Calendar Spreads: Seeking Profits From Theta Time Decay
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Tomorrow, you could begin doubling your account every single month starting with one letter.
The letter will come from a 20-year trading professional named Ian Cooper. He says, “In 2022, following my trades you would be doubling even tripling your account some months. Let me show you how.”
He will show you exactly what to do... and he’ll give you the blueprint for just $1.
The Top 3 Natural Gas ETFs to Consider on Skyrocketing Prices by Ian Cooper
Natural gas prices are soaring – again.
All after Russia said it would cut natural gas shipments, drought conditions in the U.S., and a heat wave that’s forcing millions to turn up their air conditioners.
For one, as noted by Barron’s, “Russian company Gazprom said on Monday that it will cut natural gas shipments from the key Nord Stream pipeline to Germany starting this week. The pipeline’s exports will be cut to 20% of capacity, down from 40%, because of a sanctions-related issue with turbines serving the pipeline.”
Two, as noted by The Wall Street Journal, “Natural-gas futures have jumped 48% this month – including 10% on Wednesday – to $8.007 per million British thermal units. That is still more than $1 off the 14-year high hit just before a Texas natural-gas export facility caught fire in early June and sent prices tumbling along with the outlook for exports. Yet the power-plant and manufacturing fuel has bounced back to more than twice the price of a year ago, adding cost pressure across the economy.”
That could create big opportunity for natural gas stocks in the U.S.
Intermarket Analysis and Correlation by Russell Sands
Many of you may already know my disapproval of looking at anything other than direct price action of the market you are trading; to say nothing of my contempt for some of the more ‘exotic’ indicators out there. Well, one of the hot new twists in technical analysis that vendors and system designers have come up with are indicators where the price of one market becomes a signal for a trade in another (related) one. The term in vogue days is ‘Intermarket Analysis’. What started out several years ago known simply as ‘Correlation’ has been carried to a whole new level. And needless to say, I think it’s been carried just a little bit too far.
One of the more ‘popular’ relationships that people look at these days is between the Bond market and the CRB Index. Traditional argument is that these two markets are negatively correlated, since the CRB is a proxy for inflation. If general commodity prices are rising, this means the overall economy is expanding, along with inflationary pressures, and thus the government will have to raise interest rates (bond prices go down) in order to keep the economy under control. On the other hand, if interest rates remain low (bond prices are high), this means we are still in the recessionary phase of the economic cycle, where we would expect commodity prices to be weak. And in fact, in the summer of 1990, a falling CRB Index kept me from selling a short-side breakout in bonds which ultimately was a false breakout, thus saving myself some money.
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