Identifying The Best Market Trading Systems

Wednesday, October 6th, 2010 by ARTS Team No Comments »

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Identifying the best market trading systems is essential to becoming a profitable investor. There are many ways to pick the best stocks, markets or ETFs to buy while having a keen idea of the goals and objectives for your investment portfolio. Stock market trading systems are  designed to make your investment experience strictly mechanical – eliminating the emotion from the process.

Many strategies for identifying the top stock trading system can be found on the internet today. It is essential to  make sure that you are choosing the right one. Often, successful market trading services are designed with complex algorithms designed to analyze the market trends, virtually eliminating the need for any type of market research. By applying the rules and trading instructions provided by the system, plus having an idea of good money management, you can become a successful trader.

Identifying the best market trading systems can be vital for all investors. Your gains depend on a system that works. After-all, the primary objective for using a market trading system is simple; consistently outperform the markets.

Depending on the goals that you set forth, your primary objective should be to find a reputable market trading system that is robust, technologically advanced as well as one that consistently out-performs the major market indices. More importantly, any trading system you are considered must be independently verified by a third party auditor that can authenticate all past performance data.

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A Look Ahead At The Week Of October 4, 2010

Sunday, October 3rd, 2010 by ARTS Team No Comments »

MONDAY: Pending home sales; Factory orders; Ford dealers meeting; Earnings from Mosaic

TUESDAY: ISM non-manufacturing index; Intel CEO Otellini speaks; Earnings from Yum Brands

WEDNESDAY: Weekly mortgage applications; Challenger job-cut report; ADP employment report; weekly oil inventories; CTIA Wireless; Earnings from Costco and Monsanto

THURSDAY: Monthly chain store sales; BoE announcement; ECB announcement; Kansas City Fed Pres Hoenig speaks; Consumer credit; Mosaic shareholder meeting; Earnings from PepsiCo and Alcoa

FRIDAY: Monthly non-farm payroll; Wholesale trade; NY Comic Con; IMF, World Bank annual meeting

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Market Musings From The ARTS Team

Sunday, October 3rd, 2010 by ARTS Team No Comments »

US stocks modestly for the week ending October 1st ending a previous month surge that was the best performing September since the 1930s and the best month since April 2009.

The S&P 500 was basically flat on Friday trading rising 0.44 percent to close at 1,146.24. The S&P is up 2.79 percent year-to-date.

YTD Stock Market Performance

The S&P has been edging closer to technical resistance levels which could mean a greater surge as it finds a new trading range. The index has been trading between a 1,140 and 1,150 level but has fallen from the top-end of that range in the last week.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 41.63 points, or 0.39 percent, to 10,829.68. The Dow closed lower for the week dropping 0.28 percent after four consecutive weeks of gains. The Dow is up 3.85 percent year-to-date.

The Russell 2000 Index of small companies increased 0.57 percent.

The Nasdaq is holding on to a 4.48 percent gain for the year. It rose 2.13 percent on Friday to close at 2,370.75.

On the NYSE there were 2,080 (66%) advancers for every 940 (30%) decliners. Four percent of stocks remained unchanged.

Gold prices surpassed a previous high, reaching more than $1,317 an ounce. As gold surged, the U.S. dollar weakened.

The US benchmark 10-year bond was unchanged rising a slight 0.01 percent to yield 2.53 percent.

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Market Briefing

Monday, September 27th, 2010 by ARTS Team No Comments »

US stocks rose for the week ending September 24th, the fourth consecutive week of gains on the benchmark indexes.

The S&P 500 rose 2.1 percent this week to 1,148.67. The S&P is up 9.5 percent in September and closed above the 1130 resistance level twice in the past week.

It should be noted though that financials continue to underperform the broader markets.  It will be difficult for the markets to move meaningfully higher without their participation.

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Market Musings From the ARTS Team

Monday, September 27th, 2010 by ARTS Team No Comments »

The week ahead:

MONDAY: Chicago Fed national activity index; Texas manufacturing outlook survey, 2-year note auction, Schapiro, Breeden, Pitt on future of SEC; BlackBerry’s Devcon 2010, FedEx shareholder meeting

TUESDAY: S&P/Case-Shiller home price index; Richmond Fed survey; consumer confidence index; 5-year note auction; Atlanta Fed Pres Lockhart speaks; Barnes & Noble shareholder meeting; HP analyst meeting

WEDNESDAY: Weekly mortgage applications; oil inventories; Minneapolis Fed Pres Kockerlakota speaks; Philadelphia Fed Pres Plosser speaks; Boston Fed Pres Rosengren speaks; 7-year note auction

THURSDAY: Reading on GDP; Weekly jobless claims; Corporate profits; Chicago PMI; Hearing on J&J recalls

FRIDAY: Personal spending; NY Fed Pres Dudley speaks; Consumer sentiment; ISM manufacturing index; Construction spending; Monthly auto sales; BP’s Hayward steps down

Sept. 26, 2010 – Market Recap

US stocks rose for the week ending Septmeber 24th, the fourth consecutive week of gains on the benchmark indexes, as investor confidence in the economy was buoyed by improving demand for capital goods and technology products.

YTD Stock Market Performance

The S&P 500 rose 2.1 percent this week to 1,148.67. The S&P is up 9.5 percent in September and closed above the 1130 resistance level twice in the past week – a signal to some traders that the market is ready to trade in a higher range.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 252.41 points, or 2.4 percent, to 10,860.26. The Dow is now up 8.33 percent for the month – the largest gain in September trading in over 70 years. September is historically the worst month for stocks.

The Russell 2000 Index of small companies increased 3 percent.

The Nasdaq is poised for its best September since 1998 – holding on to a 12.6 percent gain for the month. It rose 2.3 percent on Friday to close at 2,381.22.

Gold futures surpassed a previous high, reaching more than $1,300 an ounce. The U.S. 10-year Treasury note fell, marking a 2.61 percent yield at the end of the Friday trading session. Fed Funds rate remained unchanged – as expected. As gold surged, the U.S. dollar weakened 2.6 percent for the week.

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Market Musings From The ARTS Team

Monday, September 13th, 2010 by ARTS Team No Comments »

US stocks close slightly higher on Friday boosted by news that wholesale inventories rose 1.3 percent in July, showing confidence in retail sales and consumer spending. A 0.5 percent rise was forecast.

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 47 points Friday in very light trading following the Rosh Hashanah holiday. It was the seventh day of gains out of the past eight sessions at the New York Stock Exchange and the S&P.

YTD Stock Market Performance

The Dow rose 47.53, or 0.5 percent, to close at 10,462.77.
The Standard & Poor’s 500 index rose 5.37, or 0.5 percent, to 1,109.55, while the Nasdaq composite index rose 6.28, or 0.3 percent, to 2,242.48.

Energy stocks rose after a 3 percent rise in oil prices. The energy sector gained after news an Enbridge pipeline that delivers oil to Midwest refineries was shut down. Oil rose $2.20 to $76.45 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Bond prices headed lower on Friday. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note, which moves opposite its price, rose to 2.80 percent from 2.76 percent on Thursday.

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Four Reasons Why Automation Will Be The Way The Markets Work A Decade From Now

Tuesday, August 31st, 2010 by ARTS Team No Comments »

Timing is everything, in work, in life, and certainly in investing. The fact is that too early or too late on a certain position, and an investor can be out hundreds, thousands or even hundreds of thousands of dollars, all due to the timing of a stock market move. This is why there is a growing move toward automation in nearly all aspects of analyzing and trading on the stock market. Despite the warnings from some pundits, and human stock brokers or investment fund managers stuck in a 20th century market paradigm, the future looks surprisingly bright for the stock market, regardless of what the current financial headlines say.

Automation is taking a lot of the guesswork and risk out of investing in the markets, and it is able to do so through an accurate appraisal of market timing.

Timing is, in fact, something that is incredibly difficult for human analysts and brokers to manage and predict, but automated market timing software is incredible accurate at pinning down the necessary timing of any given stock market maneuver for maximum profit.

Here are four quick reasons why the stock market will be nearly fully automated in the years ahead.

Automated Timing Removes Human Error And Bias

Timing systems are able to work without the incredible limitations that come with being human. They do not possess any bias, nor are they prone to unfocused and unwitting errors that can completely derail an entire day’s or week’s worth of analysis.

Human Timing Systems Rely More On Guesswork Than On Analysis

Human operated market timing systems have been around for a very long time, but they are more reliant on guesses and gut instincts than anything else. Only the sophistication of automated algorithms have been able to take the standard timing systems and achieve optimal performance through them.

Automated Timing Systems Can Work Without Human Involvement

As these systems become more and more sophisticated from an automation standpoint, the fact is that human necessity is diminishing from the process with each and every year. Pretty soon, all human involvement will revolve around final approvals and maintenance issues only.

There Is No Practical Way For A Human Broker To Accomplish What Automated Systems Can

Human stock brokers and fund managers simply do not have the ability to work at the same rate of speed, performing the same level of analysis, as automated market timing software systems can.

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Market Briefing

Monday, August 30th, 2010 by ARTS Team No Comments »

The major indices closed on Friday in far better shape than might have been expected, suffering only modest declines for the week as a whole after Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke sparked a sustained rally on Friday with comments suggesting the Fed was willing to consider more muscular intervention in the economy to quicken the pace of recovery.  We expect, however, that the rocky ride for investors is expected to continue in the coming week, as the glow from recent corporate earnings reports fades and the focus shifts to weak—and weakening—economic data.

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Market Musings From The ARTS Team

Monday, August 30th, 2010 by ARTS Team No Comments »

The major indices closed on Friday in far better shape than might have been expected, suffering only modest declines for the week as a whole after Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke sparked a sustained rally on Friday with comments suggesting the Fed was willing to consider more muscular intervention in the economy to quicken the pace of recovery. The S&P 500 slid only 0.7% for the week after being down as much as 2.3%—eventually settling at 1,064.59 at Friday’s close (+17.37, 1.66%). Bernanke made clear his belief that growth will pick up significantly in 2011, suggesting that the Fed will consider “unconventional measures” to forestall any slide into double-dip recession. Bernanke’s statement reassured investors, and stocks rallied 1.7% following the announcement, with the Dow up 164.84 on Friday to finish at 10,150.65 (+1.65%) and the Nasdaq rising 34.94 to close at 2,153.63 (+1.65%). Friday afternoon also witnessed a sustained Treasury sell-off.

YTD Stock Market Performance

Response to the Fed’s message was mixed overall. Only three of the ten major sectors rose, led by utilities (+2.0%), with the tech sector acting as a significant drag on the market—down 2.1%. The majority of economic data remain far from reassuring, with the housing market once again on the precipice. Existing home sales were down 27.2%, reaching an adjusted annual rate not seen since record-keeping began in 1999. At the same time, new home sales plummeted to between 276,000-334,000—the lowest figure since 1963. Second-quarter GDP was revised down to 1.6% from 2.4%, though most analysts had expected a lower figure.

On the corporate front, Dell and Hewlett-Packard are involved in a bidding war for 3Par, a data storage company. Dell, which had seemed to have a takeover of 3Par well in hand prior to HP’s involvement, was forced to raise its offer significantly, to $27 per share. HP has since responded with $30 per share offer.

Canadian-based Potash (POT) has rejected a $130 per share offer from BHP Billiton (BHP) and is said to be encouraging other bidders.

Intel has lowered its third-quarter revenue projections significantly, to between $10.8 and $11.2 billion.

In Europe, the FTSE 100 was up 45.72 to finish at 5,201.56 (+0.89%), the DAX rose 38.59 to close at 5,951.17 (+0.65%), and the CAC 40 gained 32.41 to end Friday’s session at 3,507.44 (+0.93%).

In Asia, shares finished mixed on Friday, aided by a major reversal in Tokyo as investors shrugged off losses amid hopes of further stimulus action and a government initiative to counter the recent rise of the yen. The Nikkei 225 Index added 84.58 points, or 1%, to finish at 8,991.06. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng fell 14.71 points, or 0.1%, to close at 20,597.35–its sixth straight negative session. Shanghai’s CSI 300 Index rose a modest 8.47 points, or 0.3%, to settle at 2,858.57.

Light crude oil finished at 75.57 per barrel, up 0.53%; gold closed at 1,235.70—up 0.01%. The 10-year Treasury bond rose 6.12%, producing a yield of 2.65%.

The rocky ride for investors is expected to continue in the coming week, as the glow from recent corporate earnings reports fades and the focus shifts to weak—and weakening—economic data.

Absolute Return Trading Systems (ARTS) Inc. delivers market timing instructions to its subscribers from its proprietary algorithmic market timing software.  The system, designed by a team of researchers over more than a decade, is designed to produce positive returns in both up and down markets.  ARTS provides performance and risk information on 43 exchange traded funds (ETFs) and 21 stock market indices and has consistently been a top-ranked market timing service as measured by the leading third-party performance verification service, TimerTrac (www.timertrac.com).

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Automated Sources Of Information Are The Keys To The Future Of Portfolio Success

Monday, August 30th, 2010 by ARTS Team No Comments »

Times are tough for those in the investing world of today. The stock exchanges  in major powerhouse cities of the world are being decimated by the volatile force that the stock market has become. With the wild ebbs and flows of the current economy, traditional methods of determining what the stock market may or may not do simply are no longer relevant or useful today’s courageous investors. The market shifts occur at such a fast and furious pace, traditional human analysis and data collecting are just too slow. Stock brokers and investment fund managers must act swiftly or else miss the opportunity altogether. This is where stock trading system software comes in.

Automated sources of information and computer analysis of data are the future for stock market players. Long gone are the days of conventional data analysis. Utilizing automated sources for information is a sure fire way to correctly wade through the vastness of the stock market and ensure the investor of a successful return. It will provide you with a foolproof strategy for dealing with the stock market.

A more traditional method of stock market analysis carries with it a large margin for error and the opportunity to inject bias into the decision making process. An investor may overlook a great stock opportunity for a profit on trendy designer jeans simply because he knows nothing about the fickle and fast paced world of the fashion industry. The software used in stock trading system software using trend analysis would have caught this gem of a stock as a good investment because the human bias and error simply is not there.

Stock trading system software has the capacity to evaluate extremely large quantities of data, more than a human being ever could, and at breakneck speed and efficiency. This allows for a broader analysis of all stocks on the market and ultimately makes the fund manager or stock broker deliver the best stocks to their clients for maximum profit and the lowest risk possible.

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