Ever wonder what the smart money is doing in the markets? You don’t need to pay big bucks to find out. Just read the Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s free weekly Commitments of Traders report. The CFTC’s COT data is a Holy Grail of market info, listing trillions of dollars in positions in 200+ markets – gold, crude oil, natural gas, silver, forex, equity indexes and lots more. My trading system, which I posted about here for seven years, gave weekly trading signals based on the COT data.
Monday, 14 May 2007
Update: Read My COTs Article
I've just posted my story on the Commitments of Traders reports in the May issue of the magazine Technical Analysis of Stocks & Commodities on a new page you can access on the right. Click "Alex Roslin's Articles." Also posted is my investing story in today's Montreal Gazette.
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3 comments:
Hello Alex,
I read your wonderful article on T&A and immediately look up your blog. Great information, thank you.
I would love to be able to send you an e:mail.
Tom...
hothang@hotmail.com
I just read your article as well. Excellent reading. I'm hoping you might elaborate on the sidebar "How to Build Your Own COTS Database".
First, the data is imported into a single spreadsheet. Working in that "raw" spreadsheet, do you then move a row of a particular market's data to the bottom of the individual spreadsheet for that market? And then, from there, calculate your average and standard deviation?
I hope you have some time to dig into this a little deeper. Thanks again.
Thanks for your message. Yes, that's exactly right. Remember: the moving average and standard deviation should both be calculated from the net percentage-of-open-interest positions. Lots of people have been asking about the Excel formulas, so I'll post some soon on this blog.
Good luck!
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