Condition Bear Market
S&P Target 970
Hedge XLE -1.83%

Position Date Return Days Call
BKI 5/31/2011 3.02% 85 Hold
CFI 6/22/2011 -0.88% 63 Hold
SE 6/27/2011 -3.51% 58 Hold
AWR 7/5/2011 -3.64% 45 Closed
CLH 7/6/2011 -2.72% 49 Hold
GCI 7/14/2011 -22.34% 41 Hold
AGO 8/5/2011 -2.51% 19 Hold
DISH 8/10/2011 0.52% 14 Buy
NA NA NA NA NA
NA NA NA NA NA
Mousetrap Return -4.01%
S&P Return -8.47%
Hedged Return -5.61%

Mousetrap Annualized -31.31%
S&P Annualized -66.21%
Hedge Annualized -43.82%

Annualized Advantage 34.90%
Hedged Advantage 22.39%

After a good run today the Mousetrap selections are again outperforming the S&P by more than 30%. The hedged option, as I said before, will underperform on any upward moves, but XLE did not go up by very much.

Anecdotally (i.e. I have not measured or quantified this), sectors which normally lead in bull markets are leading in both volume and breadth, while bearish sectors are trailing. Short term this appears to confirm a rally, but long term this remains a bear market, with price momentum and acceleration still strongly confirming the bear.

Based on Len’s analysis, this should fade soon, and in fact he is considering this a good place to take profits off of the table.

I’m a long term timer – and long term the model will remain hedged (as in fact the full model would have done from the very first trade, since this model was in a bear configuration from the beginning of May).

Any long buys, such as DISH, must be hedged against an equal amount shorting XLE, to conform to the complete model. To put this into perspective, the XLE short from the other day has a 1.83 percent loss. From May 31, however, it would have a 16.49% gain. Although I was personally shorting the energy sector during that time, I am not including it in the model because I had not yet combined my hedging strategy into the Mousetrap as a single model. The protection I experienced as I finalized my tests shows the purpose of hedging in a bear market. One can still profit from fundamental selections in outperforming the S&P, but only if balanced against a short position which will go down as fast or faster than the S&P.

If you are not hedged – taking profits off of the table would indeed be a good thing.

Tim