Global Macro Trading Journal

Quote from Martinghoul:

I can't and don't deny this, not at all... It's just that, IMHO, the usefulness of reading about other people's performance is marginal at best. Personally, I can find a lot of better uses for my time in the mkt. Specifically, I'd rather spend this time doing some analysis and trying to find good trades. Again, I stress that this is only my personal opinion and I am not a macro guy at all.

Please... I have said it before and I'd like to mention it again. I am not an IBanker and I have never been an IBanker.

There is an assumption made by most on this site that if you're not trading spot FX on metatrader in your mom's attic then you're an ivory tower ibanker.
 
Quote from atticus:

NPR ran a story on a "leading online retailer" and the working conditions at their warehouses and how it related to profitability. I love AMZN as a consumer, but it's a massive house of cards.


At 120x earnings Amazon doesn't even have to stumble, all it has to do is catch the sniffles or trip on a press release. You could whack 30-40% off the multiple (and share price) and it would still be a nosebleed growth play.
 
Quote from ralph00:

Introduction of Windows 8 has really opened my eyes to the issue AMZN faces. Between Apple, Android, and MSFT, the online shopping experience is moving from web-based to OS-based. Apple led the way, then Android, now MSFT. AMZN could get squeezed. Trading at 120X earnings, I'll let others see whether Bezos & Co. can adapt.

Not sure I follow this line of reasoning. Amazon isn't going anywhere regardless of how operating systems change. I have no position in AMZN, but I fail to see any connection between Windows 8 and how Amazon will perform in the future.
 
Quote from Martinghoul:

I can't and don't deny this, not at all... It's just that, IMHO, the usefulness of reading about other people's performance is marginal at best. Personally, I can find a lot of better uses for my time in the mkt. Specifically, I'd rather spend this time doing some analysis and trying to find good trades. Again, I stress that this is only my personal opinion and I am not a macro guy at all.


There's a big difference between 1) reading about "performance" and 2) digesting a well-articulated set of nuanced ideas and observations, set forth by someone successful, as to how the market works, how a trading style works, useful things they have discovered and so on.

A great trading book is like a great conversation: It gives you fresh ideas (or fresh perspectives) and makes you think.
 
Quote from Daal:

Given the amount of inflation indicators at highs I'd expect the deflator to be revised up and GDP down. I'm not sure if you posted on the past but what are your views and market positioning currently?

At the beginning of the year I was bearish on everything, anticipating that the recession warnings from Europe indicated an imminent global slowdown (there was lots of ancillary supporting data on this point as well). Technically that the October lower highs in SPX would hold or be broken only marginally before a next wave down, taking other risk assets with it.

Obviously this was wrong across the board, I didn't anticipate that the 'LTRO effect' would be a carbon copy of the 'QE effect' (plowing through everything regardless of valuation, sentiment, technicals, etc.) and certainly the economic data has been consistently good for months [though as I type this the ISM comes out weak and ES drops 5pts]. But then, earnings have been weak and it's unclear why the 'decoupling' thesis should suddenly be correct now, after having been wrong for so many years. So like I said, I find the macro picture at the moment pretty unclear. I did take some losses of around 2% finding all this out.

I guess looking years ahead I'd say that overvalued markets eventually mean revert, you cannot print forever without consequence and government liabilities will have to be resolved - so I don't hold much stock but do try to hold lots of inflation hedges.

For positioning I'm about 12-15% in PMs, 30% RE, 10% with a few mutf managers (mostly fixed income) and the rest in cash - though the cash isn't strictly idle as I do other non-macro trading.
 
Quote from Martinghoul:


Please... I have said it before and I'd like to mention it again. I am not an IBanker and I have never been an IBanker.

I somehow (not sure how) was of the impression that you are either making markets in swaptions for barclays, or are running their hybrid book. Maybe I am misinformed!

Edit: I equated ibanker with trader - if you wanted to point that out, when you said you are not an ibanker.
 
Quote from Butterball:

The author's argument is hard to follow. Because Private Equity investors are buying out small cap companies the space is uninteresting? I don't get it. That's ridiculous.

Agreed. Hempton is a quack and offers little of value. :confused:
 
Quote from gmst:
I somehow (not sure how) was of the impression that you are either making markets in swaptions for barclays, or are running their hybrid book. Maybe I am misinformed!

Edit: I equated ibanker with trader - if you wanted to point that out, when you said you are not an ibanker.
No, I have no direct association w/Barclays or any other IB.

And no, when I said I am not an IBanker, I meant that I am not employed by a bank, rather than the other meaning.
 
Quote from sprstpd:

Not sure I follow this line of reasoning. Amazon isn't going anywhere regardless of how operating systems change. I have no position in AMZN, but I fail to see any connection between Windows 8 and how Amazon will perform in the future.

Of course you don't follow my argument if somehow you construe what I wrote as meaning Amazon is "going somewhere." The company is still a great one that will be around for a long time (and get a lot of my business). My argument has to do with the stock price. At 120X earnings (or whatever it is), the slightest stumble could see the price whacked 50% or more. More and more purchases are being done through the OS - where Apple, Google, now MSFT get a piece of the action - rather than over the web/AMZN (where Amazon would get a piece). There's a sea change going on here. It doesn't mean AMZN will cease to exist, just that they've got issues which they will have to adapt to.

BTW, Google is going to have issues as well. Where do you think some of those billions in Facebook revenue are coming from? I would not be an owner of GOOG anywhere near these levels.
 
Quote from Martinghoul:

No, I have no direct association w/Barclays or any other IB.

And no, when I said I am not an IBanker, I meant that I am not employed by a bank, rather than the other meaning.

My bad then - don't know how I got this impression.
 
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