Link: Myth: Retirement Accounts Are Designed To Help You Retire Early
I just read an interesting article that follows along with my view that retirement accounts are really not that great.
Check it out and see for yourself that there are downsides to them.
Active investors: stay away from retirement accounts
The prospect of tax free gains or investing with tax free money, offered by retirement accounts, seems like an amazing deal.
If you’re earning $50,000 per year, you’re probably losing at least 20% to taxes (varies by where you live) and I bet you would love to get some of that 20% back.
What could be better than that government offering you a 20% return on your money even before you put it into the markets?
But don’t be fooled!
There is always a catch!
I have been a strong advocate of RRSPs and TFSA, until now, because I understood, theoretically, that they allowed for you to make and keep more money than a regular trading account.
I know that an RRSP is beneficial if you’re making more money now than you will be living off of in your retirement and a TFSA is great if you’re in the opposite situation, but they both have the very very limiting restriction.
They both require that you become a permanent bull.
You see, retirement accounts will not allow you to short stocks, they won’t let you buy/sell on margin and they certainly won’t let you trade in put options.
Those poor bastards with retirement accounts have had their hands tied behind their backs as this recession looms on and the markets wipe out all gains since 1997!
It is probably a sentiment of bullishness and hopes of an unchallenged US/Canadian economy that made regulators impose that restriction on retirement accounts.
It must have been a happier time when those accounts were created.
The government needs to remove that restriction on retirement accounts and let the people decide which they would rather be – bulls or bears.
It is challenging enough to make money in this bear market, but being forced to be a bull, watching your savings go to hell and not being able to do anything about has to be the worst.
I don’t really know what to say to those of you with retirement accounts except to make wise decisions from now on.
But for the rest of us, stay away from bull-only accounts and be free to trade the markets as you see fit.
Looking for a reversal in ANDS
ANDS is a high flying stock that’s been in a nice uptrend since January 8th.
It sky-rocketed that day because it received Fast Track designation from the FDA for its drug approval, which is a great fundamental reason for it to go up, but consider that this company has had 0 revenue since 2008 to balance that out.
I agree that if this bio-tech company gains approval of its drug, it might start to see some significant revenue come in and that will be a good reason to go bullish on this stock.
I think that drug will pass the FDA approval process, but until it does this company will continue to eat through its cash.
Lets look at the technicals for a shorter term perspective.
This stock hasn’t seen many down days since the announcement of its FDA status, despite the market’s volatility.
A quick glance at a daily chart (http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=ANDS) shows that this stock has an RSI @ 90, which is incredibly high and signals an overbought stock, and declining volume, which signals decreasing interest in the trend. Both of these are signs that a correction is coming.
As of Jan 30, many of the shorts had covered leading me to think that at least part of this rally had been a short squeeze.
I think that we should wait for a reversal to show itself before shorting this stock, and with rumors of a partnership in the works and an earnings release on the 26th, we can expect lots of volatility over the next little while so be wary of a false trend.
I have no doubt in my mind that there is to be a correction in the price of the stock. It might be after the earnings or it might be tomorrow.
Keep your eyes open. I most certianly will be.
Are republicans single minded?
Does it always have to be black and white with the republicans?
They vote as if they share a brain.
I think that any group of thinking individuals, even if they all share the same religion and values, would on occasion disagree with each other on a complex issue.
But not the US republicans. It’s almost as if they have a big meeting before every bill comes to the house/senate and vote on whether they will accept it or reject it as one.
I hope that they will someday realize that times are changing and that their rigidity will not get them anywhere in modern society.
Review of my predictions from yesterday
I made a few stock predictions yesterday and I would like to go back over them to see if any of them came true yet. Lets take a look:
Stock: FBP
Prediction: up day tomorrow but a down-trending stock, declared dividend is still on, RSI too low
Actual: This stock went down a little today, short interest went up, and volume was high, MA cross over too, but RSI is too low, this stock won’t change direction till some good news comes out
Stock: TNB
Prediction: up trending stock, might need one more day to clear oversold levels, good earnings
Actual: This stock just wants to follow the stock market and is probably levered to stimulus package, the stock went down and the short interest went down too, i think this stock will go up soon enough
Stock: MTL
Prediction: watch tomorrow, if it opens up it’ll stay up
Actual: The stock was down on lower than average volume and the short interest is low now, the stock will probably turn up soon
Stock: DTPI
Prediction: short interest is almost fully covered, it’s oversold, time to buy
Actual: Looks like it went through accumulation today and closed up, should be starting an uptrend
Stock: MF
Prediction: short interest is high and going higher but the stock doesn’t seem like it’s stopping, watch for a small sell off with low volume tomorrow then continuation up
Actual: The volume was lower and the stock was down for most of the day, the short interest went up, probably because RSI hit 70, it’s gotta get off this oversold level before it continues up
Stock: ABK
Prediction: going down after today’s rally, down trend
Actual: This stock has really high volume for small cap, it’s really hard to predict, but it was down a little at the end of the day today
Stock: ARNA
Prediction: can’t stop won’t stop, look for the short squeeze
Actual: Wow I hate this stock, it had a correction today that will probably continue, but I can’t predict this stock
Stock: BZH
Prediction: wicked down trend stock, wait for it to spike up a couple of days then short!
Actual: BZH moved a little bit lower today on lower volume and a bunch of shorts covered, if the past repeats itself for this stock then it’ll jump up and come back down
Stock: TISI
Prediction: very oversold, almost all shorts covered, wait for it to start the up trend
Actual: The uptrend might’ve started already, 3x average volume on an up day.. got this one right..
Stock: CBL
Prediction: HOLY SHIT HIGH short %, needs to go down for a bit, let it fall below $4
Actual: It did go down below $4 and a few shorts covered today, it might test the $4, but it will probably keep going down
Stock: NARA
Prediction: watch this stock to turn up and then buy as it runs up
Actual: This stock started its uptrend today, yesterday was very high volume probably for all the shorts to cover, it should keep going up
Stock: PDS
Prediction: all shorts covered, watch for this to turn up
Actual: This one didn’t turn, it went lower and more shorts covered, I would like to see this one start going up soon
Stock: CLFC
Prediction: same as above
Actual: There are VERY FEW shorts left in this stock and it’s started going up a little, I’m guessing people are accumulating, but I can’t be certain, maybe the company really sucks, it is a financial after all
Stock: CRAY
Prediction: continue up till it hits 70 RSI, very few shorts but building
Actual: It’s almost at 70! and shorts went up a little, it should slow down then reverse, wait for it
So, in review, 9 of my predictions were correct in the very short term, 3 were incorrect and 2 were meh, by which I mean I didn’t really predict anything so I wasn’t right or wrong.
That’s pretty good if you ask me.
Stock Thoughts & Ideas
Here are a few stocks on my watch list and my thoughts on them.
I won’t be trading all of these, but I will be watching each of them to see if my predictions start to come true.
If they do start to come true then and only then will I dip my feet in.
FBP – up day tomorrow but a downtrending stock, declared dividend is still on, rsi too low
TNB – up trending stock, might need one more day to clear oversold levels, good earnings
MTL – watch tomorrow, if it opens up it’ll stay up
DTPI – short interest is almost fully covered, it’s oversold, time to buy
MF – short interest is high and going higher but the stock doesn’t seem like it’s stopping, watch for a small sell off with low volume tomorrow then continuation up
ABK – going down after today’s rally, down trend
ARNA – can’t stop won’t stop, look for the short squeeze
BZH – wicked down trend stock, wait for it to spike up for a couple of days then short!
TISI – very oversold, almost all shorts covered, wait for it to start the up trend
CBL – HOLY SHIT HIGH short %, needs to go down for a bit, let it fall below $4
NARA – watch this stock to turn up and then buy as it runs up
PDS – all shorts covered, watch for this to turn up
CLFC – same as above
CRAY – continue up till it hits 70 rsi, very few shorts but building
Pennystocking

I have been studying a little bit of Pennystocking by Timothy Sykes of timothysykes.com who turned $12,415 to over $1.6 million in 4 years.
His teaching style is brief and fun and he doesn’t come off as a know it all, which is both good and bad I guess.
He openly admits to not being an economist or a technician but suggests the use of technicals only to find trades in micro cap stocks.
I enjoyed his material and think that it is definitely worthwhile because he focuses on how regular people without million dollar portfolios can make good returns without the use of leverage.
His strategies are a little bit presumptious and like everything else to do with the markets, not always right, but I think that it is worthwhile to learn some of his techniques for the occassions when they are right.
What I found beneficial about his material are some of his personal chart patterns. Prior to learning those, I was always confused about how to play big stock moves and how to detect when a correction was going to take place after a huge rally.
I recommend his product because it falls in line with the philosophy of “see what others see, but do what others won’t”, which is a decent way to earn money in the markets.
Looking for a reversal in EBS
Lets take a look at the weekly chart of EBS, Emergent BioSolutions.
I spotted this chart a while ago because its beautiful and predictable uptrend but now I am starting to think that this might be a good short trade.
Take a look at the chart here: http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=EBS&p=W&b=5&g=0&id=p88491272954
This is a weekly chart of EBS with Bollinger Bands, 50/200 day moving averages, RSI on top and MACD on the bottom.
If you look at the recent trend in the stock it has been mostly up, staying above the middle line of the Bollinger bands and continuously pushing the upper limit of the Bollinger Bands higher. This is a very bullish trend in the stock and can usually be traded by buying at a reasonable projection of the middle of the Bollinger bands and selling at the top, but has the stock run up too much?
The recent volume in the stock is up drastically and the price seems to be waning, perhaps indicating some profit taking. The RSI is above 70 and has hit its own resistance level signaling an overbought situation.
The stock has been also been hitting a price resistance at the $26 level and I think that it will be a level that is not going to break.
The trade here is to short at the $26 level with a tight protective stop at $27 which is a 3.8% loss and a potential for the stock to go down to around $15 if the trend turns.
A simple mechincal trading system
The Dogwood Report posted a sample mechanical trading system:
Go long if price is above the MA(50) and RSI(2) is less than 5
Exit when RSI(2) is above 70 or an 8 percent stop loss is hit
Go short if price is below the MA(50) and RSI(2) is greater than 95
Cover when RSI(2) is less than 30 or an 8 percent stop loss is hit
The results of this system were quite impressive.
Take a look at their results here:http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_-YWCgDK_Px4/SWQvNwoLXvI/AAAAAAAAC7U/DxV3aq5DZ2A/s1600-h/RSI(2)+Long+%26+Short.png
The one negative of this system is the number of trades this system creates is high. With a fixed cost broker like most people have, those can really cut into your profits.
I believe that this system is impressive and follows the philosophy that simpler is better.
It could probably be further refined to reduce the number of trades that it makes.
Play around with it yourself and see if you like it.
The original post is at:http://thedogwoodreport.blogspot.com/2009/01/wealth-lab-developer-51-experiment.html
Developing a mechincal trading system
I have started looking into developing a mechanical trading system and as with all things I try, I am going at it with a passion akin to that of Al Pacino in Scarface.
The task seems slightly in-surmountable because I have tried and failed to develop something successful in the past. In retrospect, I feel that I may have taken the wrong approach.
During my previous attempts, I was unaware of software such as Tradesignal. Tools such as this one allow anyone to develop custom trading algorithms with ease.
My approach was more of a do-it-yourself methodology and I was trying to re-invent the wheel.
I had once programed Bolliginer bands and moving averages into excel files using end of day data that I downloaded from Yahoo Finance, only to realize that my plan of programing individual indicators then searching for trends then coming up with profitable combinations of them is a task with no end.
I tried to re-invent the wheel but my wheel turned out square.
This time, I will be successful. I am not going to waste time programming the math behind indicators. I will however, learn their use and research how others have succeed in using them in the past.
A program like Tradestation does the hard work for you. The indicators are pre-programmed, the back-testing algorithms are pre-programmed, the graphs look good, the interface is nice, etc etc etc. All in all, it is really a good program.
Your role in developing your mechanical trading system is simply to pick the indicators you want, use the Tradestation optimizer to select appropriate parameters for those indicators and test it.
Now that I have made it sound as easy as taking candy from a baby, here is the honest truth, it is hard. How hard? Very hard. Ok, maybe not that hard – but it’s not easy.
There are hundreds of indicators to choose from, millions of combinations to create and if you don’t really know what you’re doing, you may as well go back to programming indicators in excel.
Here is the approach that I am taking:
- Learn a few common technical indicators and how they work
- Backtest the use of those indicators
- Learn a few complex indicators
- Think up logical combinations of the indicators I know and test them in Tradesignal
- Read about others who have had success in mechanical trading
- Repeat 3 – 5
I am currently at step 2 and I am hoping to be ready to test some of my “strategies” in the next few months.
I will post my results on this blog so stay tuned.
Leave a comment if you have dabbled in mechincal trading and have any tips.

