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Frank

Buy on Open / Sell Close Vs Buy on Close / Sell Open

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Thanks very interesting....basically it looks like you are better off buying on open and selling on close for less volatility and continuous but small gains of less than 10% over 8 years.

Seems to me that in a bull market buy and hold beats everything...go figure.

 

does that include commissions?

How do you have a futures contract that excludes dividends - if I assume you have just taken the historical prices? I would have thought thats factored in as part of the Fair value calculations?

 

As something extra interesting - its worth looking at how the analysis works in separate bull and bear markets. its amazing how many up and down days you get in both. I did it once before on the Australian market and it was about 50-50 in a bull market - it was just in the magnitude of the size of the move for the days that is important.

Edited by DugDug

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I did that chart to show someone that doesn't trade futures -- and they would probably have noticed that those returns are not the same as the S&P 500 so I just stated that up front (in the title of the chart). You can see in this data table to the right that SPY dividends add a few percentage points a year.

 

(it takes less money up front to buy same amount of futures exposure, so its assumed you invest the extra money in treasury securities to make up for lack of dividend).

 

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5aa70fa46319b_SPFuturesvsSPY.thumb.png.b97787d3ed832303db7a1bc459de3fcd.png

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This is interesting, but how do you manage risk? I'm curious if you've even looked that far into the strategy.

 

I've been playing around with a lot of strategies similar to this in Excel with limited success. I'm not looking for any trading strategies, I just like to see the different results. A lot of contrarian plays seemed to be the most consistently profitable, but I only looked back to 2005.

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