28 November 2014
KEPPEL CORP
Labels: Live Trading Records
G3B
27 November 2014
G3B
Labels: Live Trading Records
26 November 2014
G3B
Labels: Live Trading Records
SBB - ProShares Short SmallCap 600 (ETF)
Labels: Live Trading Records
RWM - ProShares Short Russell 2000 (ETF)
Labels: Live Trading Records
25 November 2014
AFYR (Q&M Rights)
Labels: Live Trading Records
Parkway Life REIT
Labels: Live Trading Records
G3B
Labels: Live Trading Records
24 November 2014
G3B
Labels: Live Trading Records
21 November 2014
MYY - ProShares Short MidCap400 (ETF)
Labels: Live Trading Records
PSQ - ProShares Short QQQ (ETF)
Labels: Live Trading Records
DOG - ProShares Short Dow30 (ETF)
Labels: Live Trading Records
CPB - Campbell Soup Company
Labels: Live Trading Records
Crash Protection Strategy
In the old days, the best you could do was to short a stock or buy tons of put options. Shorting, however, had to be on a uptick, which wouldn’t happen much during a correction. But ETFs give you that instantaneous ability to hedge your portfolio if you have cash or margin available, and to do so without selling out on long holdings.
The simplest and most obvious move is to buy the ProShares Short S&P 500 (SH), which does just as it says — you short S&P 500 index. Most investors are long the same index, so by buying an equal amount of this ETF to balance out your long position, you’ll become “market neutral.”
I like the market neutral position because it just means you are sitting on the sidelines. You aren’t losing or gaining anything, and you may not have to deal with constructive short sale rules (shorting against the box), which can be complex.
Of course, if you really feel we are in the midst of a significant correction or crash, you can purchase more of this ETF than you hold on the long side and earn money on the downside. SH costs 0.89% in expenses, or $89 for every $10,000 invested.
Another choice is the ProShares Short QQQ (PSQ), which allows you take a short position in the Nasdaq-100. During a correction, tech stocks tend to get hit harder. The Nasdaq-100 tends to have high volatility and offers a good way to make money on the way down. If, for example, you have a neutral position on the S&P 500, having a short position on the Nasdaq-100 is where you may make some money during the correction. PSQ charges 0.95%.
You also can use leverage on this play, by buying the ProShares UltraShort QQQ (QID), which gives you a double short position on the Nasdaq-100. QID, like PSQ, charges 0.95%.
If you want to go with an even broader short position, consider the ProShares Short Russell 2000 (RWM); small-cap stocks tend to get hit hard, particularly in crashes, so the RWM is a good way to play that. You also can buy the relatively illiquid ProShares Short Small Cap 600 (SBB); both charge 0.95%.
Lastly, if emerging-market stocks are swooning and you want a market hedge for the rest of the world, you can try the ProShares Short MSCI Emerging Markets (EUM), which was a great play earlier this year. Like most of this lot, EUM charges 0.95%.
Labels: ETF, Inverse ETF, Risk Management
G3B
Labels: Live Trading Records
20 November 2014
G3B
Labels: Live Trading Records
19 November 2014
G3B
Labels: Live Trading Records
18 November 2014
SH - ProShares Short S&P500 (ETF)
Labels: Live Trading Records
G3B
Labels: Live Trading Records
17 November 2014
G3B
Labels: Live Trading Records
15 November 2014
EWY
Labels: Live Trading Records
14 November 2014
G3B
Labels: Live Trading Records
13 November 2014
G3B
Labels: Live Trading Records
Ascendas Real Estate Investment Trust(SGX:A17U)
Labels: Live Trading Records
12 November 2014
Suntec Reit
Labels: Live Trading Records
G3B
Labels: Live Trading Records
11 November 2014
G3B
Labels: Live Trading Records
10 November 2014
G3B
Labels: Live Trading Records
07 November 2014
DE/MKC/ESR
MKC sold at 72.97 at profit, well done!
ESR added at 20.42
Labels: Live Trading Records
01 November 2014
SPY / VOO / QQQ
VOO sold at 185.02 at profit, well done!
QQQ sold at 101.68 at profit, well done!
Labels: Live Trading Records