Why We Don’t Swing for the Fence Trading Gold

Although we’d be thrilled to be able to brag a year from now that a trade we recently advised in Natural Gas futures caught a bear-market low within two cents, we’re not prepared to bet the farm on it. Similarly, a winning gold trade that got stopped out earlier in the week may have caused us to miss a moon shot, but we’re not about to look back. For when all is said and done, we’d rather not be prayerfully holding our breath or losing sleep as gold in particular swoons, leaps, caroms and careens its way higher. Aggravation and stress aside, on a simple risk:reward basis there is never justification for buy-and-hold speculation. Yeah, we’ve heard the story about the commodity whiz who made $50 million riding a brahma bull in soybeans/cattle futures/crude oil all the way to the top. But the guy couldn’t possibly have made all of that money without experiencing devastating setbacks along the way. And he could not have kept doubling down on subsequent trades without giving it all back. In our book, it is slowly but surely that wins the race, and the massage we preach to subscribers and students who take the Hidden Pivot Course is to never risk more than $1 to make $3. This applies along the entire route of a trade, from entry to exit. Moreover, we recommend that positions be constantly  “worked” so that s trader’s hard-won gains will not be entirely and constantly at risk.

How does that advice relate to the chart above?  To begin with, when we advised buying eight gold contracts in two places below current levels, we “knew” exactly how much we stood to make on the trade because our proprietary technical indicators said a 1771.50 target would be reached come hell or high water. We took partial profits when the futures rose as anticipated, but we reluctantly kissed the last piece of our position goodbye when it tripped a stop-loss during a particularly vicious after-hours swoon. Although our confidence in the 1771.50 target had verged on certitude – still verges on certitude — we were not about to let ego and greed supersede the boring math of sound risk management. And that is why we exited the last 25% of our long position when the futures did their fake kamikaze dive.  Now, although it could prove difficult to climb back aboard (as we intend to do), the hard work and diligence that may be required is preferable to seeing our profits gyrate wildly from day to day, and possibly evaporating entirely if price action turns even more rabid.

Step-Swoon-Step

While we’re on the subject of managing risk, there is one more elemental point to be gleaned from the chart. Notice that April Gold made a series of  marginal new highs over the last week or so. If one were long at the first of those highs – 1734.50 on January 26 – he’d have made an additional $8.50 per ounce (on a 100-oz. contract) by holding the position till 1743.00 was achieved the next day. However, the intervening swoon to 1717.20 would have subjected the trader to a paper loss of $17.30 per ounce – more than twice the gain that would have resulted from holding peak-to-peak.  Although holding the position for another two days would have gotten one to the next, 1750.60, for a further gain of $7.50, the intervening swoon to 1718.80 would have subjected the trader to a paper loss four times that, or $31.80.  What this implies is that, over the course of the trade, the trader gambled more than $4 to make $1. You don’t need to be a trader to understand why taking those kind of odds will never make you rich. And it is why we prefer to move in and out of long positions as gold moves higher rather than swinging for the fences with a buy-and-hold, damn-the-torpedoes swagger. No bull market is going to be so generous and accommodating that traders can simply forget about their positions and let them run.  While it’s possible to strike it rich once or even twice with that approach, the odds that you will eventually go bust are overwhelming.

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  • bc February 2, 2012, 2:04 am

    I have to admit; it’s kind of gratifying to watch the ramparts fail as predicted, and kudos to RA for getting this right. As we enter the end game, it now comes down to incentives. If you are a lower level finance sector dweeb, you are expendable (aka screwed) because you produce nothing. Ditto for the retired and elderly. Sucks to be you (us), dudes. The young, hard working,intelligent, and (in a last hope for humanity sense), productive are holding all the cards, but they don’t know it…yet. I’m really looking forward to the coming internet mediated negotiation between our asshole-ocratic oligarchs and this new class of young, intelligent, and productive actors. Show us the way, my young friends. And if debt/tax slavery is proposed to you by our oligarchs, simply tell them to shove it where the sun don’t shine. My four kids included. I’ll bet our war mongering, congress and presidency buying, masters of the universe oligarchs never thought of that possibility.

  • John Jay February 1, 2012, 10:02 pm

    Rick,
    Exactly right about gold and PMs in general.
    If push comes to shove, the government will order you to turn it all in, and subtract a 33% tax from whatever they decide is a “fair” price. Then DHS will offer informers a 25% tax free reward for gold being “hoarded” by “economic terrorists”. I hope they will let you keep PMs in the form of coins/jewelry. Maybe 2% of Americans have any real gold holdings, so the masses will jump right in to help out the DHS and claim the reward. That includes the rich guy that just loaded up on rolls of nickels that are worth more than the 5 cent face value. They are getting ready to mint nickels and pennies in steel only, just like WWII when for a few years pennies were steel and nickels were silver. I have got those in my small coin collection. They may not even need informers, just get records from gold/coin dealers and troll the blogs for anyone talking about holding PMs. It is all closing in on us now!

  • John Jay February 1, 2012, 8:42 pm

    Mario,
    If Uncle Sam starts to get real ugly about collecting taxes and ending the black market evasion of income taxes by pulling all cash out of the system they might just muddle through without a collapse. If everything is forced to go through checks, debit/credit cards, and electronic transactions every penny in the economy will pass through their hands for instant taxation. Even if you renounce your US citizenship you are on the hook for 7 years more taxes, correct? And a sales tax on real estate over 500k is just a foot in the door to a tax on all RE transactions. Just like the Income Tax that started out only affecting the very wealthy 100 years ago. So you can finance the RE sales tax through JPM/Chase/BAC in your 30 year mortgage. How lovely! Stay tuned!

    • Mario cavolo February 2, 2012, 2:50 am

      They do it so simple here in china with their “fapiao” receipt system. A registered business pays a gross revenue tax ranging from 3 to 15 %, depending on your biz category right off the top…it’s a flat sales tax. After that other typical accounting practices do apply with respect to expense deductions,etc.

  • Mario cavolo February 1, 2012, 5:05 pm

    Rick! GS blowing past past that midpoint on news of MS leading the facebook IPO I suppose…! Cheers, Mario

  • jim sproule February 1, 2012, 5:03 pm

    Rick I took your class and I use your system and it works. But are you sayaing that you don’t have any core holdings of physical gold and silver? Now that would really keep me up at night. The paper dollar profits that we make trading are in just that-paper. If you don’t look at gold and silver as real money then I don’t think that you get it. I have been buying physical gold and silver for 11 years and trading the miners and the etf’s in order to make more paper dollars to buy more physical gold and silver. This could change but only if the money destroyers change first. Best Jim

    • Bradley February 1, 2012, 5:24 pm

      Rick, I came away with the same question–do tell, do tell!

    • Traderbob February 1, 2012, 7:47 pm

      Jim …
      After reading Rick’s thoughts, I was all fired up to post a thought saying … exactly what you so cogently and persuasively expressed. Good show.
      I believe a Euro and then, in short order, a FRN currency implosion could occur without much warning, and paper assets will collapse with them. Because I am not prescient enough when that might occur (next 4 to 24 months seems to be a plausible period) I sleep better knowing that my small (but growing) physical stash of gold and silver (yes, PLEASE do not discount silver’s potential) will not evaporate and WILL be valued MUCH higher when the inevitable S— hit the propeller … dips along the way notwithstanding.

    • Rick Ackerman February 1, 2012, 9:32 pm

      I hold gold (from as low as $300), silver (junk) and platinum coins — each category is mostly in non-numismatics — having done so mainly to hedge the costs of putting my sons through college. For what it’s worth, when my older son started college last year, I did not cash out the bullion coins as intended. They are still sitting in a safe-deposit box, and I am paying for college with cash. College costs may be going through the roof, but I am somewhat comforted by the fact that I have been applying Gresham’s Law to give CU’s bursar the short end of the stick.

      Concerning the supposed safety of gold, my gut feeling is that when U.S. banks shut down for an extended holiday as seems inevitable, “worthless” U.S. currency will be more useful, at least initially, than gold or even pre-1965 coins. That’s why I continue to advise keeping a supply of $5s, $10s and $20s on hand.

      Over the longer-term, although bullion seems very likely to hold its purchasing power, there are no guarantees that you’ll be able to trade a couple of Krugerrands for farmland or fuel (or batteries, for that matter) at the exchange rate that currently obtains. This is not an argument against holding physical, but rather an idea to help temper “inflated” expectations. I don’t trust gold to be the one-size-fits-all answer to your Depression woes, especially since the Second Great Depression seems likely, for reasons I’ve written about here before, to be far, far worse than the First.

      Meanwhile, I keep a Maple Leaf on my desk as a constant reminder of Gold’s innumerable timeless qualities. I hold no mining stocks at the moment, although I’ve put friends and family into some good ones, including Detour Gold and Goldcorp. Regarding Rick’s Picks trades in Gold & Silver futures, they are intended to help subscribers do as they please, and to accumulate profits that can be used in any way desired. However, I would caution that leaving all of the said profits in one’s bank account, ready to be extracted as legal tender, is a risky game, especially with the MF Global cloud starting to billow.

  • John Jay February 1, 2012, 3:38 pm

    I just discovered that part of Obamacare is a sales tax of 3.8% on home sales over $500,000 starting in 2013.
    I wonder what else is in a law that “we have to pass to know what is in it”? I also read that the Federal government expects tax revenues to increase 30% in the future. I guess we will find out shortly where that will be coming from!

    • Mario cavolo February 1, 2012, 4:42 pm

      Hey JJ, one source is massively stepped up chasing of expats… targets on our backs just because we,re smart enough to live outside of the country…

  • mario cavolo February 1, 2012, 12:36 pm

    While everyone keeps talking about how the financial markets are essentially destroyed, that is, already destroyed, ruined, kaput, etc….the fact is that with interest rates near zero, the stock market will continue to be a relatively attractive choice, especially good dividend yielding stocks/MLPs/funds, preferreds, etc… One can argue that if your stock is at $100 yielding $6, that’s 6%, ok well, so if it plunges to $50 its yielding 12%, oh yes naysayers, if the company slashes the dividend in half, its yielding 6% again….hello?

    So then on that basis, consider how many cash rich dividend paying legitimate public companies are out there to consider as longterm portfolio holdings…

    Relating to Rick’s risk/reward/gold comments today, gold doesn’t yield anything at all and if the USD is going to be a strong safe haven choice for the next 2-3 years, which is very possible, and with a continued bullish bond market, that’s a weak scenario for gold to continue rising…

    Cheers, Mario

    &&&&&&

    You need to wake up and smell the coffee, Mario. The way this MF Global saga is playing out, your business-as-usual forecast is like arguing that gamma rays from a nuclear war will be great for farmers and horticulturists. RA

    • Mario cavolo February 2, 2012, 2:43 am

      I know Rick… As I quipped in previous forum, what’s going on incites a genuinely deep fear of what,s coming for billions across the globe…

  • Onoiro February 1, 2012, 9:00 am

    “He says the only reason it’s still working at all (the clearing system necessary for settlement and price discovery) is “rank ignorance” on the part of the participants as to the implications of this MF Global bankruptcy case. And he’s not just talking about gold and commodity trading. He says that virtually any money held anywhere within the system right now exists only insofar as the insiders have yet to figure out the dire implications of MF Global. This is a crisis of confidence. Remember where I said demand/velocity can turn on a dime?

    Jim says there’s no way to know if the clearing house being used by your broker or money manager is using your funds as collateral for gambles on its own behalf. And the way the law is written, the bank that is lending money to your clearing house apparently has the primary claim to your funds, ahead of you, in bankruptcy.” – FOFOA: Unambiguous Wealth 2

    • mario cavolo February 1, 2012, 12:25 pm

      Onerous stuff Onoiro…

  • Onoiro February 1, 2012, 8:51 am

    “I’d like to mention now that Jim Sinclair has been absolutely ON FIRE talking about the implications and the shockwave of consequences emanating from the MF Global bankruptcy. In his latest great interview he says that by putting the OTC derivative positions of a bankrupt clearing house ahead of its client’s deposits, this case will ultimately break the very market mechanism for price discovery. He says the system ($IMFS) is already broken, but whereas Lehman Bros. was the “Lehman event” for Main Street, MF Global is the “Lehman event” for the insiders. When your clearing house becomes a questionable counterparty, it’s over.” – FOFOA: Unambiguous Wealth 2

    • John Jay February 1, 2012, 4:36 pm

      Onoiro,
      We are now completely at the mercy (ha,ha,ha) of TPTB. Rule of Law and Due Process are history. They wancha, they gotcha. TARP, GM bond holders, Fast and Furious, MF Global, Foreclosure fraud, ZIRP, Obamacare, Amish dairy farmers, British tourists making twitter jokes, Senators at airport security. You name it, it never ends and it is only going to get worse. Mass sales of foreclosed houses are in the works to FOG (Friends of the Government) for them to rent out. We eat the loss, they get real estate for 70% off or more. We are not invited to that party, as usual. Just pray the wolf pack doesn’t turn it’s eyes on you and yours.

    • Rick Ackerman February 1, 2012, 9:11 pm

      Sinclair is dead-on in characterizing the MF Global saga is the “Lehman event” for insiders. Only a relative handful of observers will understand at this point that MF’s failure is atemplate for the by-now unavoidable systemic failure that awaits.