3 Steps to a Simple Trading System

  1. Trends (price direction over time) are set by the flow of investment money into or out of a market. Using a simple momentum indicator – the four-week rule – we can generally stay in step with the trend.

  2. Markets indicate real supply and demand through spot/cash price, basis, futures spreads, and forward curves.

  3. We can use filters – volatility, seasonality, price distribution – to theoretically manage risk.

I saw a discussion on the social media site LinkedIn recently with the poster stating he wanted a simple trading system, rather than one filled with all the equations and statistics that drive most algorithms these days. (It’s at this point I could veer off and discuss how unsophisticated – or stupid – the artificial intelligence behind the algorithm trade industry actually is based on how easily it can be manipulated by social media posts. We’ve seen over the past decade how this has become the game within the game, guessing what the next post – usually not quite true – will be. But that’s a bigger subject for another day.) This brings to mind the age-old debate of if the algorithm-driven investments side of the market is trend following or trend setting. Based on my application of Newton’s First Law of Motion applied to market analysis, a trending market will stay in that trend until acted upon by an outside force (from John J. Murphy’s “Technical Analysis of the Futures Markets”, 1986 edition, page 3), I’ll continue to hold to my belief algorithms are trend setters. This brings up another larger discussion of the value of technical analysis given algorithms do not use classic technical patterns.

With that as background, let’s start building our simple trading system based on my 7 Market Rules, starting with #6: Fundamentals win in the end. In the past I’ve mentioned something I call the Vodka Vacuity, the reality there are no Absolut(e)s in market analysis. But there is one: Eventually, markets come down to supply and demand. No, I don’t mean government related estimates and imaginary numbers, but rather real fundamentals shown to us through spot (cash) price, basis (differential between spot/cash and futures), futures spreads, and forward curves. One of the filters used by investors moving gains from equities (Rule #7: Stock markets go up over time) to commodities is looking for markets with bullish real supply and demand. A couple examples over the past year or so are live cattle (LEJ26) and the ongoing rally in soybeans ($CNSI). Both could be viewed as Rubber Band Dispositions; the former with bullish fundamentals and bearish social media posts driving algorithm selling, the latter what could be considered bearish fundamentals and bullish social media posts triggering algorithm buying. When the Rubber Band snaps, markets return to their base, meaning supply and demand.

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