Last night we had three CVR buy signals (and three other confirming buy signals) on the Market Bias Indicators page in spite of the stock market dropping for the day.
Trading Options With CVR Signals, Part I
Last Thursday, March 11, we talked about trading CVR signals with options, especially CVR buy signals. These trades are particularly effective because when the signal is correct, you have the three main features of options working in your favor: time, price direction, and volatility.
Trading Options With CVR Signals, Part II
Today I’d like to share some option strategies you can use to exploit CVR sell signals. There are two strategies available to exploit sell signals. The first is to sell calls. If you are right, time and price will be in your favor, but implied volatility will work against you.
Dual VIX Signals
I will delay part two of “Trading Options with the CVR Signals” (see my commentary from March 11) until Thursday, March 18 so I can share with you a somewhat rare, but solid, set-up that occurred the other day.
A Strategy For Playing Large-Range Days
Chart analysis is a subjective game, and many commonly accepted interpretations of patterns fail to hold up to detailed analysis. We’ll explain the realities of large-range days and the kind of market behavior they foreshadow.
Watching Volatility on Different Time Frames
Watching Volatility on Different Time Frames
Theory Behind the CVR (Connors VIX Reversal) Signals
The theory behind the CVR (Connors VIX Reversal) signals is that volatility will revert back to its mean (average).
Multiple Signals
In a previous article, I talked about how and why multiple signals are superior to
stand-alone signals.
Missing A 250-Point Move On The Dow By 3/100 Of A Point!
Last Thursday I was waiting for a CVR I buy signal to trigger.
What is the VIX?
The VIX (the Chicago Board Option Exchange’s volatility index) is becoming an increasingly popular indicator in the financial press.