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Thread: Mousetrap 08/28/2011

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Dec 1969
    Location
    Long Island, New York
    Posts
    515

    Mousetrap 08/28/2011

    Condition Bear Market
    S&P Target 970
    Hedge XLE -1.61%

    Position Date Return Days Call
    BKI 5/31/2011 2.54% 89 Hold
    CFI 6/22/2011 1.40% 67 Hold
    SE 6/27/2011 -4.19% 62 Hold
    AWR 7/5/2011 -3.64% 45 Closed
    CLH 7/6/2011 -1.93% 53 Hold
    GCI 7/14/2011 -21.45% 45 Buy
    AGO 8/5/2011 6.36% 23 Hold
    DISH 8/10/2011 0.52% 18 Hold
    NA NA NA NA NA
    NA NA NA NA NA
    Mousetrap Return -2.55%
    S&P Return -8.53%
    Hedged Return -3.96%

    Mousetrap Annualized -18.53%
    S&P Annualized -62.00%
    Hedge Annualized -28.77%

    Annualized Advantage 43.47%
    Hedged Advantage 33.23%

    GCI is back in the buy position. Those who layer in could do so now – but only if applying an equivalent XLE short to counterbalance.

    I will not be doing so myself. I’m saving any layering for a confirmed bull market (which we are no way close to).

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Dec 1969
    Location
    Long Island, New York
    Posts
    515

    08/29/2011 update

    Condition Bear Market
    S&P Target 970
    Hedge XLE -4.57%

    Position Date Return Days Call
    BKI 5/31/2011 8.21% 90 Hold
    CFI 6/22/2011 6.57% 68 Hold
    SE 6/27/2011 -2.12% 63 Hold
    AWR 7/5/2011 -3.64% 45 Closed
    CLH 7/6/2011 3.30% 54 Hold
    GCI 7/14/2011 -15.06% 46 Buy
    AGO 8/5/2011 12.57% 24 Hold
    DISH 8/10/2011 5.40% 19 Hold
    NA NA NA NA NA
    NA NA NA NA NA
    Mousetrap Return 1.90%
    S&P Return -6.24%
    Hedged Return -2.10%

    Mousetrap Annualized 13.60%
    S&P Annualized -44.57%
    Hedge Annualized -14.97%

    Annualized Advantage 58.17%
    Hedged Advantage 29.61%

    The non-hedged, long only version of the model is back to positive.

    GCI is still the selected buy, even after gaining 8% today.

    Hedged is, as I mentioned before, trailing during an uptick.

    Bear market rallies tend to be rather volatile, and long term target is still around 970 for the S&P.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Dec 1969
    Location
    Long Island, New York
    Posts
    515

    08/30/2011 update

    Condition Bear Market
    S&P Target 970
    Hedge XLE -5.19%

    Position Date Return Days Call
    BKI 5/31/2011 9.80% 91 Hold
    CFI 6/22/2011 2.12% 69 Hold
    SE 6/27/2011 -2.53% 64 Hold
    AWR 7/5/2011 -3.64% 45 Closed
    CLH 7/6/2011 1.25% 55 Hold
    GCI 7/14/2011 -14.62% 47 Buy
    AGO 8/5/2011 10.64% 25 Hold
    DISH 8/10/2011 5.49% 20 Hold
    NA NA NA NA NA
    NA NA NA NA NA
    Mousetrap Return 1.06%
    S&P Return -6.04%
    Hedged Return -3.48%

    Mousetrap Annualized 7.47%
    S&P Annualized -42.45%
    Hedge Annualized -24.43%

    Annualized Advantage 49.92%
    Hedged Advantage 18.02%

    As noted, the hedged is underperforming on an uptick. The hedged position controls volatility, but it can be a little boring sometimes.

    Of course, right now I’m happy to be spared the excitement…

    Tim

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Dec 1969
    Location
    Long Island, New York
    Posts
    515

    08/31/2011 update

    Condition Bear Market
    S&P Target 970
    Hedge XLE -5.98%

    Position Date Return Days Call
    BKI 5/31/2011 7.85% 92 Hold
    CFI 6/22/2011 2.48% 70 Hold
    SE 6/27/2011 1.85% 65 Hold
    AWR 7/5/2011 -3.64% 45 Closed
    CLH 7/6/2011 1.07% 56 Hold
    GCI 7/14/2011 -15.14% 48 Buy
    AGO 8/5/2011 8.78% 26 Hold
    DISH 8/10/2011 12.36% 21 Hold
    NA NA NA NA NA
    NA NA NA NA NA
    Mousetrap Return 1.95%
    S&P Return -5.63%
    Hedged Return -3.28%

    Mousetrap Annualized 13.48%
    S&P Annualized -38.91%
    Hedge Annualized -22.67%

    Annualized Advantage 52.39%
    Hedged Advantage 16.24%

    Sometime in the next day or two I plan to show back-tested market calls and each associated strategy, as well as the conceptual foundation for the sector rotation model, as it relates to the work of Sam Stovall.

    Until then, the long-only option is beating the S&P at a comfortable rate, while the hedged option is lagging.

    Anecdotally, such an imbalance shouldn’t last, and it is quite likely that we will exhaust the current mini-rally near this level.

    GCI is the current “Buy”, but a discretionary trader might want to wait until the market turns down for a spell.

    Tim

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Dec 1969
    Location
    Long Island, New York
    Posts
    515

    Recap of Mousetrap features

    Condition Bear Market
    S&P Target 970
    Hedge XLE -5.18%

    Position Date Return Days Call
    BKI 5/31/2011 4.44% 93 Hold
    CFI 6/22/2011 2.60% 71 Hold
    SE 6/27/2011 -2.04% 66 Hold
    AWR 7/5/2011 -3.64% 45 Closed
    CLH 7/6/2011 -0.64% 57 Hold
    GCI 7/14/2011 -17.85% 49 Buy
    AGO 8/5/2011 6.68% 27 Hold
    DISH 8/10/2011 12.99% 22 Hold
    NA NA NA NA NA
    NA NA NA NA NA
    Mousetrap Return 0.32%
    S&P Return -6.63%
    Hedged Return -4.22%

    Mousetrap Annualized 2.16%
    S&P Annualized -45.04%
    Hedge Annualized -28.64%

    Annualized Advantage 47.20%
    Hedged Advantage 16.40%

    I’ve had some questions about the model, so I’ll recap:

    The Mousetrap model is an experimental fusion of technical industry selection and fundamental stock selection within those industries. The industries are chosen by positive breadth and volume action, and the stocks are chosen by a simple GARP (growth at reasonable price) sorting of 12 month earnings yield and 12 month return on total capital.

    The technicals have been backtested with a 20-25% return rate, and the fundamentals have been tested with a 10-15% return rate.

    A successful test would add the minimum technical rate to the minimum fundamental rate for a 20 + 10 = 30% performance advantage on the long-only model.

    Each position is listed with the date it was purchased and the return from that date, followed by the number of calendar days it has been held, and followed by the action required by the model.

    GCI is currently listed in the buy position, and if I did not already hold it I would be adding 10% of my portfolio to that stock at today’s closing price.

    AWR was closed.

    In addition I am listing a short XLE position as an optional hedge for those (like me) who don’t like volatility.

    The total returns are listed after the stocks.

    The annualized rate is the total returns * (365.25 / average number of days held).

    The S&P returns are calculated from the price at the date of each position in the model – so while the S&P is actually down more than 6.63% from its top, the prices from each date of the stocks I hold averages to a 6.63% loss for the S&P.

    The annualized advantage is the difference between the annualized long-only return and the annualized S&P return. The hedged advantage is the difference between the annualized hedged return and the annualized S&P return.

    The market call (at the top) is the condition reflected in the current volume, breadth, and price strength ratios between the nine sectors that I track. Currently bearish defensive sectors like utilities and healthcare are outperforming bullish sectors like technology and cyclical.

    The model is being tested in real time with real money. I will list each change of position and limit order before the market opens.

    Currently there is no change, since I already hold the buy recommendation and there are no listed sells.

    Tim

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