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Natural Gas futures were trading for around 3.58 in
November when we projected a possible bear-market low at $2.30. Imagine our
excitement when, ten days ago, on January 23, the March futures contract trampolined from within exactly 1.6 cents of our target,
shattering the despair and deathly calm of a relentless, multiyear sinking
spell that had not seen respite since last spring. The initial leap was
enormous, to 2.63, and anyone who bought down around the target would have
reaped a $3400 profit per contract on the first day of the move. We had
prepared subscribers for a potentially tradable bounce, reiterating our
contrary stance on January 12 with this advice: The futures were
barely able to muster a dead-cat bounce on that last effort. Even so,
the 2.305 will remain a good place to try bottom-fishing aggressively with
our habitual penny-ante stop-loss. At the time, the futures had been
falling, falling, falling, but they were still well above our target, trading
around 2.80. However, the next week saw them plunge, kamikaze-style,
precisely to the Hidden Pivot support where we had anticipated a turn.
 
In tracking our own recommendations, we never assume
subscribers are making money merely because a trade that we advised
triggered. In this case, a subscriber reported in the Rick’s Picks chat
room (click here to
access this 24/7 service free for a week) that he had indeed bought some
contracts at the 2.30 target. And so we established a “tracking
position” to guide him and any other subscribers who had caught the
low. In the ensuing days, the steep rally continued, peaking on January
26 at $2.84. At that point, each contract purchased would have racked up
gains of about $5400 before commissions. We advised partial-profit taking
that effectively reduced the cost basis on the 25% of the position remaining
to 2.12 per contract. And then we sat back and waited for a fabulous new bull
market to unfold in natural gas. The chart above tells what happened next,
and you don’t need to be a trader or technician to see that bulls got
suckered again. Which is not to say Rick’s Picks
bulls lost money. On Tuesday, just before the futures dove anew,
we advised exiting the remainder of the position if it traded down to
2.39. This it did, and then some. In theory, this gambit would have
produced a theoretical profit of $2700 for traders who followed our advice
from beginning to end.
As for natural gas, although the March contract has yet to breach the January
23 low, we would not lay odds that it will hold. Technical considerations
aside, the vague impression one gets is that the bear market in this useful,
clean but difficult to transport fuel will never end. As traders, however,
because we know that this cannot possibly be so, we will continue to look for
the elusive opportunity that could reward our efforts spectacularly.
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