The Event-Trading Phenomenon


Book Description




The Event-trading Phenomenon


Book Description

Event trading is a new technique for trading in the financial and commodity markets, and represents a third major approach to trading, distinctly different from the fundamental and technical approaches. Designed to capture profits from market reactions to news events, event trading provides a systematic approach for exploiting a variety of market-moving events, such as economic reports, official interest rate changes, and surprises in corporate earnings reports. Traders can reap huge profits if they understand how markets respond to events in the news.




Event Trading


Book Description

Designed to capture profits from market reactions to news events, event trading provides a systematic approach for exploiting a variety of market-moving events such as economic reports, interest rate changes and surprises in corporate earnings.




World Event Trading


Book Description

In an age of twenty-four-hour news coverage and cutting-edge technology, world events dominate our lives and impact the financial markets. From hurricanes to the war in Iraq, we exist in a crazy, connect-the-dot planet. However, the well-prepared investor can turn these events into profits. All they need is the ability to recognize the consistent characteristics of these events and the vision to build a strategy or portfolio that can take advantage of these situations when they begin to unfold. As a foreign exchange strategist with over twenty years of financial experience, author Andrew Busch knows what it takes to make it in today’s dynamic market. And now, with World Event Trading, he wants to show you how. Filled with in-depth insights and expert advice, this practical guide examines three categories of world events—infectious diseases, natural disasters, and politics—and provides hands-on strategies for trading profitably on each. Using actual examples of the war in Iraq, Hurricane Katrina, and other recent "page one stories," Busch shows you how to understand all-important market moods and anticipate profitable trades. He also reveals little-known details on legendary event-driven trading successes, illustrating how any trader can repeat them in different market environments. Andrew Busch is the Global FX Market Strategist for BMO Financial Group’s Investment Banking Division in Chicago. He is a recognized expert on the world financial markets and how these markets are impacted by political events. Busch’s views appear in his daily newsletter, the Busch Update, which reaches 5,000 investors and financial professionals. He also writes a weekly column that appears on The Globe and Mail Web site on Fridays and in print on Mondays (circulation 40,000). Busch makes weekly appearances on CNBC’s Closing Bell with Maria Bartiromo and is frequently quoted by the Wall Street Journal as well as other news services. He graduated Phi Beta Kappa with a BA in economics from Ohio Wesleyan University and received an MBA from the University of Chicago.




A Traders Handbook


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GameStop


Book Description

The news has been full of headlines, whether watching on television, reading on a webpage, or following them through an online app. The world is in a 24/7 news cycle that none of us can escape from unless we literally go off the grid. If you are someone who is a news junkie and gets excited about the latest headlines, then you were probably intrigued by the events that occurred in late January related to GameStop and other retail stocks. Those who followed the events closely enough understood that a group of retail day traders, who communicated via social media and other online forums, caused one of the biggest stock market frenzies in recent times. You'll read about: How a few tweets led to a massive rise in GME prices Why Robin hood really suspended trading in meme stocks How the irresponsible actions of a few billionaires led to mania in the market The fate of the hedge fund caught on the wrong side of GME What the future holds for the stock market and investing in general This primer helps you build a solid foundation in options trading by exploring the headline-grabbing event that brought options into the mainstream. Learn how the armchair investors of Reedit successfully used options to squeeze hedge fund short sellers and spark a financial revolution.




The Blank Swan


Book Description

October 19th 1987 was a day of huge change for the global finance industry. On this day the stock market crashed, the Nobel Prize winning Black-Scholes formula failed and volatility smiles were born, and on this day Elie Ayache began his career, on the trading floor of the French Futures and Options Exchange. Experts everywhere sought to find a model for this event, and ways to simulate it in order to avoid a recurrence in the future, but the one thing that struck Elie that day was the belief that what actually happened on 19th October 1987 is simply non reproducible outside 19th October 1987 - you cannot reduce it to a chain of causes and effects, or even to a random generator, that can then be reproduced or represented in a theoretical framework. The Blank Swan is Elie's highly original treatise on the financial markets presenting a totally revolutionary rethinking of derivative pricing and technology. It is not a diatribe against Nassim Taleb's The Black Swan, but criticises the whole background or framework of predictable and unpredictable events white and black swans alike , i.e. the very category of prediction. In this revolutionary book, Elie redefines the components of the technology needed to price and trade derivatives. Most importantly, and drawing on a long tradition of philosophy of the event from Henri Bergson to Gilles Deleuze, to Alain Badiou, and on a recent brand of philosophy of contingency, embodied by the speculative materialism of Quentin Meillassoux, Elie redefines the market itself against the common perceptions of orthodox financial theory, general equilibrium theory and the sociology of finance. This book will change the way that we think about derivatives and approach the market. If anything, derivatives should be renamed contingent claims, where contingency is now absolute and no longer derivative, and the market is just its medium. The book also establishes the missing link between quantitative modelling (no longer dependent on probability theory but on a novel brand of mathematics which Elie calls the mathematics of price) and the reality of the market.




The Global Trader


Book Description

Global trading was once purely the domain of specialists such as George Soros. But the efficiency of electronic trading is opening up this lucrative market to the masses. This book details how the average investor can access the global markets and profit from them.




Stock Trader's Almanac 2005


Book Description

This practical investment tool contains a wealth of information you can use to enhance your profit potential. Organized on a calendar basis, the Almanac alerts you to little-known market patterns and tendencies useful in forecasting market trends. You'll learn: How our presidential elections affect the economy and the stock market. How the passage of the Twentieth Amendment to the Constitution fathered the January Barometer, which has a 90.7% accuracy ratio. Why there is a significant market bias at certain times of the day, week, month, and year. Even if you pay scant attention to cycles, indicators, and patterns, your investment survival could hinge on your interpretation on one of the recurring patterns found with these pages. Order your copy today!




The Analysis of Insider Trading on Credit Derivatives Market by Means of the Event Study Methodology


Book Description

In this article I investigate the information flow between credit default swap market and equity market as well as insider trading on credit default swap market.I apply the event study methodology. By means of the event study methodology I compute abnormal stock returns and abnormal credit default swap premium changes. The research was based on 175 874 observations collected for 92 entities from 2001 to 2010. The results show that the information flow from credit default swap market to equity market is the most significant with regard to rating's negative perspective. The information flow is much less acute in relation to the negative surprise at the annual earnings announcement and rating's upgrade. The evidence of insider trading is also the most visible with reference to rating's negative perspective. Additionally, the distinctive feature of credit default swap market and equity market is the asymmetrical reaction to negative and positive credit information. The event study methodology does not consider other potentially important reasons for the information flow between markets than actually investigated. The credit events and credit risk information used in this research is just a proposal and can be enlarged by future researchers. This article discusses new research area. The main research field with regard to insider trading remains equity market with special focus on the US market. I decided to explore insider trading phenomenon on the credit default swap market. I consider only contracts that are quoted with reference to the European underlying assets. This part of the financial market is attractive in terms of the economic research as credit derivatives are more commonly used not only in North America but also in Europe.