November 22, 2017
Inside Trading
TradeWins Publishing

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Peter McKenna




The Event-Trading system was developed by Peter McKenna, a journalist with more than 20 years of experience reporting on the stock market. As a reporter for Investor’s Business Daily, he watched in horror as thousands of small investors lost their money when the tech bubble crashed. He went looking for a better system, a system that would put the power back in the hands of the small investor and keep the so called professionals at bay. The system he found was the Event Trading Phenomenon.


Technical and Fundamental
Strategies to Profit
from Market Swings




The Event-Trading Phenomenon introduces a new trading system that is destined to become the most popular trading strategy ever devised. It offers substantial profits with minimal risk.

Under the event trading rules, you will trade only when a news event makes market direction highly predictable for just one day. And when the right news event occurs, event traders trade index options rather than stocks. They do not have to be stock pickers and they can earn large, one-day profits that would not be possible with stocks. This strategy keeps market risk extremely low.

The event system is not a simple-minded, knee jerk reaction to good and bad news. It is a highly disciplined strategy that keeps investors out of the market unless the right news is released under the right market circumstances.

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The Event-Trading Phenomenon



 

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With the Thanksgiving holiday upon us, market volume is likely to be very light.

So we wanted to take the opportunity to share some exciting news to look forward to for 2018. Not only are we looking to launch a daily version of Inside Trading full of options, stocks and ETF recommendations, we’re also looking to introduce a new letter on crypto-currency trading.

We also wanted to talk about one of the most controversial trading opportunities, and share some information on why it may be time to short oil.

Next, Jon Najarian shares a video where he provides a perspective of what it is like to trade from the floor of the exchange.

Then, Peter McKenna explains why the relationship of the index line and the moving average line is important to event traders.

Last, Chris Verhaegh offers his PULSE Options Weekly Newsletter.

Enjoy!

Adrienne LaVigne
TradeWins Publishing



 

Inside Trading: 3 Hot Ideas

by TradeWins Publishing

With the Thanksgiving holiday upon us, market volume is likely to be very light.

So we wanted to take the opportunity to share some exciting news to look forward to for 2018. Not only are we looking to launch a daily version of Inside Trading full of options, stocks and ETF recommendations, we’re also looking to introduce a new letter on crypto-currency trading.

We also wanted to talk about one of the most controversial trading opportunities, and share some information on why it may be time to short oil.

Hot Idea No. 1 - The Crypto Currency Boom

It’s the hottest trade of the decade.

It’s already outperformed stocks, bonds, gold and real estate. And to be perfectly honest with you, there’s no end in sight.

In January 2013, it priced at just $13.36.

Four and a half years later, it was up to $7,858 with sights set on $10,000.

3 Hot Ideas

 
 

Dr J: Trading from the Floor

by Jon Najarian

The following is a video from The Money Man DVD

From his "How I Trade Options" package, Jon Najarian provides a perspective of what it is like to trade from the floor of the exchange. He looks at why there is a lag of communications between the floor and the media. Last, Dr. J also discusses why the seats are valuable.


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Moving Averages

by Peter McKenna

The following is an excerpt from Peter McKenna's The Event-Trading Phenomenon

If you add together the closing price of the S&P 500 Index over the past 10 trading days and divide the result by 10, you have found the 10-day moving average of the index. It is called a “moving” average because it moves with the calendar. The closing price for the 10th day is always dropped and the current day’s closing price is added. Moving averages are most often calculated for 10-day, 30-day, 50-day, 100-day and 200-day periods.

You can find charts of the moving averages for the major indexes in Investor’s Business Daily, the only daily financial newspaper I know of that provides a 200-day moving average of the indexes. The index line tracks the daily performance of the index itself. The moving average line tracks the 200-day moving average, which is the sum of the closing prices of the past 200 days, divide by 200.

The relationship of the index line and the moving average line is what event traders should take note of. As long as the index line stays above the moving average line, the index, and hence the overall market, is considered to be in a healthy, upward trend.

Moving Averages

 
 

PULSE Options Weekly Newsletter

by Chris Verhaegh

The following is an excerpt from Chris Verhaegh's PULSE Options Weekly Newsletter

Every week Chris publishes his “PULSE Options Weekly Newsletter”. The following is from his most recent issue.

First Things First

There are three things going on this week traders need to know about: Wednesday, Thursday & Friday.

More specifically the Federal Reserve (the “Fed”) releases the Meeting Minutes from their November 1st FOMC Meeting on Wednesday, November 22nd. Understand the Fed always releases the Meeting Minutes three weeks to the day after the close of their FOMC Meetings.

Since we’re getting very close to the end of Fed Chairwoman Janet Yellen’s tenure, I am personally interested in what if anything was discussed about the situation at their last FOMC Meeting. But more than just my curiosity, I would like to think that the market as a whole should show interest in the specifics of what the Fed will release on Wednesday.

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PLEASE READ. Past results are not necessarily indicative of future results. There is a substantial risk of loss trading commodities, stocks, bonds and options with or without this or any other advertised product, service or system. Also hypothetical or simulated performance results have certain inherent limitations. Unlike an actual performance record, simulated results do not represent actual trading. Since the trades have not actually been executed, the results may have under-or-over compensated for the impact, if any, of certain market factors, such as lack of liquidity. Simulated trading programs in general are also subject to the fact that they are designed with the benefit of hindsight. No representation is being made that any account will or is likely to achieve profits or losses similar to those shown.