Monday, September 15, 2008

LONG
NASDAQ 100: 16% (-9.7% since entry Aug. 4)
Copper: 16% (-11% since entry Aug. 25)
Crude oil: 12% (-30.7% since entry Aug. 18)
Russell 2000: 12% (-8.6% since entry Aug. 25)
Long-dated bonds: 9% (+2.4% since entry Aug. 13, 2007)

SHORT
U.S. financials: 26% (entry Sept. 15)

CASH
37%

CLOSED TRADES (Sept. 15)
U.S. financials (long): +2.6% gain since entry July 14
Natural gas (long): -14.7% since entry Sept. 2

Notes:
- Positions are as of the open of Sept. 15, 2008. Numbers may exceed 100% due to leveraged trades or may not equal 100% due to rounding.
- Returns on ongoing and closed trades are based on my own positions, not the underlying market prices. My own return may differ from the market return because of how well the fund I use tracks the market. In some cases, my return is based on a leveraged fund and may also include currency exchange into Canadian dollars.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

hi Alex,

why aren't you long gold if you got a bullish signal for today, and other related markets are also bullish?

peter

Alex Roslin said...

Hi Peter - good question. I've already got about 30% of my portfolio in those six highly correlated commodities - specifically copper and crude oil. One of my risk-control rules is not to put over 30% into any highly correlated sector.

Regards,
Alex