TRADING STRATEGIES

Join The Mini Craze

They Call Me "Mini E"

by Afshin Taghechian


Well, actually, it's emini, and this article has nothing to do with Dr. Evil. You might find it informative anyway, especially if you're looking for a new instrument to trade.

Since March 2000, when the stock market bubble burst, most equity traders have started to look into other trading and investment vehicles to profit from the market. Because the stock market rally lasted for so long -- 18 years! -- plenty of other market vehicles had been overlooked by investors and traders during that time. Now, these overlooked markets are attracting much more attention. One of the most successful financial products, and one that has experienced impressive growth in the past few years, is the emini stock index futures.

That's right, the emini indexes. It's been six years since the emini "craze" began, and today it's no longer a craze, but a boon to a variety of traders who may not have the wherewithal to trade individual stocks but want to look at the broader market on a more limited basis. The Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME), Standard & Poor's, and Nasdaq eminis are the hottest things going, with the Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT) mini-Dow coming along nicely, based on the same concept. Unmatched for consistent volatility and the tops in liquidity, these markets are gold mines for the trader looking for a real opportunity to trade profitably again.

SELECTING A MARKET VEHICLE

For short-term trading, finding the right market vehicle is an important step. Emini stock index futures have become popular trading vehicles in the past few years because they have certain prized characteristics that other markets just don't have, at least not all together at the same time and in the same market. Even if you had total freedom to design the ideal market for short-term trading, your dream market would probably fall short of what emini indexes offer.

  ...Continued in the September issue of Technical Analysis of STOCKS & COMMODITIES


Excerpted from an article originally published in the September 2004 issue of Technical Analysis of STOCKS & COMMODITIES magazine. All rights reserved. © Copyright 2004, Technical Analysis, Inc.



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