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<title>Market Updates</title>
<link>https://www.mipstiming.com</link>
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<description>Commentary on the current stock market trends by MIPS Timing Systems CEO and Founder Dr. G. Paul Distefano.</description>

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<title>Why Is the Last MIPS Long Signal (6/26/20) Still In Effect After 11 Months?</title>
<link>https://www.mipstiming.com/blogs/view/17097</link>
<pubDate>Sun, 30 May 2021 16:51:00 CDT</pubDate>
<author>Dr. G Paul Distefano</author>
<guid>https://www.mipstiming.com/blogs?blogm=view&amp;blogid=17097</guid>
<description><![CDATA[<div>Remember, when using MIPS Signals, we can trade one or more of the SPY, QQQ, IWM or DIA indices.&nbsp; And we can use leverage between 1.0x-1.5x on Long signals and between 0.5x-1.0x on Short signals. I personally trade 50% SPY and 50% QQQ, and I use leverage of 1.5x Long and 0.5x Short. Some of our more aggressive members trade 2.0x Long and 1.0x Short. This grows more, but is way more highly volatile.</div>

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<div>The TABLE&nbsp;below is MIPS3 with my trading allocation above in the market since 2007 <u>(verified by TimerTrac.com)</u>.</div>

<div><i>- call&nbsp;me if you have questions.</i></div>

<div><span style="color:#ff0000"><b><span style="color:#0000ff">&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; QQQ (with 1.5x /0.5x leverage)&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; $10,000 =&gt; $189,000</span></b></span></div>

<div><span style="color:#ff0000"><b><span style="color:#00ff00">&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; SPY (with 1..5x / 0.5x leverage)&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; $10.000 =&gt; $118,000</span></b></span></div>

<div><span style="color:#ff0000"><b><span style="color:#f1c232">&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; SPY (with no leverage)&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; $10,000 =&gt; $78,000</span></b></span></div>

<div><span style="color:#ff0000"><b>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; S&amp;P Index &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp; $10,000 =&gt; $30,000</b></span></div>

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<div><b>SO, WHAT&#39;s GOING ON NOW WITH THE CURRENT MIPS SiGNAL (since 06/26/2020) ???</b></div>

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<div>Many MIPS members are now very &quot;anxious&quot; ro know why the MIPS models have been Long for the past 11 months (with no shorts).&nbsp; Many don&#39;t really understand that quantitative models (like MIPS) are only supposed to change positions (Long-to-Short, or Short-to-Long) when the market changes direction (from down-to-up or from up-to-down),&nbsp; In quantitative terminology, the exact time of these directional changes are called &quot;Inflection Points&quot; and those are what MIPS is looking for.&nbsp; What makes this so difficult is that for <span style="color:#000000">each </span><b><span style="color:#ff0000">correct</span></b> Inflection Point there are multiple <b>fakes changes</b>.&nbsp; The recent market has really WREAKED HAVOC on many other commercial quant models; but not on MIPS !!!<br />
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<div><span style="font-family:verdana, sans-serif"><b>So, how has MIPS performed with the last Long Signal since</b> <span style="color:#000000"><b>6/26/2020</b></span></span></div>

<div><span style="color:#ff0000"><span style="font-family:verdana, sans-serif"><font size="2"><b>Since 6/26/2020</b></font></span></span></div>

<div><span style="color:#0000ff"><b>QQQ with 1.5x / 0.5x L/S leverage =&nbsp;&nbsp; +69%</b></span></div>

<div><font size="2"><b><span style="color:#00ff00"><span style="color:#6aa84f">SPY&nbsp; with 1.5x / 0.5x Leverage&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; =&nbsp; +57%</span></span></b></font></div>

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<div><b>Now, let&#39;s examine possible future &quot;market drops&quot;<br />
- there are multiple, identifiable ways that stock markets &quot;go down&quot;</b></div>

<div><b>- our reaction to each &quot;drop&quot; should be different</b><br />
<br />
<font color="#ff0000"><b>Since the stock market basically goes up most of the time, quant models are mostly looking for corrections and market crashes (market drops) that happen in up markets.</b></font></div>

<div><font color="#ff0000"><span style="color:#000000"><i>- below are some definitions of typical market drops </i><i>(and how quant models should react to each)...</i></span></font><br />
&nbsp;</div>

<div><b>1) Normal &quot;Dips&quot; </b><br />
&nbsp;&nbsp; In long-term <u>up-markets</u> (like now)</div>

<div>&nbsp; &nbsp; - stock markets move in cycles (like a sine wave)</div>

<div>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; - this means that an up market will experience normal ups-and-downs along the way</div>

<div>&nbsp;&nbsp; - this is what has happened in the last 11 months</div>

<div>&nbsp;&nbsp; - along the way, the MIPS models have determined that these drops are normal, not a new serious drop of 20-50%</div>

<div>&nbsp;&nbsp; - many commercial models that have tried to capitalize on these small dips have gotten whipsawed (big losses, up and down)</div>

<div>&nbsp; Nothing special causes dips this, as it is &quot;the norm&quot; of movements for bid-and-ask markets</div>

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<div><b>2) Corrections</b><br />
&nbsp; &nbsp; The investment community has named a market drop of over 10%-15% (but not over 20%) a &quot;Correction&quot; in the market</div>

<div>&nbsp; &nbsp; - most corrections happen in normal markets as the result of some &quot;bad-news events&quot;, not from bad economic business fundamentals</div>

<div>&nbsp; &nbsp; - a good example of this was the correction between 4Q&#39;19 thru 1Q&#39;20 that resulted from bad news regarding the Brexit</div>

<div>&nbsp; &nbsp; - during this time, the market fell in almost a straight line from the beginning-to-end of 4Q&#39;19 and fully recovered in a straight line by the end of 1Q&#39;20</div>

<div>&nbsp; &nbsp; - the pattern for this type of correction would be called a &quot;V-Bottom&quot;&nbsp;<br />
&nbsp; &nbsp;In addition, many corrections result from extremely overbought markets (where investors have pushed up stock prices way higher than they are worth)</div>

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<div><b>3) Market Crashes</b><br />
&nbsp; &nbsp; Market crashes are when market indices (like the DOW, S&amp;P500, Nasdaq 100, Russell 2000) drop over 50% in a one or two year period</div>

<div>&nbsp; &nbsp; - in the market crash of the <b>2000 </b><u>recession</u>, the Nasdaq index dropped over 60% and took over 16 years to recover</div>

<div>&nbsp; &nbsp; - in the market crash of the <b>2008 </b><u>financial crisis</u>, the SP500 dropped 55% and recovered within the next two years<br />
&nbsp; &nbsp;Normally, Market crashes result from a very poor economy (like a recession or depression).</div>

<div>&nbsp; &nbsp; - by poor economy, we mean low consumer spending, lower business revenues, lower profits, higher debt, high borrowing rates, etc<br />
&nbsp; &nbsp; - this is like being in a slow moving, bad news environment with a relative long-time recovery</div>

<div>&nbsp; &nbsp; - in the market crash from the <u>depression</u> in 1929, the market fell 90% in 2 years and took over 20+ years to recover</div>

<div>&nbsp; &nbsp;Under no conditions (<u><i>except using Quantitative models that hedge by effective shorting</i></u>), should you be fully invested in a market crash.</div>

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<div><b>4) MIPS in the 2008 crash:</b></div>

<div><b>&nbsp;&nbsp; </b>Below is the actual performance of MIPS in the crash of 2008<br />
<i>&nbsp;&nbsp;</i> <b>4Q&#39;07-1Q&#39;09&nbsp; =&gt;</b> &nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp; <b><span style="color:#0000ff">MIPS3&nbsp; +155%</span></b>&nbsp; &nbsp;<b> &nbsp;&nbsp; <span style="color:#cc0000">SPY (buy/hold)&nbsp; -54%&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></b></div>

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<div><b>In the meantime, and no matter what you decide to do in the future, keep using MIPS Signals as your guidance for now.</b><br />
Call me (10am-10pm, CDT - six days/week)</div>

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<div>Paul Distefano, PhD</div>

<div>CEO / Founder<br />
MIPS Timing Systems, LLC<br />
Houston, TX<br />
281-251-MIPS(6477)</div>

<div>408-234-8348 (cell)<br />
&nbsp;</div>

<div><font color="#0000ff"><i><a href="mailto:support@mipstiming.com" rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer" target="_blank" ymailto="mailto:support@mipstiming.com">support@mipstiming.com</a></i></font></div>]]></description>
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