Hedging
Hedging is an attempt to protect your investment positions
by making a counterbalancing investment within your portfolio. Why do I mention
that at this time?
One of the jobs of an investor is to evaluate the current
state of the market environment. Most of the time there is nothing to be
concerned about. But every once in awhile the risk of a market sell-off becomes
elevated and an investor would be wise to hedge his positions if for no other
reason but to protect himself from himself psychologically. A violent market
selloff can be a scary thing and will tempt the individual investor to run with
the herd and head for the exits. Hedging your investments ahead of time is a
way to protect yourself against this before it happens.
I keep track of the momentum of the breadth of the NYSE
market (advancing - declining volume) on
a daily basis and smooth this data with various moving averages. I then
subtract the longer moving average from the shorter one and this produces a
trend deviation indicator (a form of market momentum). I use this to help me
gauge the internal trend of the market. Both the direction and level of this
indicator are of equal importance.
At this moment in time (April 9 2017) the underlying market
is seriously deteriorating (money is flowing out of the market). It’s been
going on for awhile. I feel a
sell-off is eminent. Two weeks ago I bought an ETF that shorts the Russel 2000
index (it trades on the NYSE). It is a non-levered ETF that re-balances once a
year so it is safe to use. Its symbol is RWM. I bought it a couple of
weeks ago and have added to it since.
This is a way of managing my risk when I feel that the risk
in the marketplace has become too elevated. It has nothing to do with
predicting the future and is not a forecast.
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