Aug 19th 2009Financial
Big move on NSX, Waislitz grabs 16.8pc
Source: www.afr.com
Alex Waislitz, son-in-law of late billionaire Richard Pratt, has become the largest shareholder in the NSX. Operator of the Bendigo and National stock exchanges, through his company Thorney Investment Group, as pressure mounts on the Rudd government to grant new market licenses in Australia. Read More »
Feb 27th 2009Financial
A strategy of buying stock and forward selling is called covered writing or a “Buy and Write” strategy. A call is a contract that entitles the buyer to purchase from the seller a fixed number of shares at a fixed price up until the expiry date. A covered call writer therefore only sells a number of calls equal to the number of shares already owned. The underlying share price of a stock would have to rise substantially to outperform the covered writer. Read More »
Feb 17th 2009Financial
I recently wrote about explaining Contracts For Difference.
The current trading environment is certainly an interesting place and it is times like these where traders with a trading plan, utilising solid techniques and logical strategies survive when others don’t. When individual stocks become overly volatile and liquidity becomes an issue, it is often useful to look at trading the whole market or particular sectors within the market. To trade the whole Australian share market, you can gain exposure to the S&P/ASX 200 Index. This index measures the performance of the 200 largest index-eligible stocks listed on the ASX. Read More »
Feb 12th 2009Financial
Volatility has been white hot in the past few months. The volatility index (VIX) is referred to as the fear gauge and has been at historic highs in recent months. The market movements of late have been spectacular, as you can see from the attached chart. The VIX spikes have coincided with significant down moves in the S&P500 and consequently on other world markets. Read More »
Feb 10th 2009Financial
Last column I referred to Fear and Greed ruling traders emotions. The fear gauge that I mentioned was the Volatility Index (VIX).
The VIX gauge is still at historic highs, which is understandable as the VIX measures market expectations of near term volatility conveyed by stock index option prices. I postulated that if history repeats then we may well be coming close to a market low. Read More »