Ah so! I didn't know 100K was a hot item in forumland. If I had I could have grabbed it, no trouble at all. Now that I know I will be sweating on beating you to 200k.
BrianB2. --- In amibroker@yahoogroups.com, Yuki Taga <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Hi intermilan04, > > This is, of course, not a one-size-fits-all situation. It is one of > the reasons a particular system designed to buy or sell *anywhere* > will produce somewhat varied results with varied instruments. > Liquidity varies from symbol to symbol and market to market. Make a > note of that. ^_- > > I never buy on the open -- ever -- unless I'm fading a sharply lower > open, or covering. I sell a lot on the open, particularly into > strength. I'd only short on the open to fade power, never to chase. > But I don't short much these days anyway -- for the same reason I > play the Don't Come bar instead of the Come, when I'm feeling silly > enough to do something like gamble, where the odds are always against > me anyway. But that doesn't mean you shouldn't buy on the open, or > short. It's just my personal preference. > > But ... I don't expect to be able to sell 20,000,000 yen value of XYZ > company on the open as easily as I can sell 20,000,000 yen value of > ABC company. By and large, I look for vehicles with the liquidity > that I require, and ignore the rest. I absolutely don't care about > stocks that are not really, really liquid. Occasionally, I make > exceptions, but the exception is always accomplished by reducing > position size, to accommodate reduced liquidity, which is another way > of saying to accommodate higher risk. > > You should know a few things if you don't already ... > > 1) When you put a market order in prior to the open to be executed on > the open, member firms can probably see it. I mean size, price, > margin or cash -- the works. They know who you are and what you are > doing, or at least they do over here. I can't speak for all > countries or exchanges of course, but I would assume when it comes to > money, there are people with an edge, legal or illegal. When it > comes to money, people with an edge usually can be expected to > exploit that edge. > > 2) You should be trading positions that are inconsequential to > typical opening volume, if your plan is to buy or sell there. In > other words, if you *care* if they see your order, you are trading > too large for the liquidity. If I'm selling 20,000,000 yen value on > the open, it had better be into a market that typically does nearly, > or even better, more than, a trillion yen value turnover on the open. > > This isn't rocket science of course, but the main thing is, you want > to be either invisible, or inconsequential. If you are consequential, > and visible, somebody with deeper pockets than you might develop an > interest to see just how strong your stomach is. Always remember > that you are playing in a field where there is an enormous disparity > of size. Some people can blow, on a whim, with regularity, what to > you would be consequential money. It's just that, to them, it's > pocket change, or other people's money -- or both. If they can see > you, and they smell weakness, I guarantee they will come after you. > > Most players understand these ideas instinctively, and so most member > firms don't spend a lot of time looking over all the pre-market > trades. But put something in worth noticing, and don't be surprised > if it gets noticed. > > So, if you are not trading more than a percent or so of opening > volume, I wouldn't worry about it very much. The more your > percentage of opening volume rises, the more risk you take on trading > there. If you are trading a very small fraction of opening volume, > you simply aren't worth jerking around; anyone who tries to jerk with > a deep market takes on enormous risk themselves. So you won't get > jerked around if you don't make big ripples, so you probably have > nothing to worry about if that is the case. > > Of course, the less *absolute* liquidity there is (we have been > talking relative liquidity so far), the more volatile openings are > going to be. In that case, you need to *really* sneak in and out, > probably. My advice in a nutshell: Stick to *very* liquid stocks, and > when you can make a consistent living at those, very, very carefully > step out and see how you do where the risk is, I guarantee you, > higher. > > If you don't know exactly how your market works (as you indicated), > you'd better learn. If you trade vehicles with low opening liquidity > ... you need to know what your risk parameters are, and if the > liquidity isn't sufficient to accommodate those parameters, you need > to cut your position size until you achieve a fit. > > This is a tough business full of very smart people, many of whom are > honest, and others who would sell their sisters to a complete > stranger if the price was right, maybe even at a discount. This is > the great watering hole of planet Earth. Clever animals can quench > their thirst, but a lot of bad things happen around most watering > holes, too. Keep your eyes open and your wits about you. > > Lastly, never expect to get 100 percent of what your system does in a > backtest. Develop a really good system, so you don't have to. ^^_^^ > > Yuki > > Tuesday, August 15, 2006, 3:30:37 PM, you wrote: > > i> Hi all, > > i> I'm just curious if anyone here are buying and selling securities > at > i> the open with market orders, i.e. orders are placed BEFORE MARKET > OPEN > i> and they get executed as soon as the market opens. > > i> I have noticed that buying at the open might help you get cheap > i> shares, but the reverse is also true...you might sell your shares > at > i> really bad bids. > > i> The reason why I'm bringing it up is, my system on Amibroker is > i> designed to trade at the open. And strangely enough, my system > isn't > i> doing too well ever since I started using it...perhaps it's > because > i> I'm getting bad bids and asks by placing market orders overnight? > > i> I'm not quite sure how the first trade occurs, in theory I sell > to the > i> highest bidder but with low liquidity of pre-market trading, what > if > i> the highest bid is absurdly low? > > i> Any thoughts on this is greatly appreciated. > > i> Regards, > > i> intermilan04 > Please note that this group is for discussion between users only. To get support from AmiBroker please send an e-mail directly to SUPPORT {at} amibroker.com For other support material please check also: http://www.amibroker.com/support.html Yahoo! Groups Links <*> To visit your group on the web, go to: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/amibroker/ <*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to: http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/