My bad, the title of the thread is kind of incorrect. My question was if there is a trend in place from this point on, based on the FOMC.
Excellent advice Landis, much appreciate it. There is a reason that I did not lose more than what I did, I realized early on that I am fighting the trend and got out. Mean reversion works when following the trend. I agree that the trend has been in place for whole of the April.
There are some really hard headed perma bears on the ultra short boards on Yahoo and I have no plans to be one of them. e.g. FXP
Excellent advice
Excellent advice Landis, much appreciate it. There is a reason that I did not lose more than what I did, I realized early on that I am fighting the trend and got out. Mean reversion works when following the trend. I agree that the trend has been in place for whole of the April.
There are some really hard headed perma bears on the ultra short boards on Yahoo and I have no plans to be one of them. e.g. FXP
Quote from Landis82:
The market has obviously been in an UPTREND since the March lows around SPX 1250; hence your system's inability to capture such an uptrend.
The title of this thread is incorrect.
Moreover, the fact that your "mean-reversion" formula of your system got clobbered fully CONFIRMS that a trend has been in place.
In fact, since the short-term low on April 15th back around SPX 1324, the market has stayed above the 10-day MA pretty much from that day forward.
I have heard several people here on ET ( S2007S ) talk about how this has been a "sideways" market, but I find that to be absolutely bizarre given that the stats show that the SPX is +10.8% from lows made about 5 weeks ago, and the IWM is +12.5%
The market was able to make a multi-month double bottom on the charts with the help of too much pessimism, too many shorts, too much cash on the sidelines, and a FED that was being very accommodative. Unfortunately, some people simply watch far too much CNBC and don't watch how the MARKET is responding to bad news. When it goes up on "bad" news, you know that you have a strong underlying trend to the upside.
So, if you want to stick your head in the "sand" and not be aware of the caveats of a "mean-reversion" trading system during a trending market environment, then so be it. If anything, you need to change the parameters of your "system", otherwise be able to recognize what kind of market atmosphere you are in and act accordingly.
Excellent advice