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Introducing the ‘SkewBar’ - a new innovation from FuturesTechs

Friday, November 13th, 2009

Here at FuturesTechs we are constantly evolving our product, and in recent years we have added a merry band of private customers and ‘at home’ traders to our following via our website members area.

One request from a good few of our less experienced members is for a bit more clarity as to our current thinking about short term trend, and preferably something visual. So we have devised the coloured bar that you can see next to our levels on the left. We will release this new innovation on Monday 16th November.

You can see there are three colours on display: Green, Grey and Red.

If we are in the green zone the market is bullish technically. In the grey zone the technical outlook for the markets is neutral or uncertain. In the red zone the technicals are bearish.

These “skews” are short term outlooks. The medium and long term pictures may differ. We have decided that the profile of our average customer is short term, so this is the most useful timeframe for a tool of this type.

So let’s think about how different looking SkewBars should be treated.

To the left is an example of a SkewBar that’s more or less all green, with only a dash of red at the bottom. This means that the market is very bullish, and that you probably want to be buying it! We suggest that you trade “to the long side”, looking to try and buy dips to support levels, or buy breakouts through resistance levels. If you were scanning through each of our reports looking for something that might be worth a buy this is the sort of SkewBar you’d be looking for.

Stops can be placed below any support level, of course, but it’s only when we move out of the Green area that the short term skew changes from bullish.

In this case there is no Neutral Zone, the market flips straight to bearish below 120.98.

In this SkewBar the market is pretty neutral, only turning bearish if we break below bold support at 121.63. The neutral skew stays in place until we get all the way up to 123.04. It is only above here that the bulls regain control of things.

In Neutral markets you should can trade in either direction but don’t hold too much conviction. Many traders like neutral conditions as they can do plenty of lower risk “range” trades, trying to do more trades but take smaller amounts of money each time.

You may want to try and “play the range” by buying at the bottom end of the grey band, selling if and when the market gets near the top.

If we then break out of the range by moving into the red or green zones then things have changed and playing the range is no longer the game in town.

Our last example SkewBar is a bear market, and this doesn’t change unless we get above 123.04. Even above here the market only turns neutral. There is no green portion on our SkewBar at all, which means the bulls don’t even get as look in!

We hope this new innovation is a helpful visual addition to our reports. It has been suggested to us that sometimes the reports can be a little ambiguous, and while we try not to send mixed messages sometimes that’s just what the market conditions are. Hopefully the SkewBars will give a little more clarity.

To all our long term readers we’d like to point out that nothing’s changed with this innovation with respect to how we analyse the markets, we’ve just added a bit of colour, if you like!

As always your feedback would be most welcome. info@futurestechs.co.uk

Weekly Summary - FTSE, Oil, Gold Technical Analysis Outlook - 10th November

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

Last week’s big highlight was meant to be the US Employment Report. As it turned out all the action was before this, and the numbers were a bit of a damp squib (like the topical analogy there?).

Equity markets have caught a fresh bid, and we were early to catch this as there were several reversal patterns on major indices at the start of last week. We were bullish from Wednesday onwards, so have reaped some firm rewards on the back of that timely change of sides.

Most of our readers are short term traders so they benefit from these timely “calls”. Longer term traders and Investors may be on the sidelines waiting for an opportunity to get in, and coming out of a dip or retracement is an ideal opportunity. Often, as was the case last week, our charts can tell us nice and early if it’s likely that a pullback has come to an end.

We are now looking to see if resistance at 5300 in the FTSE Index will be seen off. If this  happens the next upside target is 5650, a failure high from last August.

Gold is on another big run at the moment and has traded up to a high of $1111 as of yesterday morning. Yesterday’s candlestick (A “Shooting Star”) gave a warning that things may be getting toppy at these levels but so far we haven’t seen any downside moves to confirm this, so we’re sticking to the idea of higher prices going forward, targeting $1192 next, then $1250.

Oil is stuck in a range for now. Brent Crude has traded between $75 and $80 for weeks now. We expect this range to get broken with a move higher, and we would then target $90 and beyond. We have been suggesting to our clients to buy the dips to $75, and whatever their timeframe this has worked out well. Longer term holders would never have been offside, whereas those who trade in and out should have been able to jump out at $78 to $80 on several occasions then buy again at £75 next time it comes off.

If you are uncertain of any of the terminology used or methodologies discussed in this report you could swot up on our website. Feel free to ask for a Free Trial by clicking here.

Yours,

The FuturesTechs Team

World Money Show “Witch Way for the FTSE” Competition Winner!

Monday, November 9th, 2009

If you came to see us at the World Money Show the other week then this is the moment you’ve been waiting for!

We are pleased to announce the winner of our “Witch Way for the FTSE” competition is Lukhvinder Binning, who guessed at 5143. Well done Sir!

Special mention really should go to O Y Tsang who plumbed for 5142, you will receive a copy of Clive’s book along with 9 others who were there or there abouts. It could not have been closer, so well done to all of you, especially considering how bearish things were looking on the Friday afternoon of the show!

Winners will be contacted over the coming days as we need your address to send you your prize!

We hope you will all take advantage of the free trial of our service, and realise the benefit of using Technical Analysis like ours as part of your daily trading routine.

Have a good week.

Why use FuturesTechs?

Tuesday, September 29th, 2009

Whether you are Spread Betting, trading CFD’s, or trading DMA Futures, you need an edge.

Trading is tough, and managing your emotions is one of the toughest things you will have to learn in order to make a success of trading for a living.

The human brain is wired up all wrong for trading, in fact.

By nature we will take a profit too early (GREED kicks in and we snaffle up the winnings on the table), whereas if a trade goes into the red we won’t get out. Instead we’ll start to cross our fingers and hope that it comes back. As the trade goes further into the red pride gets in the way even more, and we allow the situation to get even worse. We FEAR booking a loss, and seeing that loss crystallise on our account, so we sit tight even more (or even worse we add to the losing position), waiting for it to come back (actually HOPING it will come back), except it probably won’t.

“The first cut is the cheapest” is a phrase commonly used by Professional Traders. When I go into my professional clients’ trading rooms I see stickers on traders’ screens with phrases like “get out of bad trades” and “run the winners”.

To become a successful trader you need to rewire your brain almost, and teach yourself to have the DISCIPLINE to get out of bad trades early on, and run the good trades as long as possible.

How can you do this? By using the charts.

You can use Technical Analysis to:

  • Trade in the direction of the trend.
  • Look for buying or selling opportunities
  • Set clear targets and stops, preferably with a decent risk/reward (ie put on trades knowing where you’re going to get out, and knowing that the possible loss will always be much less than the potential profit)
  • Trade at the important technical levels, and not in “no mans land”.

All of this will help you to manage your emotions. Only the very best traders in the world can ELIMINATE emotion. Most of us will have to content ourselves with finding a way of REDUCING the emotional side of things in order to help us make better trading decisions.

If you’re a novice at trading and/or technical analysis you will need some help with this, and FuturesTechs can provide you with the levels to trade around, as well as offering market leading guidance and analysis on a daily basis.

Professional Traders have been using our service for years as an essential part of their daily routine.

YOU now have the chance to enjoy the same advice on a daily basis.

Click here to subscribe (your maximum commitment only has to be 1 month, or £57.50)

Or if you’ve never seen our service before, click here to request a no obligation Free Trial.

Have a good week,

Yours,

The FuturesTechs Team

Weekly Technical Analysis Commentary: Clive Lambert on CNBC

Thursday, August 13th, 2009

Clive has recently started a weekly slot on CNBC, where he’ll be explaining concepts in technical analysis and reviewing the current state of play in the markets. Tune in on Thursdays from around 6:30am, or check our archives.

Here is today’s appearance, discussing Marabuzo lines in the context of what’s been happening recently with the FTSE, S&P 500, Bund and Brent.


Technical Outlook in the Footsie?

Wednesday, July 8th, 2009

The FTSE has been making some noises to the downside of late, finally coming to the party on our pullback skew.

Our regular readers will know that ever since we found resistance around 4500 over most of May we have been mooting the idea of a pullback. Will this take us back to or even through the March lows? You need to subscribe to FuturesTechs to have access to our views on questions like this. As a taster for those of you who, for some strange reason, don’t subscribe,  here’s today’s FTSE Futures commentary and chart.

“Monday saw the bulls recover from as bad start. This may have sucked many into thinking that we were going to move back into the range that’s been defining this for a while now. I wasn’t convinced at all and said this:
So have the bulls saved the day, just in the nick of time? I’m not convinced… With 4236 in the resistance column we expect the market to continue lower

Just in front of resistance at 4236 we had a level at 4212. the market got to 4210 then fell over. We got down to a late low of 4121.5 in after hours trade, so we’re now very close to testing the next bold support at 4101.
Below 4101 (and we think we will break this level) look for 3975 next, then 3849.5.
So we continue to look to sell into strength and get short for further losses”.

To get this sort of thing every day you need to become a FuturesTechs member. We offer generous discounts for 6 or 12 month memberships. Click here to join up.

Clients are enjoying the extra levels we now provide on our levels sheets, which have padded out the offering for all asset classes; Commodities, leading UK Stocks, and Forex now enjoy extra coverage for FuturesTechs members.

Clive recently spoke at the SII “Risk Forum” on a pnel discussion on the outlook for the next 6-12 months. Again our clients had access to the slides for this presentation, giving bigger picture insight on the technical outlook for Equities, Commodities and Bonds.

Clive was recently asked to do an interview by Malcolm Prior, author of several best selling books on Spread Betting. Malcolm published this interview on his website, Spread Betting Central. Click here to read this.

We are also considering rolling out Twitter updates for FuturesTechs members so they can get updates on anything new, either in the markets, or on the website. Please let us know your thoughts on this by clicking here.

Spread Betting - What to trade?

Tuesday, June 24th, 2008

We spent Friday at the IX Investor show where there were many people that were looking into the idea of trading the markets using Spread Betting.

A question that often comes up is what to actually trade, when it comes to Indices like the FTSE and the Dow, because on most Spread betting platforms there are several choices of product.

The FTSE 100 Index (aka “the Footsie”)  tracks the country’s top 100 companies. As many of you may be aware this list changes depending on who’s doing well and who isn’t. This week Alliance and Leicester, Persimmon, Tate and Lyle and Home Retail Group all fell out of the FTSE 100. This is a reflection on how tough Banks, House Builders, Retailers and Food companies (respectively) are doing it right now.

So who replaced them? Fine British names like Petrofac and Ferrexpo joined Drax Power and Invensys.

Petro-who? I think I know what it does based on the name; and it sounds like it likes Oil at £139 a barrel! Petrofec is an Oil service company; a truly worldwide operation.

Ferrexpo is a Ukrainian mining company.

The FTSE 100 reads like a who’s who of international powerhouses these days, whereas 10 or 20 years ago it read like a who’s who of the British High Street.

Now here’s one thing to think about while we ponder the make-up of the Index: It always champions the strong and weeds out the weak.  If a company performs badly, or if they are in a struggling sector,  they can fall out of the Index.

It’s the mining companies that have been the stellar performers in recent years, and the FTSE is now chocker-block with them.  As the Banking Stocks continue to fall like lead balloons their effect on the overall index decreases. So what you’re trading when you buy and sell the FTSE 100 is very different to what you were trading even a couple of years ago.

But back to our initial concern: The different products on offer on the Spread Betters platforms.

Most firms seem to offer at least two choices, the main two being a rolling “Cash” product or the “Quarterly/Forward” contract.

The rolling/cash merely tracks the underlying Index and settles against where that finishes each night.

The “Quarterly” or “Forward”  is based on the FTSE 100 Futures and is, in my humble opinion, the best one to trade, especially if you want to use our daily reports!  We write our reports on the Futures contract, currently for expiry in September (it trades for delivery in September, December, March and June, by the way), and this is what most Spread Bet firms will be referencing their quotes from.

If you want to trade the daily rolling contracts you  would need to work out the difference between it and the Futures before you can make firm use of our levels. The Futures should trade at a premium to the underlying, and at the moment in the FTSE that’s about 28 points.

If you have any further questions feel free to contact us via the button in the Member’s Area. We always aim to help our Members get the most out of the service.

Happy trading.

Cheers,

Clive.

Scary Bond markets, Predicatable Equities, Volatile Oil, and Footy with no England… Hmmmmm

Friday, June 13th, 2008

Another busy week in the markets:

Bond markets have pretty much gone one way all week, and it’s been quite tidy, barring the first hour blip in the Eurex Bund Futures on Monday. I have spoken to several traders this week as it was the IDX Exhibition in London. To a man they said that Monday was one of the craziest moves they’d ever seen in these markets. Technical Analysis allowed us to step back from this and suggest it may be a selling opportunity. Sweet!

Equities have been pretty predictable, I think. Across most markets is looking increasingly Bearish and I said at the SII Risk Forum last night that I think we’ll see a fresh test of the Year’s lows soon in things like the FTSE, DAX, Dow Jones and S&P. The NASDAQ has been the most resiliant of late, but even that has now given a sell signal.

Oil is a market for the brave right now. It’s just insane!!! In the Brent Crude Oil contract on ICE we’ve seen so much volatility that it does smack of a top, but as yet we haven’t broken any really important supports, so we’re not calling a top. In fact we still consider that weakness should be bought.

And a football tournament that I have absolutely no interest in is, I have to admit, somewhat strange. I really want Holland to keep up the good work, partly because I really like the Dutch people anyway, and partly because Monday’s game was (what I saw of it) a real joy to watch.

Interesting times in Oil… On yer bike!!

Monday, June 9th, 2008

$16.80 in 2 days. That’s how much July Brent Crude went up on Thursday and Friday of last week. That’s just under 15%.

A rise of just under 15% in 2 days? Excuse me? Are you serious?

Has anyone dusted off their pushbike over the weekend? If you didn’t you may be by next weekend! Make room for the car in the garage. You can get fit on a bike, and save on petrol!

And the price of Oil could go a lot higher in the coming days and weeks because we are in a bubble. So what does this mean for us as traders?

I tell you one thing: It doesn’t mean sell it!! This is a common mistake to make. You don’t get prizes for selling the top of a market. You shouldn’t be trying to sell into such rises. What’s wrong with trying to get on the dominant up-move? Or to get back to the pushbike theme don’t you prefer cycling with the wind behind you rather than it blowing into your face?

We could easily go to $150, or even beyond, and it can happen in the coming days or weeks.

Even if I look back at this Blog and today turns out to be the day we topped out I wouldn’t be worried, because I can safely say I don’t care if I miss the first 10% of the sell-off, because there will be a lot more to go to take advantage of.

Last week, when we were selling off, we said that we’d expect the buyers to return to the fray at some point, and we had a key support at 121.40 suggested as a bold level. What was the low? 121.32.

It’s much better to buy a pullback in a strong uptrend than continually try and bat against it by being short.

Just think about being on your bike on a windy day!!

Where did FuturesTechs come from?

Wednesday, May 28th, 2008

We have had our new website available for around 1 month now and we are starting to gain momentum for our new “per end user” offering. Private Investors, CFD and Spread Bet traders are starting to sign up and see the value of our service.

In recent days we’ve seen some interesting moves in the markets:

Gold Futures have turned over and after a plethora of sell signals yesterday we went Bearish this morning, just before the market sold off sharply.

Brent Crude Oil Futures has seen a big sell off but we’re certain this is merely a buying opportunity.

We have remained Bearish in the short term on Equity markets but our patience is being tested on this, particularly in the DAX Future, never one to willingly play the game!!

Interestingly today’s early high/failure in the S&P 500 Futures could be key and suggests that the market can head lower in the short term.

Login for a free trial to see our thoughts on these movements in more detail.

So to a question we’ve been asked a few times of late: Where did we appear from?

We have been servicing professional traders for 8 years now. The company formed in March 2000, soon after the closure of the LIFFE Floor. The traders who congregated on the LIFFE Floor headed up to different offices around this time, and suddenly they needed an edge, they needed information. I always had a string of traders who used to come and have a chat about the charts when I was based on the Floor, and so it was a natural progression to turn this into a daily commentary. I started by sending out a daily report on Bunds and T-Notes, and it grew from there. We grew with the Industry. Proprietary trading accounts for a good percentage of the daily Volume on exchanges like LIFFE and Eurex.

We wanted to expand our horizons beyond this arena, though, so it was a choice of Banks and Hedge Funds or Private/Retail Customers. Which way to jump!? We have found over the years that “bean counters” at the Institutions can cause problems for services like us, because they see a lot of free technical analysis being provided by the large brokers vying for their business. “Why pay for something that you can get for nothing?” -they say.

So we came up with the idea of a Members website where the reports can be viewed securely, on a “per end user” basis, which allows us to significantly reduce the price without upsetting our existing professional clients who pay for a “Site Licence” and the ability to distribute the reports amongst their traders.

We encourage you to take advantage of the chance to utilise this professional trading tool in your daily trading routine.

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