Thursday 22 March 2012

JF pays down 2.8% to Investors over 2 months

Whether it be a curse or a blessing, JF Capital is again having to close its doors to trade in order to reorganize and recapitalize in the face of strong demand for the 'main fund', which will also undergo rebranding over the next few months.
 
Our final position was harvested in keeping with JF's investment philosophy - averaging-out and taking chips off the table when a trade yields a measured profit and not allowing the archetypal vice of a trader, greed, to interfere in decision making. Evidently our 1.31 EURUSD put expired worthless and thus taking profits when sentiment appears overdone has deftly captured nearly 1 percentage point for the team.
 
Future ideas remain under-wraps currently, save for those already published e.g. our desire to build a Silver position into the lows. It would be disloyal to our new fleet of investors to reveal how we will continue to navigate the ship across the ever turbulent asset markets.
 
Indeed, it is the house view that the worst of the crisis is still to come. Don't be fooled by the relative calmness, European solvency problems are yet to be dented by the current splurge of liquidity.
 
Expect the main fund, and timely blog posts, to relaunch around June.

Wednesday 14 March 2012

Greek Debt Swap: Week Round Up

(3rd March to 9th March 2012)


On the 3rd of February 2012 we were sitting on MTM value on the EURUSD put of 7%, by the 6th March we were looking at a bid offer of 99/101, this gave way to locking in some profit. As one of our philosophies is playing the average this seemed like a good idea especially as news coming out of Greece was becoming more and more positive.

JF’s thinking lead to options, as previously written, because a positive LTRO followed by a Greek bailout would have lead to a large spike on any EURUSD rate therefore the put option was limiting us to one sided risk.

As we moved to the latter part of last week and it became obvious that the CACs (collective action clauses) will occur and the debt haircut swap will go ahead our option’s value moves closer to 0, reinforcing our profit seize as said above, although the position will still stay open as it seems pointless to close due to the nature of options- it cant get worse. The position therefore makes a total minimum gain of 10.22%, although more would have been nicer we cannot complain.

While all of this was happening JF did some P&L doctoring, or the "P&L mechanic" as our trader called it, using some intra day trades in AUDUSD (sell on 7th), EURUSD (sell on 7th and 8th) and XAGUSD, silver in USD, (buy). As Thursday drew to a close XAGUSD was up, see trend lines below for entry and exit positions.







This trend and the other currency trades, as above, meant loses suffered in changes of EURUSD on JF’s put option due to such a positive Greek bailout and with limited affect on bank balance sheets of the haircut and a limited affect on insurance groups (CDS were activated as a credit event was determined) were limited. So in summery an interesting week both for the EZ and JF, watch this space......




Author Details


This report was written by a JF contributor not directly involved in placing any of the trades/actions listed above for the aim of trying to objective. To raise any issues or ask any questions please feel free to get in contact with the team by commenting or emailing JFCapitalUK@gmail.com

Thursday 8 March 2012

Risk performs as Greece stays contained.. We bought Silver

Risk is back ON, thanks to optimistic headlines from "insider sources" on the Greek bond swap deal. Some are even suggesting participation of over 90% in the press, which we find very hard to believe.

Fortunately, we took some profit on our 1.3100 EURUSD put as this option may now prove to be worthless in 2 weeks time when it expires. However- we shall not close the trade, which is still in +ve MTM territory, as we feel the market is in "buy the rumour, sell the fact" mode and shall sell off steeply once CACs are used and the Greek CDS are triggered, perhaps causing a domino effect on some smaller peripheral banks.

It's worth keeping chips on the table to be exposed to this tail risk.

In order to hedge ourselves slightly to the upside, we took a small clip of XAG/USD (Silver) for a number of reasons:
  1. Silver has shown strong support to a sell-off and has faired relatively well in risk-off scenarios, which we still believe are down the road. Timing in this type of market is a fools game, we are platonic.
  2. We remain bullish on commodities in an inflationary outcome (read "currency war") and always look to buy on dips with Gold and Silver, depending on which looks better value.
  3. The white metal has outperformed of late, mostly due to it being "safer" (not a word normally associated with Silver) than Gold in a loss-of-confidence scenario, whereby precious metals lose their safe-haven status. We assign a small probablility to this outcome and therefore it must be considered as the price movement would be violent.
  4. In an out-and-out real recovery, Silver, of some industrial usem has a better chance of holding value.

Tuesday 6 March 2012

Profit Cystallizes on our EURUSD put. Did you follow?

Our 1.31 EURUSD put, bought for a mere 25pips at 1.345 last Wednesday, is now straddling 100 (99/101 bid/offer) and we take this opportunity to realise some profit as Greek fears begin to creep out of the woodwork. Equity investors spooked themsleves this morning, the cascade of red across screens all day was virutally guaranteed after any meaningufl dip as market agents are acutely aware of how far we've rallied - beyond the June 2011 levels which saw a significantly better (albeit make-believe) economic outlook.
The chart below should help readers to understand our call a little better.


EURUSD, above, is currently the main risk driver in the markets (apart from perhaps AAPL but that's another story entirely), meaning it is watched by every trader everywhere, regardless of what they trade, as an indicator.

It therefore has the 'power' to reverse sentiment and form market tops and bottoms.

Analysis on the pair is a mainstay of our cross-asset forecasting and trade idea generation. Last Wednesday, not only were fundamentals and news-flow pointing to a lower Euro, we also see on the chart signification resistance to a further upside move. These are, in order of importance:
  1. The downward sloping trendline (in Red) that has defined the market norm for over 11 months
  2. 200-day Moving Average (SMA - in Yellow), an important psychological level for the market
  3. The 50% retrace of the move down from 1.425 in October '11
The confluence of these factors led our positioning. Any move up would have been sharp, if however the LTRO 2 had impresed, thus we chose to expose ourselves only in options - limiting our downside.

Sunday 4 March 2012

JF Capital Monthly Report February 2012


Monthly Report February 2012


As another good month and our first quarter come to an end we reflect on what has been an exciting start for JF Capital UK. With, active months, month-on-month returns of over 2% in our 'Beta' stage of testing we look to increase our targets of 2% m-on-m to a slightly more ambitious 3.5%, which we believe is definitely achievable through the increase of our leverage in positions and continued broadening in the JF trader base.

Below is a cumulative NAV (net assets value) of the fund in percentage increase from 27th January to 3rd March 2012. Due to data availability issues (teething problems!) we are unable to provide a continuous NAV graph and therefore rely on NAV at the close of trades, in % on month-start.







The first major (stop loss at approx 2% risk) trade this month came on the 27th Jan with a short on JPY at 76.6 to 76.9. This came at a nice technical level with support in the mid 76s and fundamentals reinforcing this viewpoint, hence our choice for a high level of risk on the table. By 31st Jan this trades exposure was reduced by a half (1), believing in the trade but sceptical about the timing, leading to a negative P&L on the trade and an YTD NAV of near 0%, this continues until we exited our SPX position, from Jan, at (2).

It is worth pointing out that this point (9th) we are 1% NAV (actual) MTM, but this is not displayed due to the graph being realised positions only.

As the middle of the month approaches, (3), our JPY short really starts to take hold as USDJPY hits 78.5, with shorts on EURUSD to mitigate wider Dollar risk. This gain is partly realised (4) when the USDJPY and EURUSD positions are reduced by two thirds. Gains occurred due to a BoJ injecting JPY10trn of QE in a helicopter drop of money together with continued threats to control their currency and deliver a sustained level of 1% inflation. These positions are also marked on the graph USDJPY graph below, including the reducing of our position size at 5 or 78 for the USDJPY.

Also (5) the closing of our XAUEUR position, with loses on the EURUSD due to positive news in Greece and gains that out weighed this loss on the XAUUSD, hence the outlier event for cumulative NAV.





On the 29th Feb with the LTRO2 on the horizon the fund took the view that we will see a drop in the EURUSD and decided to buy a March EURUSD put option at a strike of 1.31 at a cost of 25pips.

As the new month starts our new put option looks inspired, with the NAV on the remainder of our USDJPY position and option at 1%, this former position is closed on the 2nd at 81.67 up from the original purchase price of 76.xx playing to the strategy of averaging out so as to protect the fund from large losses (and gains) at the peaks and troughs.

It is worth noting that the 1.31 EURUSD put has not been closed but has been added to the chart at its NAV so as to show the value at month end of an increase of 2.305% on the month.


Summary


All in all a good month for this young fund, although the USDJPY position did cause some pain at the beginning of the month the analysis was proved correct. Coupling this with good moves in the gold market and a helpful LTRO we saw a positive end to the month.

Going forward we will hope to continue to be long in gold as a hedge to “global central bank balance sheet exposure” as March continues. In terms of JPY, it would seem unlikely for us to open another position until USDJPY hits the high 70s again. JF hopes to make a move into single stock market as equities continue to rally (FTSE up 6% in 2012).  

In terms of administration we continue to strive to find the most useful platform for our trading, CMC has been useful for our CFD trades and provides a low spread of 0.7, however the poor data feed and lack of options has lead us to explore other options as we move into the future.



Author Details


This report was written by a JF contributor not directly involved in placing any of the trades/actions listed above for the aim of trying to objective. To raise any issues or ask any questions please feel free to get in contact with the team by commenting or emailing JFCapitalUK@gmail.com







Friday 2 March 2012

TRADE ALERT: After 1 Month+, We Exit USDJPY

It's been emotional.


At 14:19pm GMT we finally sold our most profitable clip of Dollars (USDJPY) back into Yen from which we had bought them. In late January, we paid in the low 76.xx (weighted average) for these USD and, as we sell them on for 81.67 into the market, we consider this trade our most well-measured and skilfully (fortunately) timed one yet.

I expect USDJPY to price north of 84 at some point this year. However, we exit now as technicals are not supportive of our position - the upward sloping trend that has defined the rally is now resistance (not the support we saw in Feb) and particularly Yen-bearish news has failed to break this zone, always a sign that the market is overextended and a correction is imminent.

A decent retracement back to the high 70s will afford us a new entry, otherwise it's goodbye to an old friend!

Thanks for the Alpha,

JF

Trading Update, Is Gold A Bubble

We remain holders of USDJPY and a March EURUSD Put at 1.31. These two positions alone represent a P&L of 1% on NAV and have performed hansomely post LTRO - but more on this later today in our Monthly Report.

Turning to Gold, our exit from this position at 1778 now looks inspired and is both a product of our averaging-in-and-out strategy and our expectation of a sentiment correction (still yet to fully materialise).

But we remain long term buyers of Gold, predominantly as a hedge against the global central bank balance sheet explosion but also as a good capture of European tail risk. Silver, however, may look better on a risk-return basis as its "fundamental" value (based on real industrial and retail demand) is closer to its price than Gold. We assign a non-zero risk to <1000 Gold but a zero risk to a Silver equivalent  <15.

For the sceptics, click to enlarge:

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