Trader Vic on Commodities: What's Unknown, Misunderstood, and Too Good to Be True (Wiley Trading) - Hardcover

Sperandeo, Victor

 
9780470102121: Trader Vic on Commodities: What's Unknown, Misunderstood, and Too Good to Be True (Wiley Trading)

Inhaltsangabe

In Trader Vic on Commodities, Wall Street legend Victor Sperandeo explains in simple terms how these markets operate, removes some of the mystique and uncertainty involved, and offers a proven method for capitalizing on commodity market trends―without taking giant risks. Sperandeo shows that, as commodities are cyclical in nature, your goal should be to capture as much of the major market trends as possible, while balancing that goal with a minimum of risk.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Victor Sperandeo is a principal of Enhanced Alpha Management. He has more than forty years' experience on Wall Street, trading independently with, among others, George Soros, Leon Cooperman, and BT Alex Brown. He has written two very successful books with Wiley: Trader Vic: Methods of a Wall Street Master and Trader Vic II: Principles of Professional Speculation. Sperandeo has appeared on CNN and CNBC, as well as in leading financial publications.

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Praise For Trader Vic On Commodities

"Victor Sperandeo is an extraordinary mentor, a 'wise and faithful advisor, friend, or teacher' as my dictionary says. His readers quote his advice long after reading his books. His new book, Trader Vic on Commodities, in some ways builds on his famous 2B rule, which is that you lose properly. This book, however, is really about winning and breaking new ground in commodities trading strategies. Sperandeo describes how an index that includes both traditional commodities and financial futures can provide a better inflation hedge and more profitable trading strategy than an investment in traditional commodities alone. The book is a treasure of statistical tables to show both the 'how to' and the validity of Sperandeo's trading strategies. Readers will find him still, as Barron's titled him years ago, Trader Vic: The Ultimate Wall Street Pro."
Elizabeth B. Currier, President, The Committee for Monetary Research & Education

"Trader Vic on Commodities will surely become one of the must-read books for anyone interested in trading commodities."
Thomas Finley, Managing Director, Global Markets & Investment Banking, Merrill Lynch

"Only the legendary Trader Vic Sperandeo could bring such clarity to what to most is a complex and indecipherable subject. This book is a splendid achievement from one of the investing world's true originals. The only thing I'd recommend more highly than the book is taking Vic's trading advice."
Keith Styrcula, Chairman, Structured Products Association, CEO, WealthNotes Capital Management, LLC

Aus dem Klappentext

Commodities are experiencing a new up cycle and an examination of the major factors contributing to these price increases suggests they are not short-lived. World populations continue to expand, increasing global demand. Industrialization in China and India, as well as in other emerging markets, has greatly increased the need for energy and industrial products, while the supply remains limited. With the increased volatility in the commodities markets, the surge in interest, and the generally higher prices in everything from crude oil to copper to cocoa, it seems clear that every investor should have at least some exposure to commodities.

In Trader Vic on Commodities, Wall Street legend Victor Sperandeo explains in simple terms how these markets operate, removes some of the mystique and uncertainty involved, and offers a proven method for capitalizing on commodity market trends without taking giant risks. He introduces a valuable tool the Standard & Poor's Diversified Trends Indicator (S&P DTI) to capture price movement, premiums, and discounts in the commodity futures markets. Sperandeo shows that, as commodities are cyclical in nature, the best goal is to capture as much of the major trends of each market as possible, while balancing that goal with a minimum of risk. The S&P DTI designed to be complementary to other investments, but with a negative historical correlation and completely uncorrelated to other investment classes has produced alpha consistency with low volatility rather than outsized returns with higher volatility.

Perhaps most importantly, Sperandeo acknowledges that losses are part of the trading business. But if you are trading properly, he explains, you will find yourself able to lose more often than win and still remain profitable overall. Learning to accept, deal with, and minimize losses is the most important factor in determining your success as a trader.

Finding ways to remove the emotion and personal judgment from an investment strategy is also a crucial factor in long-term market profitability. The S&P Diversified Trends Indicator accomplishes these goals more successfully than most other strategies you will find. It will provide a well-researched, low-volatility strategy for taking advantage of commodity trends in a systematic way so as to earn consistently superior index returns over the long run.

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Trader Vic on Commodities

What's Unknown, Misunderstood, and Too Good to Be TrueBy Victor Sperandeo

John Wiley & Sons

Copyright © 2008 Victor Sperandeo
All right reserved.

ISBN: 978-0-470-10212-1

Chapter One

The Basics

Sometimes something that seems convoluted and meaningless will actually hold within it some very deep or profound meaning. Take, as an example, a personal favorite of mine-a quote from Donald Rumsfeld, former U.S. secretary of defense. At a Department of Defense news briefing on February 12, 2002, he said: "As we know, there are known knowns. There are things we know we know. We also know there are known unknowns. That is to say, we know there are some things we do not know. There are also unknown knowns, the ones we did not know we know."

If that sounds confusing to you, go back and read it again, for it is worth taking the time to understand the grand design of what he said. We also added a final category: unknown unknowns, which are the things we did not know that we do not know. Those classifications are not just valid as the keys to military victory, they are also the keys to trading successfully! And as Satyajit Das wrote in Traders Guns and Money (Prentice Hall, 2006)-a highly recommended book-these are also the keys to the derivatives world. I imagine they are equally applicable in almost any complex intellectual or financial universe!

More than anything, the most important aspect of translating Rumsfeld's categories into successful trading is to realize the truth inherent in his statements, especially that there are unknown unknowns. It is impossible to know everything, to have all the information in the universe. Doing all you can to minimize the effect of those unknown unknowns-partially by simply acknowledging that they exist-can be the difference between a winning trade and a losing one.

BREAKING IT DOWN

You drink coffee each morning, eat your cornflakes and enjoy a glass of orange juice, take a shower with water running through copper pipes, put gas in your car, and head off to work. Each one of those actions involves a specific commodity, all of which happen to be traded as commodity futures on one of the major U.S. commodity exchanges. But the reason those commodity futures exist is not because you use the physical item (not directly anyway). Perhaps the best way to understand the commodities markets is to know why they exist in the first place: Commodity futures were created not to make you rich, nor for you to trade them, but rather to allow the producers of the commodity to hedge their risk.

Now please understand this next important point, as for almost everyone it is an unknown unknown: They pay you to take this risk! That is correct: The producers and hedgers pay you! That may sound like some late-night television infomercial sales line (usually followed by "But wait, there's more!"), but it happens to be true. The premiums and discounts of commodity futures are, in effect, payments to speculators to entice them to buy and sell the contracts, generally speaking. This is similar to the way you ask insurance companies to take on the risk of you having an accident-by paying them insurance premiums.

Really, the concept should not be all that surprising, when you consider that commodity futures are simply another major investment vehicle. Many stocks offer dividends, and bonds have their coupon. So why would commodity futures be any different?

The similarities don't stop there. Just as a portfolio of bonds and notes will have an overall yield, a portfolio of long and short futures creates a yield, as long as you follow the trends. This is explained in detail in later chapters, but it can be proven. The primary key is to follow the trends properly and to build a balanced portfolio of commodities. I can think of no better way than using the S&P Diversified Trends Indicator (DTI) as a method for both.

The S&P DTI is deterministic, not stochastic. That is, it is fundamentally driven. It has a better 12-month win ratio than the Lehman Agg, when combined with T-bills (i.e., total return). It is not a magic formula and it was not optimized, curve-fitted, or data mined. Any system or method based on optimization will fail in the long run. This is because markets change and evolve, they do not remain constant. So if you structure a system based solely on the past, it cannot survive the future.

The second important basic to understand about commodity futures is that no cash capital is required to buy or sell futures. Only collateral is needed. This concept is mostly misunderstood. Therefore, you can use stocks, bonds, T-bills, or many other liquid assets to own a position in futures. It is the ability to overlay your futures portfolio over the other assets that creates additional alpha and increased returns.

As the word implies, futures settle at a future date for cash or via delivery. However, the stories of people having a boxcar full of corn delivered to their front yard are nothing but fantasy these days. Unless you want to take delivery of a particular commodity, because you are an industrial or commercial purchaser or have some other legitimate need, the delivery process can be stopped far in advance (although there is a cost involved). Still, all of that can be avoided simply by rolling out of a futures contract into a later one before first notice day.

The reason for the collateral requirement is simply because your bank or broker cannot take you at your word that you will pay up if you lose. Think of placing a bet on a football game with a bookie. You only need call him up, place a bet, and it is done. If you lose, you have to pay. Otherwise, instead of the SEC or CFTC knocking on your door, you'll find a big man named Buster asking you for the cash. You'll soon learn he is far more of a problem than the government, bank, or broker you would owe the money to if you were trading commodity futures.

Futures contracts are created if enough volume and open interest in what is being hedged can be generated, and if a ready supply of the specific commodity in a consistent condition can be assured. A diamond contract would be problematic, for example, as diamonds are of such individual quality and value. The underlying commodity must also be fungible, and settled for cash.

Futures are contracts that discuss the terms of maturity, in addition to the specifics of what you are buying and selling, while forwards are futures without a standard maturity date. For the purposes of this book and the S&P DTI in general, we will be discussing futures contracts, but I think it is important to understand that forwards are a similar investment vehicle and can be used in some of the same ways.

Futures contracts are made to fix a certain value. A Comex gold futures contract in the United States is based on 100 ounces of 99.9 percent pure gold. Therefore, if gold were trading at $650 per ounce, the total contract value is $65,000 (although the margin or collateral one needs to put up to trade that contract is a small percentage of that). If the contract were for 1,000 ounces of gold, it would be worth $650,000, and would be too large to attract as much public interest as a $65,000 contract, for obvious reasons. It is for the same reasons that stocks go through stock splits-to keep values at a manageable and attractive level for investors, so the minimum investment does not grow to a size that causes people to consider other investment...

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