Trading Against the Crowd :Profiting from Fear and Greed in Stock, Futures and Options Markets ( Wiley Trading )

Publication subTitle :Profiting from Fear and Greed in Stock, Futures and Options Markets

Publication series :Wiley Trading

Author: John F. Summa  

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc‎

Publication year: 2004

E-ISBN: 9780471701019

P-ISBN(Hardback):  9780471471219

Subject: F830.9 金融市场

Language: ENG

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Description

Efficient market theorists contend that markets are random and thus not predictable. With the publication of Trading Against theCrowd, however, noted author, economist, and professional trader John Summa convincingly shows that investor sentiment can be incorporated into profitable stock and stock market trading systems. In this groundbreaking book, Summa explains how to use popular gauges of crowd psychology, such as put/call ratios, option-implied volatility, short sales, investor surveys, and advisory opinion to trade against, or contrary to, prevailing market sentiment. He also makes compelling arguments against the efficient markets hypothesis with the presentation of his own quantitative weekly bear and bull news-flow intensity indices, which he builds from news scans. This data series, and other popular measures of crowd psychology, are processed through custom indicators that are programmed into profitable trading systems, such as Squeeze Play I & II, Tsunami Sentiment Wave, and the Fourth Estate. Trading Against the Crowd is the first book to provide a comprehensive assessment of investor crowd psychology, offering valuable market timing tools and trading techniques, including: MetaStock and Trade Station system and custom indicator code; comparative statistical studies of CBOE, OEX, and equity-only put/call ratios; straightforward instructions for combining price triggers with sentiment indicators; a practical guide to understanding put/call ratios, short sales, investor surveys, newsletter opinion, and stock market news-flow intensity; how to use LEAP options as trading vehicles to avoid use of stop loss orders; use of put/call ratios for trading the Treasury bond futures market; and test results and evaluation of trading system performance. Many of today’s professional money managers rely on investor sentiment for improved market timing. They know that at extremes of market sentiment, markets tend to be the most predictable.Trading Against the Crowd shows how you can begin to profit from these short- to medium-term sentiment waves generated by the actions of the speculative crowd. Put into practice powerful sentiment data using thoroughly back-tested trading systems, and rise above the herd mentality of the investor crowd, where potentially large profits await.

Chapter

Contents

pp.:  1 – 13

Preface

pp.:  13 – 15

Introduction

pp.:  15 – 17

Chapter 3: Will the Real Put/Call Ratio Please Stand Up?

pp.:  27 – 35

Chapter 4: The Options Trading Crowd at Extremes

pp.:  35 – 45

Chapter 5: Does the Entire Group of Options Traders Get it Wrong?

pp.:  45 – 55

Chapter 6: OEX Options Traders — Is This a Smart Money Crowd?

pp.:  55 – 65

Chapter 7: From Statistical Tests to Sentiment Trading System

pp.:  65 – 75

Chapter 8: Squeeze Play I: Pulling the Price Trigger

pp.:  75 – 83

Chapter 9: Sentiment Squeeze Play II

pp.:  83 – 93

Chapter 10: Squeeze Play II and LEAPS Surrogates

pp.:  93 – 111

Chapter 11: The Tsunami Sentiment Wave Trading System

pp.:  111 – 117

Chapter 12: Adapting Put/Call Ratios to Bond Futures

pp.:  117 – 123

Chapter 13: Option Implied Volatility and Investor Sentiment

pp.:  123 – 129

Chapter 14: Testing Option Volatility on Equity Indices

pp.:  129 – 137

Chapter 15: Stock Options Volatility and Sentiment Long Waves

pp.:  137 – 153

Chapter 16: Gauging Crowd Psychology with Short Selling Ratios

pp.:  153 – 163

Chapter 17: Public Shorts: Still as Good as Ever as Crowd “Sentimeter”

pp.:  163 – 173

Chapter 18: Trading Against the Advisory Opinion Crowd

pp.:  173 – 179

Chapter 19: The Fourth Estate Crowd

pp.:  179 – 185

Chapter 20: Postscript on Crowd Psychology in Financial Markets

pp.:  185 – 195

Appendix A: MetaStock Formula Language Code

pp.:  195 – 199

Appendix B: TradeStation EasyLanguageCode

pp.:  199 – 203

Appendix C: Notes on System Testing

pp.:  203 – 213

Index

pp.:  213 – 219

LastPages

pp.:  219 – 227

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