingly good plays (one with 100% return in 3 days), following the swing and day trading recommendations of a newsletter, which newsletter (and associated “direct line” service) has also helped me in learning options and “scalp” trading.

The problem is that I’m human, and my impatience for high returns has interfered, and I’ve tried tweaking the recommendations of the pros or trying my own thing which inevitably.. you guessed it.. blows up in my face. If I followed recommendations with conservative scrutiny to the letter, I’d be breaking far above even.

(And this seemingly incessantly sideways market that has every sign it should be a bear market has been driving me batty. The market can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent.)

But you are wondering what the headline is about. I’m getting to that.

What I’ve learned is that when I stick with what a pro says, I make money. If I tweak it or place my own (intemperate, more aggressive high-return seeking) speculations, the odds of my failing are better.

And I’ve learned that with these robots, too.

What robots?

There are programs that monitor and respond to live, streaming market data, and which respond to the data by sending (or not sending) buy and sell commands to your trading account with a broker. You run these programs in an environment (application) that you can host on a computer connected to the internet (the buy or sell commands are sent over the internet).

These programs that execute automatic market trades are referred to as Expert Advisors, or EAs, or more simply robots, or Forex robots.

These robots have been programmed with all the ingenuity and detached observation of seasoned investment professionals who have long histories of avoiding losses (or cutting them early if they must), letting their winners run, and bringing in high returns on investment.

Or, depending on who made the robot, they can exhibit all the sloppy oversight, inordinate aggression, or simple wrong-headed-ness of an overly risk-tolerant buffoon who doesn’t know when not to enter a trade or cut a loss off early.

But among all these robots, those that work really work.

For me it’s the discovery of a lifetime. So deceptively simple, so obviously awesome.

I closely examined the claims of many of the programmers of these robots, examining their published historical and live investment account statements, and thinking: if these robots really work, they have no reason to fudge these statements to lie to me, just to get me to buy, because they’re already making a killing doing automatic trading with their own robots. The robots could really be worth the thousands of dollars they’re claiming, and a hundred or a hundred and fifty bucks for one of these robots really could be a bargain in the face of the potential the robots harness, and they’ve well earned the right to sell these robots to bring in extra cash to throw into their grossly fattening investments.

And if the robots don’t work, they’re telling me how to set up an account that will let the robots run against live market data, the very same markets and data that people trade real money on, except that I’m using pretend money to see what the robots would do with real money. If that is the case, then I can avoid all risk by seeing that it doesn’t work, and being refunded what I spent for the robot.

You can run the robots on historical data as well, emulating how the robots would perform in any period with known data (to a large degree, with admitted limitations).

I ran the robots through a lot of back-tests ranging over many years (on historical market data) and forward-tests (on live market data, with pretend money). That means exposure to a wide variety of market conditions, volatile and non-volatile, ranging, trending, bull, bear, sideways, dropping, spiking – everything.

They work! They take money, and make more of it! Sometimes a lot more of it!

A high proportion of the trades they make are winners. There are small and big losers here and there – which are far outweighed by the winners. And among the losing trades, the robots are good at cutting losses early, further limiting losses.

By far the weight of the scale goes with wins.

I’ve given these robots real money. And they’re running with it and bringing back more money, and how.

In tests and live trading I have tweaked the settings of the robots outside of what their programmers recommend, and when I do this by and large the robots blow up my money (lose it). When I leave the settings as the pros recommend them, by and large they bring back consistent positive returns.

As the title of this post says, these Robots have returned $1,884 in 5 days – only the first trading week of this year! Here is my live investment account statement to prove it. This statement updates automatically with every trade the robots place. Look at the “Profit” column. The “Closed P/L” (Profit or Loss) total below it shows the total profit (or, when applicable – and gratefully not here – loss).

These robots brought that in while I did nothing. Nothing besides stand aside, waiting on tenterhooks, because I’ve learned I just need to sit back and let the robots do their job, and wait it out, and watch the returns come in.

Starting out even on this live money account, I tweaked the robot settings in ways I obviously shouldn’t have and saw substantial losses. I was so terrified after that I was tempted to throw in the towel, but said to myself: No, I can see a direct cause and effect here of my meddling with the settings and the robots losing money. I’ll learn this lesson for the last time, put the settings back to what the pros recommend, and just sit, watch, and stop meddling.

It is after I made that choice that I’ve seen the robots fall into a longer-term pattern of bringing in more consistent and high returns. And the live statement begins near to where I made that decision, showing a start amount of zero, which of course isn’t true. It’s only showing the amounts invested and returned in each trade. In fact at this writing I have yet to climb back into the “black” above the substantial losses of my meddling with the settings. I am confident these robots will climb back above that loss and then well above and beyond it.

I have simply believed the robots will work, and been proven right. I could have been wrong. And although I don’t believe I’ll be shown wrong, it’s possible I could be. You must realize that. As you drool over my gains. And watch them seriously amass over the long term. If you aren’t watching your own returns amass by then.

I’ve averaged the returns over all the days since that decision (more than 5 days) – taking the percent gain per day, and dividing it by the number of days – right now the average is 2.33% returns per day.

If these robots continue at that pace unabated for an entire year (and my back-tests give me excellent reason to suspect they will), the return on investment will be 40,884% percent! Here is the math rundown in a spreadsheet (Open Office Calc required – Excel doesn’t know these functions), starting with $250 capital – you can start out on this with only that much. At this rate for one year, $250 turns into $102,027!

That’s not on the settings that “came out of the box”. My guess is the default settings return 1 percent or less per day. I found the web site of someone whose avocation is investment, who has found amazing success with his own custom settings, which I bought from him and am using.

How can you get your hands on these robots, and these settings? I haven’t put together my obnoxious sales letters and affiliate links to bring me commissions on sales of the robots yet ;) That is pending..

[Update 01-13-10: Because I am an unbearably human human, yesterday I again made manual interventions I should not have, and much of the account blew up in my face again. Despite this, now that I have stepped aside and let things work by themselves, the robots resume a pattern of consistent, steady gain. Because I am leaving things alone. Like the robot-programming professionals told me to. To my very great displeasure, I again learn the wrong way that the robots can consistently defy odds a human can very seldom defy - if the humans leave the robots alone. I solemnly pledge under penalty of terror and insolvency to leave the robots and their money alone. Until they make enough money that I want to withdraw some. That will be my only, and most pleased, intervention :) For all this, and to hide the less beautiful part of my account history, the online statement now begins post-human-idiot-intervention-number-2, to represent consistent robot power, not debatable, fallible human power. May the Cylons teach the humans yet. Amen.]

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