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Thanks for your suggestion. Some of the ETFs
I trade are in a retirement fund where shorting is not permitted. Although both
ProFunds and Rydex have $B!H(Breciprocal$B!I(B NASDA and S&P funds, there are no reciprocals
for the sector funds.
By negative correlation I mean 100% uncorrelated.
For example, $TYX (rising interest rate index) usually moves in an opposite
direction of telecom type securities or an ETF like TTH.
<span
>-----Original Message-----
From: manohohman
[mailto:no_reply@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Thursday, October 16, 2003
1:11 PM
To: equismetastock@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [EquisMetaStock Group]
etfs
<span
>
<span
>I'm not sure what you mean by inverse. Why don't you
short the ETFs. <span
>
That's what I do.
I've found that the indicators from John
Clayburg's book Four Steps
to Trading Success work great on ETFs and even
better on Mutual
Funds.
Rydex has 2X long and short funds for both the
S&P and the Nasdaq.
That's one solution.
JO
--- In equismetastock@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx,
"drstutz" <drstutz@xxxx> wrote:
> I am a market timer. I trade predominately
ETFs. I have found the
recent MS
> TrendMedium to give fairly reliable signals
about when to enter and
exit a
> given sector ETF. Is anyone able to devise a
system to find
a "inverse
> sector ETF" or security to hold when a
given sector falls from a
bull to
> bear status so that I can remain fully
invested? Or, on a broader
note is
> there a way use MS to determine negative
correlations for a given
security
> or ETF?
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