View Full Version : Mousetrap 3/17/2012 -- less is more
  
Timothy Clontz
03-17-2012, 09:36 PM
Condition	Bear Market	Rally		
S&P Target	1020			
Small Portfolio	IAU & XLF	15.26%		
Hedge	XLU	-1.74%		
				
Position	Date	Return	Days	Call
CLH	7/6/2011	29.71%	255	Hold
GCI 	7/14/2011	11.76%	247	Hold
CSGS 	10/3/2011	26.57%	166	Hold
NLY 	10/25/2011	-1.59%	144	Hold
DD	10/27/2011	10.38%	142	Hold
KBR	10/27/2011	28.32%	142	Hold
VG	10/27/2011	-32.38%	142	Hold
TTM	11/30/2011	67.46%	108	Hold
BT	1/4/2012	9.01%	73	Hold
PDLI 	3/7/2012	1.88%	10	Buy
				
S&P	Annualized	5.50%		
Small Portfolio	Annualized	19.15%		
Mousetrap	Annualized	22.54%		
Hedged	Annualized	20.35%		
No changes.  The we are still in a Bear Market Rally sector configuration.  Utilities remains the hedge, and have thankfully gone nowhere while the rest of the market has been on a tear.  In fact, the negative money flow in utilities is the most bullish thing about this rally.
Meanwhile, enough time has elapsed with the model that I can begin to optimize holding periods based on real data.  A preliminary calculation has the optimal holding period at 179 days, meaning a new trade every two and a half weeks.  I’ll do some more calculations over the course of the next week, but it appears that the next rotation day should be the Monday after March 24th.
There’s a reason to hold trades as long as possible,  If you had 20,000 in your trading account, and were trading ten stocks, then each buy-sell round trip would knock off about 1% from your total holding.
So, for ten stocks, you adjust your total expected returns based on your average holding period.  So, factoring trading costs and taxes, with a 7% average appreciation per stock, the average holding period would have to be 76 days JUST TO BREAK EVEN.
This is why women generally do better than men with their investments.  They trade less.
In other words, less is more.
Tim
Timothy Clontz
03-18-2012, 01:04 PM
I’ve been studying the periodicity problem in more detail.  After running all of the stocks selected and adjusting against the S&P, the optimized rotation schedule appears to be 66 days per stock – or roughly one trade a week.  179 days came in at a very close second.
I got this by looking at each stock’s return MINUS the S&P return for the same time period, in order to factor out random market movements.
In any case, it turns out that I WILL make a rotation tomorrow, if possible:
I’ll be selling CLH and buying CLF
CLF is Cliffs Natural Resources, in the STEEL industry.
The only thing that would cancel this plan would be a positive gap of CLF more than 1% greater than CLH.  If that happens, I’ll check again at lunch and the end of the day.  As long as they are within 1% of each other, I’ll make the trade.
Timothy Clontz
03-19-2012, 10:09 PM
Condition	Bear Market	Rally		
S&P Target	1020			
Small Portfolio	IAU & XLF	16.19%		
Hedge	XLU	-1.04%		
				
Position	Date	Return	Days	Call
GCI 	7/14/2011	12.71%	249	Hold
CSGS 	10/3/2011	27.37%	168	Hold
NLY 	10/25/2011	-1.65%	146	Hold
DD	10/27/2011	10.11%	144	Hold
KBR	10/27/2011	27.46%	144	Hold
VG	10/27/2011	-32.67%	144	Hold
TTM	11/30/2011	65.25%	110	Hold
BT	1/4/2012	10.74%	75	Hold
PDLI 	3/7/2012	2.20%	12	Buy
CLF 	3/19/2012	1.65%	0	Hold
				
S&P	Annualized	5.98%		
Small Portfolio	Annualized	20.18%		
Mousetrap	Annualized	22.53%		
Hedged	Annualized	21.23%		
The CLF trade was executed, selling CLH and buying CLF at the open.
I’ve still been working on the periodicity problem (i.e. how often to rotate).  Yesterday I went through the daily returns of all open AND closed positions – showing the gains of the open positions and the gains the closed positions would have had if they were kept open.  I also eliminated the random price movements of the S&P by subtracting the S&P returns from the date each trade was opened and then re-adding the average daily gains of the S&P over the course of the last 62 years.  (You have to love this kind of thing)…
In any case, so far it appears that the ideal holding period is even further out than I suspected.  210 days per stock is currently the highest annualized score.  That’s basically three weeks between each trade.
As time goes on the ideal holding period may be even further out, and it’s not impossible that we could find ourselves further out than a year.
Nearest I can tell, the technicals manage to give each stock liftoff into about 70 days before it begins to stall, and then the fundamentals give it a second wind at 150 days for another advance.  Compound interest makes it worthwhile to hold the trade until at least 210 days, rather than trade at 70 as I originally thought.
So far I’ve initiated 20 long positions, ten open and ten closed:
OPEN		Win	Loss					
GCI 	1	12.71%	0.00%	Hold	7/14/2011	12.71%	249	
CSGS 	1	27.37%	0.00%	Hold	10/3/2011	27.37%	168	
NLY 	0	0.00%	1.65%	Hold	10/25/2011	-1.65%	146	
DD	1	10.11%	0.00%	Hold	10/27/2011	10.11%	144	
KBR	1	27.46%	0.00%	Hold	10/27/2011	27.46%	144	
VG	0	0.00%	32.67%	Hold	10/27/2011	-32.67%	144	
TTM	1	65.25%	0.00%	Hold	11/30/2011	65.25%	110	
BT	1	10.74%	0.00%	Hold	1/4/2012	10.74%	75	
PDLI 	1	2.20%	0.00%	Buy	3/7/2012	2.20%	12	
CLF 	1	1.65%	0.00%	Hold	3/19/2012	1.65%	0	
								
CLOSED								
BKI 	1	17.05%	0.00%	Closed	5/31/2011	17.05%	149	10/27/2011
CFI 	1	4.10%	0.00%	Closed	6/22/2011	4.10%	127	10/27/2011
AWR 	0	0.00%	3.64%	Closed	7/5/2011	-3.64%	45	8/19/2011
AGO	1	14.41%	0.00%	Closed	8/5/2011	14.41%	83	10/27/2011
DISH 	1	17.87%	0.00%	Closed	8/10/2011	17.87%	78	10/27/2011
GTAT	0	0.00%	35.32%	Closed	9/8/2011	-35.32%	84	11/30/2011
AMGN 	0	0.00%	2.16%	Closed	10/27/2011	-2.16%	35	11/30/2011
WHR 	0	0.00%	1.45%	Closed	11/30/2011	-1.45%	30	12/30/2011
SE	1	17.60%	0.00%	Closed	6/27/2011	17.60%	254	3/7/2012
CLH	1	29.07%	0.00%	Closed	7/6/2011	29.07%	257	3/19/2012
These collectively amount to the 22.53% annualized return I reported above.  HOWEVER, had I not closed the original positions I would have had a 41.75% annualized return.  
As I said the other day – less is more.
The good news is that I’ve finally solved the rotation problem, and can actively track how often to rotate a position.
It’s well ahead of the S&P.  Now it’s just a matter of fine tuning…
Tim
Timothy Clontz
03-22-2012, 10:30 PM
Condition	Bear Market	Rally		
S&P Target	1020			
Small Portfolio	IAU & XLF	14.19%		
Hedge	XLU	-1.18%		
				
Position	Date	Return	Days	Call
GCI 	7/14/2011	12.93%	252	Hold
CSGS 	10/3/2011	24.26%	171	Hold
NLY 	10/25/2011	-1.34%	149	Hold
DD	10/27/2011	7.98%	147	Hold
KBR	10/27/2011	23.06%	147	Hold
VG	10/27/2011	-34.73%	147	Buy
TTM	11/30/2011	54.84%	113	Hold
BT	1/4/2012	11.51%	78	Hold
PDLI 	3/7/2012	2.45%	15	Hold
CLF 	3/19/2012	-4.07%	3	Hold
				
S&P	Annualized	4.36%		
Small Portfolio	Annualized	17.50%		
Mousetrap	Annualized	19.05%		
Hedged	Annualized	17.60%		
The most amazing thing about this rally is how consistent it has been in regard to the money flow between the sectors.  For the entire ride financials have been long and utilities have been short, and even with the action today that is still the case.
My friend Len is looking for a correction.  I’m looking for an end to this rally – but I don’t see it yet.  There just hasn’t been any meaningful shift… yet… into a defensive posture.
The model is holding its hedge – shorting utilities.  And when you think about it, shorting UTILITIES is about as ambivalent a hedge as you can get.  This is a market that punishes sudden moves, and it punishes decisive ones most of all. 
Boring is a good thing.
Tim
 
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