Jon Markman

Jon Markman

Jon Markman is the editor of Trader’s Advantage, a daily trading service that leverages his unique swing trading principles and aims to capture profits of 7% to 15% — and often much more with his options trades — in less than 90 days. By combining technical analysis with underlying fundamentals, Jon recommends beaten down stocks on the brink of reversal and powerful momentum stocks breaking out to new highs.

In CounterPoint Options Jon helps options traders lock in consistent profits from the volatility that rocks the market. At its heart is a proprietary trading system, Magnitude, that pinpoints indexes or sectors that have reached a critical inflection point — then translates that signal into profitable trades.

CounterPoint Options keeps volatility options trading very simple, focusing on the most popular, highly traded exchange-traded funds (ETFs) that are headed for a key reversal. Magnitude scans the market and allows subscribers to take advantage of these very liquid trading opportunities.

When CounterPoint Options first launched, it was focused solely on trading the VIX, commonly known as the “fear index.” When traders start buying up put options as “portfolio insurance,” the VIX spikes — a phenomenon that we’ll either trade directly, or use to inform our ETF trades on specific slices of the market. Our agile (and highly lucrative) strategy lets us turn volatility into profits… just like professional traders and hedge funds have been doing for years.

CounterPoint Options helps individual traders make steady, consistent profits from a very methodical approach to growing your portfolio in the midst of a turbulent market.

A pioneer in the development of stock-rating systems and screening software, Jon Markman is co-inventor on two Microsoft patents and author of the best-selling books Swing Trading and Online Investing. He was portfolio manager and senior investment strategist at a multi-strategy hedge fund from 2002 to 2005; managing editor and columnist at CNBC on MSN Money from 1997 to 2002; and an editor, investment columnist and investigative reporter at the Los Angeles Times from 1984 to 1997.

Jon won a Gerald Loeb Award for Distinguished Financial Journalism for his columns explaining market chicanery in 2002; Society of Professional Journalists awards for his 2001 reporting on Enron and the post-Sept. 11-investment environment; and was a news editor on the Los Angeles Times staff that won Pulitzer Prizes for spot-news reporting in 1992 and 1994.

A graduate of Duke University and the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, Jon speaks frequently on investment topics at conferences nationwide, as well as on TV and radio.

Recent Articles

Financials Weigh Down the Market

Stocks have floated languidly this week like paper airplanes looking for a place to land. Leaders are energy, materials and utilities, while laggards were REITS, autoparts makers and regional banks.

Banks in a World of Hurt. How to Cash In

Stocks continue to struggle, with no equity sectors standing out with significant strength as a new collapse in the banks overshadow everything else. Read on to find out how you can benefit.

Why You Shouldn’t Buy and Hold in this Market

In my three decades of investing, the only method that I have seen consistently work is to buy shares of companies that are fast-growing, cheap and innovative -- and are also in sectors, market cap groups or investment styles that the market currently favors. And I've got just such a play for you.

Post Inauguration Rally Fizzles

On the surface, the big rally on the first work day of the new Obama Administration appeared to be a mirror image of the massive down day that preceded it. Yet the internals were quite different.

Bears Not Going Away

Commodities and financial companies were hit hard earlier this week, with major banks like Bank of America (BAC), Citigroup (C) and JPMorgan Chase (JPM) in particular getting shellacked.