Can someone explain?

dribs

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Hey,

I need some things answered if I can, thought this was the closest relevant section to put it in. Okay, I have some questions about the lingo and what things actually mean, been reading stuff on global macro hedge funds. There seems to be a lot about being short or long "volatility". What does this mean? I am trying to get my head around what things mean, like how does one long or short volatility?

Next thing is yield curve trades, I kind of understand the yield curve thing, I think. But can someone explain it in basic terms of putting on a trade for it? Like if I think the curve is going to steepen or flatten, what would that mean? Going long or short the 30yr?

Next is spreads, I understand there are spreads in the same contract, like the STIRs how you can trade the months in the future(what is this called? forward months?) but I mean spreads like in this book I am reading it says about all kinds of different spreads, like one is "Corporate and Emerging Market Spreads" with the X axis as "Basis Point Spread to Treasuries", what do these spreads mean and how does one actually place a trade on something like that? Is there a platform somewhere that has all this random stuff on it or something? When people talk about spreads, are they nearly always linked to the Treasuries? Things in this book like "I'd be short corporate spreads, they'll blow out". What does this mean and what would the trade be?

Another bit in the book says "Another one was the Japanese yield curve, which again we started trading around 1999 or 2000 when you could do 5 year, 5 year forward against a 20 year, 10 year forward steepener".....wtf? What does that mean?(the underlined part). Also the same guys are talking about a TIPS trade, they bought TIPS(Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities) yielding 3.4% and got out @ 1.5% in 2003, now this just means they went long on TIPS and because price and yields are opposite, the trade was a huge winner as they got out at 1.5% yield. Correct? First, why do traders/fund managers/everyone talk in terms of yield when it comes to this, on every platform I see, bonds are shown in prices, not yields, so why does everyone refer to yields? And two, how would one actually put this trade on? Start buying TIPS, how do you do that? Is there some exclusive access that hedge funds have somewhere because I have never seen TIPS anywhere other than in books and see people talking about them.

Also, what is the thinking and ideas behind these trades? As in, what do they actually mean, I hear Bloomberg and sqwawk guys going on about spreads and yields "blowing out", like Portugese or Spain or something, wherever it may be, what does that mean? For the country and for the markets and how does one place a trade to use that to his effect? What would he have to place a trade on? Does a higher yield mean that country is more risky than it was before with lower yields, therefore their bonds would be going down if yields blew out? Which would.....widen the spread to US Treasuries?

I'm sure I have more questions but can't think of anything extra just yet, I know there is a lot there but anyone that knows, please let me know because it bugs the hell out of me, I read/hear about this kinda thing all the time but don't really know what it all means and how one benefits from it. Sure I can read about it in books and in textbooks(which I am doing, but it takes forever because of all the puffed up fancy words), but I want to know how it works in the real world and what traders do and how they actually put the trade on with weird things like this(weird to me, never seen TIPS or Portugese spreads on Interactive Brokers platform or TT or anything) and what it ACTUALLY means when these things happen(yields blowing out, spreads etc etc.).

I want/need to expand myself, trading for me is scalping the Bund in trades that last a few seconds to minutes, so whether I should or shouldn't, I don't really know what all these things mean, so any help is very much appreciated. :) (y)
 
Jeez, mate... Lots of questions. They're simple questions, but you have to be more specific. Can you just put up a list, so that I can respond item by item?
 
Jeez, mate... Lots of questions. They're simple questions, but you have to be more specific. Can you just put up a list, so that I can respond item by item?

Haha yeah I know, sorry. Thought I might as well post it all as one rather than have 5 million different posts asking different questions.

How do you mean more specific? I'm not sure how to describe it in more detail because I don't know what it all is, I'll try.

Ok here is a list. Might be a bit jumbled but I'll try.

1. What are they referring to when they speak of volatility, as in trading it, going long or short volatility? And how does one do it.

2. Can you explain a yield curve trade in basic form and also how you would put it on? I read about people thinking the curve is going to steepen or flatten, does this mean going long or short the 30yr or what?

3. How do traders determine where a yield curve SHOULD be at? Like in the book some guys referred to the 30yr TIPS trade, because they went long when it was yielding 3.4% and got out at 1.5%, but they were saying how the TIPS shouldn't have been at 3.4%, how would they come to this conclusion?

4. Spreads. For example - "I'd be short corporate spreads, they'll blow out" means what? First of all, what are corperate spreads and what does it mean when he says they will blow out, rise? Is everything related to the USTs? All these different spreads.

5. What does it mean for a country/economy/market when I hear about yields or spreads blowing out, like sometimes on a sqwawk I hear him say something like "Portugese spreads widening" or something similar to that, can't remember exactly what he says, but what does this actually mean and how does one trade that? Like does that mean the country is more risky if its yields or spreads are blowing out? Traders rush in or short bonds or? Are "portugese spreads" or Italian spreads an instrument that you can choose on your platform or something? I've never seen it on TT or anything, I know I'm probably sounding stupid but I want to make sure I understand it clearly.

6. What does " 5 year, 5 year forward against a 20 year, 10 year forward steepener" mean? Again, how would one put a trade like this on?

7. Back on TIPS, what is it and how does one put a trade on it? Actually most of these sorts of things, EURIBOR, LIBOR etc. Are these rates that traders just check each day or do they actually trade them? And why? What do they mean if it rises or falls? Where can I find it, again, I have never seen a TIPS or EURIBOR or LIBOR ticker on any platforms or anything.

8. Why do people refer to bonds in yields and not prices when they are all quoted in prices from what I have seen?

9. What are the main things traders/macro guys look at as far as spreads/yields/bonds, whatever in whichever country, are there a certain few that are most important or is it just about where the money is flowing and where the most opportunity is?

10. Can you explain a scenario in the markets, say...if there was a terrorist attack, what would happen to spreads and yields, equities would plunge and bonds would rise, therefore yields would drop? So what would happen to spreads, a spread is obviously the difference between two instruments, but can it be any instruments, or are most foreign country yields all related to the USTs?

Basically, I'm just trying to get an idea of how traders actually trade these things, I only ever read about them or hear about them, but have no idea about what they actually mean or do, let alone how to actually trade them, or where to even look at them? Do you need to get the Bloomberg Terminal or something to gain access?

Hopefully that's a little easier, some questions might be the same answers or very similar at least, I wouldn't know so if they are, feel free to answer them together. Sorry for writing so much! :eek: :cheesy:
 
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1. There's a variety of products (derivatives) in a variety of asset classes that allow you to trade volatility. These range from vanilla options (not a pure volatility bet) to variance swaps to VIX futures etc. Simplistically, when you buy an option you're long volatility and when you sell, you're short. Volatility is a very very big subject and there's a lot of stuff that can be said and discussed about it. You'll need a thread for it alone.

2. A yield curve spread trade is one where you buy/sell a shorter-maturity bond vs selling/buying a duration-weighted amount of a longer-maturity bond. When you're short the longer-dated bond, the position is known as a steepener (performs when the yield curve steepens, i.e. longer-dated yields rise more than shorter-dated ones); otherwise, it's a flattener.

3. A very loaded question. There's a whole variety of ways one can model the shape of the yield curve and a lot of factors determine that shape. So different people would rely on different techniques. Most traders who bet on the outright level of yields (such as in your example) base their conclusions on macroeconomic analysis and forecasting.

4. When people talk about corps, they normally use USTs as sort of a baseline. So you're correct and all other bonds trade as a yield spread to USTs. To get the yield for a corp bond, you would add the "spread" to the yield of the corresponding maturity UST. Spread blowing out means that the corp bond yield is rising relative to the UST yield.

5. It's the same for countries, more or less. For most European sovereigns the most important metric is currently the yield spread of that sovereign's bonds to German sovereign bonds. So in that case as well, "spread widening" means yields are rising, which can be interpreted as the mkt perceiving the country's sovereign risk rising. To actually trade the spread you would buy/sell a Portuguese bond vs selling/buying a German bond (or bond futures, where available).

6. These trades are mostly done in the world of interest rate swaps (although you can do it bonds as well). For example, 5y 5y forward is a 5y swap that starts in 5 years. So 5y 5y fwd vs 20y 10y fwd steepener means that you go long (receive fixed) on a 5y swap that starts in 5y vs going short (pay fixed) on a 20y swap that starts in 10y.

7. TIPS stands for "Treasury Inflation-Protected Security". It's an inflation-linked bond, i.e. a bond whose cashflows vary with inflation. You can buy and sell a TIPS just like you could any bond. As to EURIBOR and LIBOR, those are money mkt rates (specifically, rates on unsecured deposits traded in the London interbank mkt). People do trade these very actively, because these rates rising and falling affect a lot of things in the economy. As to tickers in platforms, you need to look more carefully or maybe the platforms you have checked don't offer these products.

8. Basically, because a bond price depends on the bond's coupon and has some other not so handy features, while yield doesn't (more or less). So yield is a single measure that captures everything you need to know about a bond. Obviously, bond trade settlement is based on price. Moreover, if you're talking about a specific bond in a specific context then its price is occasionally used. At any rate, it's not really correct to say that bonds are quoted in price. In reality, they're quoted in either price or yield and/or both.

9. I am not sure what you mean. Macro punters look at the overall macroeconomic environment, so all sorts of data releases etc. Obviously, "where the money is flowing and where the most opportunity is" is what it's all about, but how are you supposed to know that?

10. It's really not accurate to talk about "spreads" outside of a specific context. You'll soon get very very confused because lots of completely different things are referred to as "spreads". So you need to focus on a specific asset class/mkt, where a "spread" is likely to describe something everyone understands. For example, in the US rates mkt, when people talk about spreads, they're normally referring to swapspreads, i.e. the spread between interest swap rates and UST yields.

If you want to know what these things generally are, there's a lot of books on the various subjects that you have touched on. In terms of access, yes, some of these mkts are only accessible by institutional types of accounts. Bloomberg does allow you to see prices in these mkts, but doesn't necessarily give you access.

Anyways, hope it helps and I am sure you're likely to have more questions, since you have covered a lot of very varied ground.
 
Have asked more questions in bold. I know I'm going to sound incredibly stupid to some, but I don't care, I need/want to figure it all out and I might as well just ask, so bear with me :)

1. There's a variety of products (derivatives) in a variety of asset classes that allow you to trade volatility. These range from vanilla options (not a pure volatility bet) to variance swaps to VIX futures etc. Simplistically, when you buy an option you're long volatility and when you sell, you're short. Volatility is a very very big subject and there's a lot of stuff that can be said and discussed about it. You'll need a thread for it alone. Ok, so would going long or short VIX futs be the thing as vanilla options, so if you're long the VIX you're long volatility?

2. A yield curve spread trade is one where you buy/sell a shorter-maturity bond vs selling/buying a duration-weighted amount of a longer-maturity bond. When you're short the longer-dated bond, the position is known as a steepener (performs when the yield curve steepens, i.e. longer-dated yields rise more than shorter-dated ones); otherwise, it's a flattener. Ok great thanks, that's along the lines of what I was thinking.

3. A very loaded question. There's a whole variety of ways one can model the shape of the yield curve and a lot of factors determine that shape. So different people would rely on different techniques. Most traders who bet on the outright level of yields (such as in your example) base their conclusions on macroeconomic analysis and forecasting. Ok so it's more up to the individual, not a commonplace where people go to check what the curve should be like.

4. When people talk about corps, they normally use USTs as sort of a baseline. So you're correct and all other bonds trade as a yield spread to USTs. To get the yield for a corp bond, you would add the "spread" to the yield of the corresponding maturity UST. Spread blowing out means that the corp bond yield is rising relative to the UST yield. Ok hang on, first of all what is a corporate bond? from a company? So other country's yield spreads are all referring to USTs most of the time? And by "USTs" you're referring to what exactly, I know its US Treasuries, but are we talking about the futures here? Like the ZN, ZB etc. contracts? Is that what people are referring to? I need it explained as basic as possible :eek::(

5. It's the same for countries, more or less. For most European sovereigns the most important metric is currently the yield spread of that sovereign's bonds to German sovereign bonds. So in that case as well, "spread widening" means yields are rising, which can be interpreted as the mkt perceiving the country's sovereign risk rising. To actually trade the spread you would buy/sell a Portuguese bond vs selling/buying a German bond (or bond futures, where available). Okay, how do I know what the yield spreads are referring to, like why the German bonds? Okay so the countrys sovereign risk rising is a bad thing I take it? Who would that impact, everyone(US,UK etc)? Or just those countries involved?

6. These trades are mostly done in the world of interest rate swaps (although you can do it bonds as well). For example, 5y 5y forward is a 5y swap that starts in 5 years. So 5y 5y fwd vs 20y 10y fwd steepener means that you go long (receive fixed) on a 5y swap that starts in 5y vs going short (pay fixed) on a 20y swap that starts in 10y. Ok this one confuses me a bit, first of all, what is an interest rate swap? Sounds confusing, what do you mean "recieve fixed" and "pay fixed"? Forgive my stupidness, but why would someone do trades like this? Why not just do simpler trades, like directional trades on futures, maybe its not as complicated as it sounds and I just don't understand it fully yet.

7. TIPS stands for "Treasury Inflation-Protected Security". It's an inflation-linked bond, i.e. a bond whose cashflows vary with inflation. You can buy and sell a TIPS just like you could any bond. As to EURIBOR and LIBOR, those are money mkt rates (specifically, rates on unsecured deposits traded in the London interbank mkt). People do trade these very actively, because these rates rising and falling affect a lot of things in the economy. As to tickers in platforms, you need to look more carefully or maybe the platforms you have checked don't offer these products. Hmm ok, a little confused here too, so these are tradeable just like ZN or ZB or Bund, Bobl or Schatz futures? I think I need to read up on what the "money mkt" is and more about the whole interbank thing, I don't really understand that or what its for.

8. Basically, because a bond price depends on the bond's coupon and has some other not so handy features, while yield doesn't (more or less). So yield is a single measure that captures everything you need to know about a bond. Obviously, bond trade settlement is based on price. Moreover, if you're talking about a specific bond in a specific context then its price is occasionally used. At any rate, it's not really correct to say that bonds are quoted in price. In reality, they're quoted in either price or yield and/or both. OK I see, how does one work out the yield from the price? So for example if I trade the Bund futures and its showing the prices obviously, then I hear some guy say its approaching X% yield, never been there before, how do I know what price that is? Is it 100 minus the yield or some calculation traders do mega quickly to determine what price level that is?

9. I am not sure what you mean. Macro punters look at the overall macroeconomic environment, so all sorts of data releases etc. Obviously, "where the money is flowing and where the most opportunity is" is what it's all about, but how are you supposed to know that? Yeah its a bit of a hard question, I guess I mean are there any main ones(if any) that most people look at to determine how things are going in the mkt, like if things were all going smoothly and suddenly some certain yield spreads blew out, that this is a sign of a coming sell of or something in equities? Ah its not really an answerable question I guess, reading it as I type, maybe forget this one, seems like its more up to the individual and gathering ideas/looking at releases etc.

10. It's really not accurate to talk about "spreads" outside of a specific context. You'll soon get very very confused because lots of completely different things are referred to as "spreads". So you need to focus on a specific asset class/mkt, where a "spread" is likely to describe something everyone understands. For example, in the US rates mkt, when people talk about spreads, they're normally referring to swapspreads, i.e. the spread between interest swap rates and UST yields. OK, I trade/sim futures, never traded options, mostly in the Bund futures, scalping for a few seconds to minutes here and there, so what spreads would one look at in that situation, if any on such a time frame? What spreads would effect those instruments? Or the US 10yr and 30yr futures. I'm just trying to get a more broad perspective on the effects of different things on the markets, how a trader approaches it, rather than an authors viewpoint on it.

If you want to know what these things generally are, there's a lot of books on the various subjects that you have touched on. In terms of access, yes, some of these mkts are only accessible by institutional types of accounts. Bloomberg does allow you to see prices in these mkts, but doesn't necessarily give you access.

Anyways, hope it helps and I am sure you're likely to have more questions, since you have covered a lot of very varied ground.

Yeah if you know of any good books then let me know, I have a few books on bonds, but they are all the same, they go into so much detail and I just get muddled and confused, all the different formulas for everything, does a trader really need to know that much detail? I mean obviously you need to know about your market and what it is but, I need a book that is from a traders perspective on these sort of things, like the global macro hedge fund interviews were probably more helpful than the bond/text book style books I have, because its in a real sense, a practical type way, so okay these yield spreads did this, so we got into this position as a result because X should happen, how its all linked and what it actually means for the market and economy when some spread or yields blow out or some corp yield does X or italian yield spreads go into unchartered territory, is it going to make equities sell off hard or commodities blow through the roof or currencies to go nuts or bond futures to do something or what?

I'm not all that interested in what the formula is on how they establish some minor detail in the building of a bond, that doesn't help me, just confuses me. Like surely I'm not going to hear something over the sqwawk and think "Oh yeah.....I remember what that is, that is calculated by going X = c + 2m-2m39-xm93=( x0-(2)x))-s=%9L". I'm just going to want to go right....that yield/spread/whatever has done X, so I will long or short X because it means Y. Doesn't that make sense? I don't know if thats stupid of me or not. If you know of any books that explain it in simple terms from a practical standpoint, please let me know (y)

Thanks heaps for your answers too, much appreciated! (y)
 
Yeah if you know of any good books then let me know, I have a few books on bonds, but they are all the same, they go into so much detail and I just get muddled and confused, all the different formulas for everything, does a trader really need to know that much detail? I mean obviously you need to know about your market and what it is but, I need a book that is from a traders perspective on these sort of things, like the global macro hedge fund interviews were probably more helpful than the bond/text book style books I have, because its in a real sense, a practical type way, so okay these yield spreads did this, so we got into this position as a result because X should happen, how its all linked and what it actually means for the market and economy when some spread or yields blow out or some corp yield does X or italian yield spreads go into unchartered territory, is it going to make equities sell off hard or commodities blow through the roof or currencies to go nuts or bond futures to do something or what?

I'm not all that interested in what the formula is on how they establish some minor detail in the building of a bond, that doesn't help me, just confuses me. Like surely I'm not going to hear something over the sqwawk and think "Oh yeah.....I remember what that is, that is calculated by going X = c + 2m-2m39-xm93=( x0-(2)x))-s=%9L". I'm just going to want to go right....that yield/spread/whatever has done X, so I will long or short X because it means Y. Doesn't that make sense? I don't know if thats stupid of me or not. If you know of any books that explain it in simple terms from a practical standpoint, please let me know (y)

Thanks heaps for your answers too, much appreciated! (y)
Right, first let me say that I strongly disapprove of shortcuts that you describe. For me the ONLY way to do anything is to understand it from the bottom up. You don't qualify to be a macro punter until you understand every detail of the thing you're punting. This is one of my most fundamental beliefs and I would discourage you from doing anything quick and dirty, in the strongest possible manner. I could properly wax poetic about this, which is one of my most important guiding principles. I have seen too many "legends" blow up on little things that they neglected to understand properly. The reason is that there's absolutely nothing in the mkts that follows pre-defined rules. Correlations change, liquidity rises and falls, models break down, etc. The only way you can navigate all this is with thorough understanding, which can only be obtained through hard work and experience (and you'll never achieve perfect understanding, as things in the mkt always evolve and change). So I would suggest you stop looking for shortcuts and work on all these confusing details and formulas, because only if you understand them will you be able to do the whole macro stuff.

All that said, my normal recommendations are these two:
"Fixed Income Securities" by Tuckman
"Understanding the Yield Curve" series of papers by Antti Ilmanen
 
Right, now as to the points above:
1. Yes, generally speaking, being long VIX is a long volatility position. It's a different position to the one you get when you're long a vanilla option (it's sort of a proxy to a portfolio of options), but in terms of volatility it's similar.

3. The curve can look any way it pleases and there's no rule about what it can and cannot do. If the "right" shape were given somewhere, what would be the point of trading?

4. A corporate bond is a bond that's issued by a private company. The baseline for other countries' yield spreads depends on which countries they are. If it's a European country, it's unlikely people would talk about its bond spread to USTs. When I say "USTs" I mean actual cash bonds. ZN, ZB etc are bond futures, i.e. derivatives, whose underlying are cash USTs.

5. You don't know, so you need the context and, if it's still not clear, make sure you check. Germany is commonly used as a "baseline" for European sovereigns, because it's perceived to be a "healthiest" sovereign in the Eurozone. Perceptions of sovereign risk rising is a bad thing and it affects the particular country in question.

6. And interest rate swap is a very common derivative that is used a lot in the fixed income mkt. It's a LIBOR derivative, so it's different to bond futures (ZB, ZN, etc), which is what makes it useful. It's a large and liquid mkt, which is why people trade it alongside the other mkts, such as bonds. As to how interest rate swaps are traded, that's probably for another thread.

7. Well, TIPS are directly tradable, whereas LIBOR/Euribor rates aren't (not practically anyway). You can trade derivatives on LIBOR/Euribor and yes, you do need to read things.

8. Getting a price from a yield (and vice versa) for a cash bond is a simple exercise. Doing the same for a bond futures contract is slightly more tricky and you need to know how bond futures contracts (such as Bund and Schatz) are actually defined. Do you know?

9. You're right... Very hard to come up with hard and fast rules (see my post above). The mkt moves in mysterious ways and you have to come up with your own analyses and conclusions all the time.

10. I suppose the current spreads that make all the difference to bund/bobl/schatz are the yield spreads between Italian and German govt bonds. At the moment that's the number that counts.
 
Right, first let me say that I strongly disapprove of shortcuts that you describe. For me the ONLY way to do anything is to understand it from the bottom up. You don't qualify to be a macro punter until you understand every detail of the thing you're punting. This is one of my most fundamental beliefs and I would discourage you from doing anything quick and dirty, in the strongest possible manner. I could properly wax poetic about this, which is one of my most important guiding principles. I have seen too many "legends" blow up on little things that they neglected to understand properly. The reason is that there's absolutely nothing in the mkts that follows pre-defined rules. Correlations change, liquidity rises and falls, models break down, etc. The only way you can navigate all this is with thorough understanding, which can only be obtained through hard work and experience (and you'll never achieve perfect understanding, as things in the mkt always evolve and change). So I would suggest you stop looking for shortcuts and work on all these confusing details and formulas, because only if you understand them will you be able to do the whole macro stuff.

All that said, my normal recommendations are these two:
"Fixed Income Securities" by Tuckman
"Understanding the Yield Curve" series of papers by Antti Ilmanen

Wow ok, so you know all the hundreds and thousands of formulas to do with everything you trade? And that helps with your trading? Interesting. I don't see how knowing these formulas is going to help me in making trades that last a few seconds to minutes. I barely understand all the nitty gritty details of a car, yet I understand the basics and trust my life in it. I know markets are always evolving and changing, correlations change, models break down, models based on formulas, I'm not trying to be a "macro punter", just trying to get a more traders perspective rather than an academic one from a book as I don't believe formulas will help me read the market on a very short term basis. I'd rather learn the nitty gritty of how people work and think, how traders think and what positions they're likely to take if X happens, not the formulas of what they're trading down to that much detail. Sure you need to know about what you're trading, but I don't see how knowing formulas of some miniscule detail is going to help my decisions, but you're much more experienced than me and you're obvioulsy right, so mabye I'm a fool. I'm not looking for a shortcut, just a different perspective to those in the books, because I highly doubt if those that wrote the books are actual traders. I'll keep reading and pushing.

Thanks for the book recommendations and answers to the questions, much appreciated :) (y)
 
Wow ok, so you know all the hundreds and thousands of formulas to do with everything you trade? And that helps with your trading? Interesting. I don't see how knowing these formulas is going to help me in making trades that last a few seconds to minutes. I barely understand all the nitty gritty details of a car, yet I understand the basics and trust my life in it. I know markets are always evolving and changing, correlations change, models break down, models based on formulas, I'm not trying to be a "macro punter", just trying to get a more traders perspective rather than an academic one from a book as I don't believe formulas will help me read the market on a very short term basis. I'd rather learn the nitty gritty of how people work and think, how traders think and what positions they're likely to take if X happens, not the formulas of what they're trading down to that much detail. Sure you need to know about what you're trading, but I don't see how knowing formulas of some miniscule detail is going to help my decisions, but you're much more experienced than me and you're obvioulsy right, so mabye I'm a fool. I'm not looking for a shortcut, just a different perspective to those in the books, because I highly doubt if those that wrote the books are actual traders. I'll keep reading and pushing.

Thanks for the book recommendations and answers to the questions, much appreciated :) (y)
No problem... I am glad to be of help and don't hesitate to ask more questions (while reading those books).

As to your points, yes, I do know the formulae that describe all the things I trade. This, obviously, limits me to a relatively small set of products/securities, but I know them relatviely well (again, I am still constantly learning new things). And no, it doesn't help me with my trading, it's absolutely essential to it. Obviously, if you intend to be a sort of "high-freq" trader, that's a completely different line of business and your knowledge may have to be different in this case. I am not too familiar with it, so you may want to ask others here.

As to the car parallel, I don't think it's appropriately framed. If you're a trader, you're not like a guy who's just driving the car to get from point A to point B. You're a professional and more like a race car driver. Do you think the top F1 drivers don't know and understand every little bit of their cars?

My point is that, in my opinion, to get to a point where you can be a good "macro punter" and make decisions about how mkts react to this or that development you always need to start from the bottom and work your way upwards. To be sure, this is just my opinion, but it's one that's near and dear to my heart. Maybe there are other people who would have a different view, so that you can form a more complete view.
 
No problem... I am glad to be of help and don't hesitate to ask more questions (while reading those books).

As to your points, yes, I do know the formulae that describe all the things I trade. This, obviously, limits me to a relatively small set of products/securities, but I know them relatviely well (again, I am still constantly learning new things). And no, it doesn't help me with my trading, it's absolutely essential to it. Obviously, if you intend to be a sort of "high-freq" trader, that's a completely different line of business and your knowledge may have to be different in this case. I am not too familiar with it, so you may want to ask others here.

As to the car parallel, I don't think it's appropriately framed. If you're a trader, you're not like a guy who's just driving the car to get from point A to point B. You're a professional and more like a race car driver. Do you think the top F1 drivers don't know and understand every little bit of their cars?

My point is that, in my opinion, to get to a point where you can be a good "macro punter" and make decisions about how mkts react to this or that development you always need to start from the bottom and work your way upwards. To be sure, this is just my opinion, but it's one that's near and dear to my heart. Maybe there are other people who would have a different view, so that you can form a more complete view.

Thanks and I most likely will have more questions :D

Okay, I see your point, but again even you're dedicated in a certain few products/securities so knowing your products more in depth would be understandable. I guess neither of us can try and force our points because we specialise in different areas.

Funny you should mention the professional race driver as I'm a huge fan of motorsport, and to be honest, yes I would not be surprised if the F1 drivers didn't know every detail about their car, sure, obviously they are the best at reading what their car is doing, how its feeling, where it needs work, they are the communicator to the engineer(who would know all the nitty gritty) but I highly doubt whether the driver actually knows the fomulae that makes up the components of his Formula 1 car, obvioulsy he knows the basics, what each component is called and its main task, suspenion, KERS, wing angles etc. But he doesn't need to know the formulas and complicated systems required to make the component, and he probably doesn't care, that is what he has a team and a group of people back at the factory that design and create the cars, I very highly doubt an F1 driver could make a car on his own(or have the knowledge to make the car at least), same as the engineer wouldn't be any good at driving the thing.(same as the people that created the financial instruments wouldn't be able to trade them better than a seasoned trader who doesn't know the formulas they used in the creation of it).

I am like the driver, I don't know the miniscule details but I don't think I need to, the driver needs to know that okay, my car is doing X mid-corner so I need more camber for example or this is doing this so I need to Y, same as I'm trying to find out if X yield spread does Y I need to do Z. But the drivers knows how to extract the most out of it, knowing what formulae was used to create the angle on his wing or something, doesn't help his driving at all, he just knows that if its raised or lowered it will give him the ability to corner faster or slower. Back to the X happens, so I can do Y thing again.

Vodafone actually released a video a while back where Lewis Hamilton and Jenson Button had to try and build the car themselves, and it was just basic parts, and the body shell, the core of the car was already put together, and they still couldn't do it, took them ages and they questioned where most parts went, laughing and questioning where the parts were supposed to go so I highly doubt they know about the nitty gritty details and formulas used in the creation of the core components.

Anyway, just providing the other side viewpoint, not having a go, I understand your side of things as well and respect that.

Yeah I see and you're probably right for someone who wants to be a "macro punter" but I don't want to be one, I just want to see if its possible to find the traders(drivers) perspective on what effects things have(if X is changed on his car, it has Y effect).

What a boring world if we all had the same opinion hey :cheesy:. That being said, I will still study and read books on the subject, I was mainly investigating if there was such a perspective that I was after but it seems that it might be more difficult that I first thought, thanks again. I'll be back soon with more questions no doubt (y). Couldn't agree more on the constant learning thing, its one big never ending learning curve, and probably if/when one ever thinks he knows it all, is most likely when he will be bitten hard probably :smart:
 
Sure, no worries... As I mentioned, it's just my opinion, so you should definitely take it with a pinch of salt.
 
Not sure if this thread is any longer active but here goes.

A question:

On the squawk it is announced that a real money buyer has just purchased €10M
and as a result the Eur/Usd moves up.

Since someone (lets call them Barclays) had to sell the the Euros to the real money buyer, wouldn't the announcement:-

"Barclays just sold €10M to a dealer for Dollars"

be just as market moving in the opposite direction?
 
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