Getting ahead with your trading in 2009

Dear trader and blog reader,

One of the things I have always enjoyed is sharing what I know with others. I have to thank my parents for teaching me the joy of sharing.

So it is in their memory, that I am excited to share with you, what I hope will be an informative, interesting and helpful series of trade lessons that I named ... Traders Whiteboard.

Experience the Traders Whiteboard for yourself and receive a comprehensive  knowledge of everything you need to know to become a successful trader.

In every Traders Whiteboard video I explain in detail how to use many of the same trading tools that are in use today by some of the worlds most successful traders.

You are probably wondering what's this all going to cost? The truth is, the service is free, and there are no catches. You can credit my parents for that.

There's no registration required to experience the Traders Whiteboard videos.

Your journey towards greater trading knowledge in 2009 begins right here.

Sincerely,
Adam Hewison,
President INO.com

About Adam Hewison
Adam Hewison is a former floor trader and past member of several major exchanges, including the International Monetary Market (IMM) a division of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange in Chicago, Index and Options Market(IOM) Chicago, New York Futures Exchange (NYFE) and The London Financial Futures Exchange (LIFFE). Adam is the author of "Right on the Money, The Definitive Guide to Forecasting Foreign Exchange Rates" and numerous other financial ebooks and web videos. His latest project with partner Dave Maher is INO TV. This newly created service is dedicated to educating traders through streaming video seminars.

December Trader's Blog Contest Winner

There were 224 eligible entries for the December Trader’s Blog Contest. Thank you for everyone who participated. For those of you that answered Bulls, you were right.

The lucky winner of 6 seminars from our INO TV digital library was comment number 198…

Shelton W. of Greenbrier, Tennessee

Congrats Shelton, your discs will be shipped out today. Don’t forget to enter our January Trader’s Blog Contest sponsored by INO TV, where the question is, “Where will the DOW close at the end of Q1 2009?” We’ve had a lot of responses already, so it only takes a minute and a guess.

Best,

The INO TV Team

How to spot winning trades in 2009

In this short video, our first of 2009, Adam Hewison explains how to spot winning trades using MarketClub's Smart scan technology.

Adam also explains in detail a specific trade that he thinks is worth watching in the New Year.

Enjoy the video and if you have any questions please call our friendly support staff at 1-800-538-7424

All the best in 2009.

Wall Street enjoys upbeat start to 2009

From our media partner Associated Press.

Wall Street enjoys upbeat start to 2009

NEW YORK (AP) — Wall Street started the new year optimistically Friday as investors brushed off a weaker-than-expected report on manufacturing and sent stocks sharply higher. The Dow Jones Industrials jumped about 250 points and above 9,000.

The market wasn't spooked by the Institute for Supply Management's report that its manufacturing activity index fell to the lowest level in 28 years in December. The Street's cool reaction extends a pattern that began to emerge after the market touched multiyear lows on Nov. 20.

Economic data have been terrible for months and investors have shown little surprise even as some readings fell well short of economists' already low expectations. During past recessions, the market has recovered ahead of the economy by growing numb to a stream of poor data and looking for signs that the downturn isn't worsening.

The ISM, a trade group of purchasing executives, said Friday its manufacturing index fell to 32.4 in December from 36.2 in November. Economists polled by Thomson Reuters had expected a reading of 35.5; a figure below 50 indicates contraction.

Wall Street's move higher comes amid light trading after the New Year's holiday. Modest volume can lend buoyancy to the market as upbeat buyers have reason to come out and those with less conviction stay home.

Investors will be looking to Monday's session, when volume is expected to be greater, as a better barometer of market sentiment for 2009. The final session of the week follows a terrible year for investors. The Dow fell 33.8 percent in 2008, its worst performance since 1931.

Still, the market's move higher was welcome.

"We like to see the markets shrug off the bad news. That typically is a sign that we're forming a bottom," said Eric Thorne, an investment adviser at Bryn Mawr Trust.

In late afternoon trading, the Dow rose 247.95, or 2.83 percent, to 9,024.34, its first move above 9,000 since Dec. 8.

Like the Dow, broader stock indicators also advanced for the third straight session. The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 27.05 percent, or 2.99 percent, to 930.30, its highest level since No. 10. The Nasdaq composite index rose 50.25, or 3.19 percent, to 1,627.28.

The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies rose 7.06, or 1.41 percent, to 506.51.

Advancing issues outnumbered decliners by about 5 to 1 on the New York Stock Exchange, where volume came to a light 706.8 million shares.

Bond prices fell as investors took on riskier assets. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note, which moves opposite its price, rose to 2.42 percent from 2.22 percent late Wednesday. The yield on the three-month T-bill, considered one of the safest investments, rose to 0.09 percent from 0.08 percent Wednesday.

The dollar was mixed against other major currencies, while gold prices fell.

Light, sweet crude rose $1.51 to $46.11 on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Thorne contends 2009 could be a strong year for Wall Street because most investors are so shaken from the sell-off in 2008, which erased six years of gains in stocks. Market bottoms often emerge because investors are so pessimistic or because stocks seem incapable of making any sustained recovery.

"A bottom isn't formed in one day or even in one month but probably over several months," he said. "Expectations are extremely low for the economy, for corporate earnings and for the stock market itself."

From Nov. 20 to the end of 2008, the Dow advanced 16.2 percent, while the S&P 500 rose 20 percent.

"We're very confident that the $9 trillion that is in cash right now will look to find a home in better-performing assets," he said, referring to the amount of money invested in conservative but low-yielding areas like money market funds. Yields on safe investments like Treasurys have fallen to virtually nil as investors have clamored for safety and surrendered hopes of even earning a return on their money.

Todd Leone, managing director at Cowen & Co., cautioned against reading too much into Friday's advance and said the first full week of the new year should provide insight into investor sentiment for 2009.

"The first five days are usually very telling," Leone said. "I'm not sure we'll be up or down." He said an advance in stocks Friday wasn't a surprise as some investors start the year by wading into the market. He said selling is more likely to occur next week.

Investors had little corporate news to go on Friday other than the completion this week of some major banking acquisitions. Bank of America Corp. finalized its deal to acquire Merrill Lynch & Co. Wells Fargo & Co. closed its acquisition of Wachovia Corp., while PNC Financial Services Group Inc. bought National City Corp.

The dealmaking came after the mortgage and credit turmoil torpedoed bank's balance sheets and sent banks' stocks tumbling. In some cases, banks grappling with liquidity shortages and rising loan losses were forced to make deals to remain in business.

Next week brings a flurry of economic readings and potentially early comments from companies on their 2008 results and 2009 forecasts.

A Labor Department report next Friday on December employment is expected to draw attention. A month ago, Wall Street showed newfound resiliency in the face of a bad reading on what is typically the most important economic report of the month. Stocks initially sagged but finished with big gains Dec. 5 after the government reported that employers slashed a larger-than-expected 533,000 jobs in November. Investors were hoping the poor report would prompt Washington to take broader steps to shore up the economy.

"The employment numbers will almost undoubtedly be very ugly. What will be interesting to see is what the market's reaction will be to those numbers," said Thorne. "We're also very interested to see what the corporate earnings reporting season will be like."

Stocks overseas also began the new year with a rally. Britain's FTSE 100 rose 2.88 percent, Germany's DAX index jumped 3.39 percent, and France's CAC-40 increased 4.09 percent. Markets in Japan were closed for a holiday.

Trader's Blog Contest for January

Contest has been closed as of 2/1/09.

The contest couldn't be any easier this month... acutally, every month is very easy. This month so you can win two ways... one way by luck and one way by skill.

Just answer the question and we'll put your name in the hat to win the prize below. If you guess ends up being closest to the actual value then you can win too.

So the question is…

"Where will the DOW close at the end of the 1st quarter of 2009?"

Will it land on 7,900 or at 11,532? It may seem like a shot in the dark now, but where do you think the DOW is headed? Enter a number and you will be put in for our drawing of the prize below.

Prize

Winner will receive 6 workshops on charting from our authors in INO TV. These MP3s and digital PDF workbooks will be mailed to you courtesy of INO TV. No shipping, no handling, no catches.

A special prize will be given out to the person with the answer closest to the actual close (winner will be notified April 1st, 2009 via email).

Advanced Trading Application Candlestick Charting Volume 1 - Gary Wagner & Brad Matheny
Advanced Trading Application Candlestick Charting Volume 2 - Gary Wagner & Brad Matheny
Practical Applications of Candlestick Charts - Gary Wagner
Bollinger Bands: Construction & Implementation - John Bollinger
Point & Figure Charting - Tom Dorsey
Finding Tops & Bottoms Using The NYSE Tick Index - Tim Ord

How To Enter:

Comment on this post telling us what price you think the DOW will close at on March 31, 2009 at 4:00 pm (EST). You have only until the end of January to answer, so think longer-term on this one.

Rules

1. This contest is open until 11:59 PM on January 31st, 2009.

2. No wrong answers, any participation counts as an entry.

3. One entry per email address.

4. Winner will be picked by random integer software.

5. Winner will be contacted on Friday, February 4th, 2009 via email.

6. Special Prize winner will be the numerical value closest to the official close listed on INO.com.

Good luck!