Registration Strip Icon for smarter Trade smarter, not harder: Unleash your inner pro with our toolkit and live discussions.

Alpesh Patel
Alpesh Patel's columns :
04/20/2006Oil and other crazy commodities
04/13/2006A quiet dip?
04/07/2006Equities booming - so where is the rally?
03/30/2006More Highs
03/15/2006Awful Feb - looking back in March
03/01/2006Highs on Equity Markets
02/22/2006European Interest Rates
02/17/2006The Quiet Before the Storm?
02/08/2006The Heat is Off
02/02/2006February the month of Valentine
01/25/2006Another Flight
01/12/2006Stock Picks for 2006
12/14/2005Fast Jet to India
11/17/2005The View From Here
11/02/2005After the Party
10/23/2005IX Investment Expo
10/02/2005Women Traders
09/27/2005Forex for us?
09/21/2005Trading as a Business
09/14/2005Women and Men; Mars and Venus
09/07/2005Fund Managers
08/31/2005Exchange Traded Funds
08/24/2005New York, London, Chicago
08/16/2005NYC Again
08/10/2005Summer Fun
08/03/2005Global Markets from a Foreign Perspective
07/29/2005Portfolio Destruction
07/20/2005Trader Health
07/13/2005Portfolio Management
07/06/2005Analyst Speak

« EARLIEST ‹ PrevNext › LATEST »
Alpesh Patel – A weekly look at market opportunities and pitfalls
Alpesh B. Patel is one of the UK's best-known traders and financial journalists. He writes a regular column for the Financial Times, has written seven bestselling books on trading, and makes regular television appearances for Bloomberg, Sky Television, Channel 4, The Money Channel, and the BBC.

Return Free Risk

02/07/2005

Forge 'return free risk' which is the fear traders always have, we seem to be having risk free returns with the FTSE hitting highs. From a technical charting perspective, it is rare for the FTSE fail to fall on a 'MACD bearish divergence' - but it has done just that - wrong-footing many including yours truly.

So that raises a couple of issues. How do you ensure when the market goes against your position you are not left sitting ugly? Or put another way how do you hedge your risk?

First, ensure your positions are not all in the same direction. For instance if you were 'long' FTSE, BA, ICI, BAT then you are making a one way bet on the markets - that is higher risk than enforcing a discipline of saying you will look for 4 stocks as the best 'long' prospects and 4 stocks as the best 'short' prospects.

That way if the market goes through a bearish ugly phase you are still making money. The problem is most people do not realize how to go 'short'; that is make money from falling prices by selling first, then buying back more cheaply later.

Of course spreadbets and CFDs are one way to do it. Of course presently a lot of the market rises are due to takeover bids and speculation. Those in the rumour or reality spin cycle include: Manchester United (he'll get it - eventually), easyJet (not close yet), Mulberry (nope - now or never and the family behind it probably won't want to exit when someone wants to buy. It's going through a good faddish phase, it like Filofax many moons ago, which is why a bid is now or never).

Also, if you would like a free multi-media CDROM on 'Investing Better', which covers momentum indicators like the MACD, posted to you then drop me an email with your postal address to alpesh@tradermind.com.

It's useful to know the leading sectors presently - given we're one month into the year. Steel is still leading. Construction is close behind, up 12%. The leading stocks in the past month (and arguably likely to continue their trend) include Gleeson, Montpellier, Bovis - amongst others.

Spreadbetters

Spreadbetters and futures traders often look at hard and soft commodities. Here's my quick take on the action for the week ahead :

  • Oil: Mixed
  • Copper: Mixed to lower
  • $/£: Mixed to lower
  • Dow: Higher
  • Gold: lower
  • FTSE 100: Higher

Alpesh B Patel, author of “Alpesh Patel on Stock Futures” available from the ADVFN bookstore.

Your Recent History

Delayed Upgrade Clock