sharetrader
Page 16 of 24 FirstFirst ... 6121314151617181920 ... LastLast
Results 151 to 160 of 232
  1. #151
    Advanced Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2001
    Location
    New Zealand.
    Posts
    1,936

    Default MCR Chart Update.

    It is interesting to revisit previous charts and see how everything worked out. Here is an update of the old MCR chart above.



    While the exit signals these 8 indicators triggered were spread out over a couple of months, interestingly enough they were nearly all at around the $2.32 level.

    Quote Originally Posted by Phaedrus View Post
    The 20% Trailing Stop featured here is currently sitting at $1.85, but it is entirely possible that other indicators could trigger Sells well before that level was reached.
    A Trailing stop is commonly one of the last indicators to trigger. Somewhat unusually, here it was the very first!

    Quote Originally Posted by Phaedrus View Post
    More active traders may well consider that MCR has "outpaced" these fairly conservative indicators and would have prepared another very similar chart covering just the accelerated uptrend of the last 3 weeks.
    Here is such a chart, using default oscillator parameters. Most indicators gave an exit at around $2.72. That was an obvious exit point based on candlesticks as well. Note the down-day (black candle) beginning a downtrend (it had a lower low and a lower high). All 6 indicators shown here had you out just one day after a new 12 month high. Howzat!



    MCR has trended down very nicely since those signals.
    Don't you just love this stuff?

  2. #152
    Legend
    Join Date
    Jun 2009
    Location
    CNI area NZ
    Posts
    5,958

    Default

    Phaedrus et al, thanks for the input. I'm going to have to learn these lessons, as I keep jumping on the bandwagon too late, and stay too optimistic

    Cheers.

  3. #153
    Legend
    Join Date
    Jun 2009
    Location
    CNI area NZ
    Posts
    5,958

    Default

    What about now? Still too early? Missed the runup after the 1/2 yr report..

  4. #154
    Legend
    Join Date
    Jun 2009
    Location
    CNI area NZ
    Posts
    5,958

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by elZorro View Post
    What about now? Still too early? Missed the runup after the 1/2 yr report..
    Good tip elZorro, MCR has ramped up in the last week.. (made some profit at last).

    I had to get it right sometime.

  5. #155
    Legend
    Join Date
    Jun 2009
    Location
    CNI area NZ
    Posts
    5,958

    Default

    MCR had an announcement today, good drill results, expecting a few more to catch on tomorrow.

  6. #156
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Mar 2001
    Location
    Auckland, , New Zealand.
    Posts
    1,410

    Default

    Hope so El
    Just got in recently

  7. #157
    Veteran novice
    Join Date
    Jun 2007
    Location
    , , .
    Posts
    7,289

    Default

    Note also the small but steady decline in LME warehouse nickel stocks since early February.

    http://www.infomine.com/investment/c...arehouse#chart

    Disc: Holding MCR and PAN

  8. #158
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Mar 2001
    Location
    Auckland, , New Zealand.
    Posts
    1,410

    Default

    Thanks to Shasta's spreadsheet and my own little bit of TA only went into MCR
    Resisitence is around 1.98/2.00 I think, lets see if it breaks that

  9. #159
    Veteran novice
    Join Date
    Jun 2007
    Location
    , , .
    Posts
    7,289

    Default

    Commentary on the nickel market.

    Nickel, The Leader Of The Pack?


    By Rudi Filapek-Vandyck, Editor FNArena

    It has been noted in the past that nickel often leads other base metals at important junctures. For example, in late 2007 nickel was the first to succumb to selling pressure. In 2008, again, nickel fell first out of bed, others followed later.

    In November last year nickel started to waver. A few weeks later all commodities, from crude oil to sugar and soy beans, were facing sudden and sharp sell-offs.

    This time around market watchers have observed how nickel has quietly outperformed the other base metals, as well as most other commodities. Last week, nickel managed to post a 4% gain when energy, other metals and especially most soft commodities recorded losses.

    Could it be, some of these market watchers started to ask, that nickel is once again leading the rest of the pack? If this proves to be the case it would confirm the view from commodity bulls that prices should run higher into the second quarter on the back of more robust economic data, even though the shorter term might see continued price weakness.

    History shows, however, that nickel has a far better track record to lead others into a downturn rather than pre-signalling another leg upwards. If anything, the case for nickel as a forward looking indicator appears to be "first in (the downturn), last out".

    This, however, hasn't stopped market watchers suspecting that nickel might be leading the pack this time around. After all, 2010 was supposed to be the year of bulk commodities, crude oil, aluminium and copper, maybe of gold and platinum too, but nickel was seldom mentioned as a metal investors should have in their portfolio. Yet, three months into the new calendar year and nickel's performance to date is increasingly attracting investors' attention. So what's happening?

    The first thing to note is that commodities as a group have de-coupled from various traditional links and relationships. Nickel certainly is no exception. Traditionally strong correlations between spot and futures prices and market indicators such as the Baltic freight indices, registered inventories in the US, Europe and more recently China, and the Chinese stockmarket (or Chinese power demand) have all declined since last year.

    This indicates that investor sentiment and flow of funds have increasingly become a more important driver behind commodity prices. No surprise thus commodities -from energy to base metals, to precious metals, to agricultural products- more and more often seem to trade in tandem with global risk appetite. But even that relationship has now broken down with equities outperforming recently.

    Even the formerly close correlation with Chinese demand has recently started to weaken. Observe, for instance, how Chinese demand for nickel has gradually declined over the past months (chart below), yet nickel has outperformed. As such, nickel's surprise performance deserves investors' attention as it signals a shift away from China as a leading indicator for industrial commodities (!).



    The bull and bear cases for nickel's price outlook this year are -for once- not China-centric, they are based upon expectations for supply and demand elsewhere in the world. The bears will tell us overall demand outside China remains well below levels prior to the GFC, while demand in China is declining. In fact, there is anecdotal evidence of large inventories and of destocking in China, including for nickel.

    The more bullish approach is that investors are anticipating the start of restocking in developed economies. Continued evidence of economic recovery, especially from the US, should therefore support commodity prices in the months ahead. Nobody is talking about another firm rally upwards, but as long as risk appetite remains high and economic data continue supporting a positive economic picture, the view is that commodities including crude oil, aluminium and nickel should break out of their trading range and see modest price rises between now and mid-year.

    What is supporting the investment case for nickel is that supply is currently lagging market expectations due to union strikes at two nickel mines operated by Vale in Canada; Sudbury and Voisey's Bay. On top of this, there's also short term disruption at BHP Billiton's ((BHP)) Kwinana refinery in Western Australia. And there are persistent market rumours that Goro (another Vale project) in New Caledonia may simply never make it into successful production a la BHP's failed Ravensthorpe project in Australia.

    Analysts at UBS argued earlier this month that falling inventories at the London Metals Exchange (LME) would signal that European steel manufactures were starting to restock again, and that this would be met by a positive response from investors. So far, both falling inventories and higher prices have happened.

    UBS is among those who believe nickel is leading the larger base metals complex as it is a relatively small market (circa 10% the size of copper or aluminium) and thus more sensitive towards early stage changes.

    Around the same time, colleagues at JP Morgan summed it up as follows: "The strength in nickel prices is a function of quite a few factors, including stronger stainless steel production output, tight nickel inventory levels of quality material and of material in the Americas generally, tight scrap markets, fairly downcast assumptions around mine supply in 2010 even though prices have rallied sharply and strong speculative demand."

    An oft mentioned target for nickel prices is US$25,000/tonne. This marks the 61.8% retracement level from the big sell-off from US$35,000 to US$8850/t. Nickel this week managed to reach above US$23,000, but it subsequently retreated towards US$22,000/t.

    Many an expert appears convinced nickel will reach for the US$25,000 target between now and mid-year.

    Investors should note not everybody is equally convinced about nickel's price prospects over the longer term. Even bulls like UBS acknowledge there's plenty of potential excess supply around that can, and likely will be, re-activated in case of high nickel prices.

    Witness, for instance, that UBS has similar average price forecasts for 2010, 2011 and 2012 and beyond: they are all around US$9.2/lb (or circa US$20,200/t).

    This story was originally written and published on Monday, March 22, 2010.

  10. #160
    Veteran novice
    Join Date
    Jun 2007
    Location
    , , .
    Posts
    7,289

    Default

    Just a reminder that the PoN continues to firm.

    Here's a twelve month chart.

    http://www.infomine.com/investment/c...xaud.uoz#chart

    Disc: I hold MCR and PAN

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •