On Monday, the USDA released it's
agriculture supply and demand projections, which sent grains "
limit down" for the day across the board, and many of the softs down sharply as well.
That proved to be the worst of it - as grains slowly recovered during the week as the market digested the news, finishing the week off with a sharp rally on Friday.
As you can tell from my
positions as of last Sunday, I was not prepared to handle a "limit down" day across the grains board. It's one of those days that, as a leveraged trader, you just want to vomit.
I had an offsite meeting in the morning, so returned to the home office after markets had closed to see the carnage. Not only was I down 25% (!) on the day, but also still had these positions open. Everything had closed limit down, and I had no clue where this market was going to find a bottom - and even when I'd be able to get out of these positions.
Fortunately I was able to get out that evening during the Asian trading sessions - basically covered the grains positions and also my Treasuries short, leaving only cotton open.
Then while sipping some wine and reading the WSJ later that night, I read analysts mentioned
they liked soybeans more than corn. So the next day, I went long soybeans, and short corn - nothing like a little wreckless pair trading to get over a big loss.
Well this trade actually held up OK until Friday morning, when, bless his heart, my commodities broker Robert gave me a call.
"Brett, I'd really like to get you in on this corn trade. It's trading
$0.50 below the cost of production. Farmers are already switching to soybeans."
After picking Robert's brain for about 10 minutes, I had him put the trade through for me (he manages my Rollover IRA account), and ran to my computer here to cover that corn short, and then go long.
Phew - not a moment too soon - corn finished the day on a sharp rally.
Yesterday I did some online research and found that, indeed,
it could be a difficult year for corn farmers. $4 corn
ain't what it used to be for these guys, with input costs sharply higher these days.
We'll continue to watch the corn markets closely.
Recommended reading:- Sugar prices continue to climb, and there could be a supply shortage shaping up soon.
Open positions
Date | Position | Qty | Month/Yr | Contract | Entry Price | Last Price | Profit/Loss |
01/16/09 | Long | 1 | MAR 09 | Corn | 374 3/4 | 389 3/4 | $750.00 |
12/31/08 | Long | 1 | MAR 09 | Cotton | 48.52 | 48.84 | $160.00 |
01/13/09 | Long | 1 | MAR 09 | Mini Soybeans | 987 1/4 | 1020 | $327.50 |
01/13/09 | Long | 1 | MAR 09 | Mini Soybeans | 989 1/4 | 1020 | $307.50 |
Net Profit/Loss On Open Positions | $1,545.00 |
Account Balances
Current Cash Balance | $39,234.38 |
Open Trade Equity | $1,545.00 |
Total Equity | $40,779.38 |
Long Option Value | $0.00 |
Short Option Value | $0.00 |
Net Liquidating Value | $40,779.38 |
---------------------------------------------
Cashed out: $20,000.00
Total value: $60,779.38
Weekly return: -16.0%
2009 YTD return: -19.7%
2008 return: -8%***"Cash out" mostly means taxes, living expenses, and startup capital for our
time management software company that was
recently covered by the Sacramento Business Journal and
Inc magazine.