Showing posts with label commodity trading. Show all posts
Showing posts with label commodity trading. Show all posts

High-Performance Managed Futures: The New Way to Diversify Your Portfolio (Wiley Finance) Review

High-Performance Managed Futures: The New Way to Diversify Your Portfolio (Wiley Finance)
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I want to thank Mark Melin for writing this important book on managed futures. As a futures trader and broker I have a strong interest in the government regulated professionally managed futures asset class. After reading numerous academic papers on the importance of using non-correlated assets to best create the most effective Risk vs Reward long term portfolio, it was interesting to learn that managed futures are the most non-correlated of the asset classes. Mr Melin shows that even other generally non-corrleated assets to equities can become very correlated at market or economic dislocation when the non-correlation is most important. What is interesting is that at just such times the non-correlation of managed futures has stood out.
I have read many papers and books on managed futures and I find that this book is the most through and comprehensive, covering all the issues that an investor or financial advisor needs to understand this important asset class including:
*Investor protection based on the very strict Government Regulations that make Managed Futures so much safer than other HedgeFunds
*The topic of diversification is critical but where he gets into the nuts and bolts of the industry discussing volatility and correlation is where the book really shines
*Why differentiating between volatility on the upside and volatility on the downside better measures what investors are really concerned about as well as giving a better sense of how well the Managed Fund advisor handles adversity
*Why, as professionals understand, working out the risk issues first along with preparation for all eventualities is more important than just looking at returns
*Why diversifying even within the Managed Futures allocation between markets, methods and time frames is paramount and that once done the returns will almost take care of themselves
*How to evaluate Managed Futures Advisors and how to understand their disclosure documents
*And what I found most important and generally not covered elsewhere is how to actively manage the account once it has been established including the graphic tools to determine that the investment is not straying from the parameters that were used to establish the position.
This is a must read for anyone considering managed futures and those working to develop uncorrelated portfolios...


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All About Commodities (All About Series) Review

All About Commodities (All About Series)
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I've been wanting to invest in commodities for some time. So I wanted to get a book that covers the gamut. That's what Tom's book does. He looks at all the major categories but also looks at some of the areas that often do not get much coverage.
Tom also shows the ways you can invest in commodities. These include futures, options, ETFs and so on. It's done in an easy-to-understand way, with many helpful examples.
Along the way, you'll find tips and techniques to improve your investment success as well. More importantly, Tom has advice on how to protect yourself from the risks.
Excellent book!

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A Trader's First Book on Commodities: An Introduction to The World's Fastest Growing Market Review

A Trader's First Book on Commodities: An Introduction to The World's Fastest Growing Market
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On a 1-10 scale I would give my own knowledge of stocks a 7, bonds a 5 and commodities a 3. I am in the steel business, but steel is not traded like a commodity (though there have long been efforts to change that). I understand the general theory of how the commodities markets are supposed to work, but I ordered this book because I wanted to get a deeper understanding of how they function on a day to day basis. I was very pleased with the scope of this book and would recommend it to people who are considering getting involved, in a modest way, with commodities.
Please note though that one book, no matter the author's skill or breadth of knowledge, is NOT capable of turning anyone in to a professional commodities trader. Some of the negative reviews are both amusing and scary because they seem to be written by people who figured that they would just buy X commodity and suddenly become millionaires. I guess every market (and poker) relies to some extent on Darwinism - it's the amateurs that end up making the pros rich.
I think that Ms. Garner manages to successfully steer a course down the middle in terms of providing enough broad, general, information for newbies, while still including some actionable technical information which would allow you to start trading immediately (if unsuccessfully).
At the end of the day, commodities trading isn't for me. Between a full-time job I don't have the time left to devote hours and hours to do the research that might possibly allow me to be a successful dabbler in commodities. Nor do I have the ability to constantly watch the markets to catch the rapid rise and falls that provide brief trading opportunities. This book helped to convince me that commodities trading is best left to others. It is this conclusion that perhaps is worth far more than the purchase price of this book.

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Diary of a Professional Commodity Trader: Lessons from 21 Weeks of Real Trading Review

Diary of a Professional Commodity Trader: Lessons from 21 Weeks of Real Trading
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Full disclosure: This is not an unbiased perspective, as the reviewer has developed a warm friendship with the author (Peter Brandt).
With that said, hopefully you can overlook the bias for two reasons:
* Having read literally hundreds of trading books over the years - most of them mediocre, a small handful worth revisiting - your reviewer knows excellence when he sees it. By any standard, this book stands out.
* The author, Peter Brandt, has the ultimate in trader bona fides: An audited track record, spanning 30 years, of better than 41% compound returns! (No, that is not a typo.)
So with that out of the way, let's begin...
There is an old saying among professional racetrack handicappers: The losing player is the one who tells you he breaks even; the breakeven player is the one who tells you he is a consistent winner; and the winning player is the one who tells you it's a tough, tough game, with great dedication required for success.
Peter Brandt, a lifetime winner in the great game of trading, falls in the third category. While clearly someone who loves the game, he does not shy away from the hard realities of trading.
In describing his method of trading, Brandt comes across as refreshingly humble, underscoring that his approach is far from the only approach, cheerfully adding that other methodologies may be superior. (Though of course the vast majority of money managers would give a kidney, or maybe even a lung, for compound returns like his.)
From a position of humility, sincerity and strength, Brandt successfully explodes the following myths:
* The myth that inside information, hidden keys, or some other form of "secret knowledge" is what matters.
* The myth that percentage of winning trades is a meaningful measure of long-run trading success. (In fact the opposite may be true - an unhealthy focus on winning percentage can NEGATIVELY impact one's chances of success.)
* The myth that winning traders never experience setbacks, periods of trading frustration, or emotional challenges as "mere mortals" do.
Next to honesty, what shines forth from "Diary" is a stunning sense of clarity: Clarity of purpose, clarity of execution and methodology, and clarity of operational procedures from start to finish.
It is a beautiful thing to approach markets with a quiet confidence. Not every day will be a winning day, but every day can be infused with a sense of deep calmness, in respect to having a good plan and executing on that plan.
As a thirty-year veteran trader who understands the vital importance of comprehensive planning, Brandt exudes this desirable sense of calmness and, through the explanation of his methodology, teaches others how to cultivate it.
Just consider how many traders (perhaps you at one time?) have gotten lost in a fog of anxiety, or otherwise lost on the murky unmarked byways of an endless holy grail quest. Method after method, indicator after indicator... or consider how many traders agonize over the decision making process, never 100% clear what a "signal" is or whether the present signal is worth taking.
If you have uncomfortable familiarity with any of the above issues, this book could be a drink of cool water in the parched desert (or perhaps a bucket of refreshing ice water splashed in one's face). With sufficient methodological development and consistent planning, there is no need for ambiguity. As Brandt shows, a skilled trader can develop sufficient insight, conviction and rule-based engagement tools to know EXACTLY what a signal is, and exactly how to act on it.
And finally, last but not least, Brandt's book is a wonderful, powerful testament to price.
In earning his stellar compound returns over the course of three decades, Peter Brandt more or less did it via "price and price alone." The charts presented are beautifully unadorned, as is Brandt's methodology in general. There are no esoteric tea-leaf concoctions here - the regular hodge-podge of indicators that clutter up most charts are completely absent (and not at all missed). Hawkers of complicated bells and whistles should fear this book!
Brandt also does a service to traders in drawing attention back to classical chart patterns, in the context of the extended time frames required for full development of those patterns. Whereas "too fine an eye for pattern will find it anywhere," as the old saying goes, Brandt is very selective in the patterns he acts upon, preferring development time of weeks to months for the generation of true "best dressed" or "best in class" trades.
In conclusion: No matter your present depth of trading experience, this book could open your eyes. (If you can already "see," they may be opened a little wider.)
Anyone who seeks a path out of the dead-end labyrinth of esoteric guru methods, impossibly precise "can't lose" systems and convoluted trading predictions should read this book - as should those successful traders who already know and walk the path, yet simply seek to elevate their game.


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