News-Based Momentum

Futures Advanced Canada S&P/TSX 60 Index Futures (SXF) S&P/TSX Capped Financials Index Futures (SXB) S&P/TSX 60 / Composite Mini Futures (SXM / SCF) Sector & Single-Stock Futures

Captures directional momentum triggered by news and events

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Quick Reference

Strategy Type Event-Driven / News Trading
Market Outlook Captures directional momentum triggered by news and events
Risk Profile High - news can be unpredictable; requires fast execution
Reward Profile Potentially large moves from significant news; quick profits or losses
Time Horizon Minutes to hours typically; some events create multi-day trends
Capital Requirement Moderate to High (C$25,000 - C$100,000 for rapid execution capability across standard and mini contracts)
Margin Type Intraday day-trade margin (offered by some FCMs) for intraday news trading; full overnight SPAN margin (set by CDCC) if holding event-driven positions
Best Used When Scheduled economic events, earnings releases, policy announcements, unexpected breaking news with clear market impact

Payoff Profile

Linear payoff capturing news-driven directional momentum

Canada Market Details

Mx Applicability All liquid index/sector futures on the Montreal Exchange; SXF/SXM/SCF for macro news; SXB/SXK for financial-sector news; sector futures (SXA gold, SXH tech, SXY energy) for sector-specific news
Ciro Csa Compliance Fully compliant - standard exchange-traded futures listed on the Montreal Exchange (Bourse de Montreal), cleared by the Canadian Derivatives Clearing Corporation (CDCC), overseen by Quebec's AMF with market-conduct and dealer regulation by CIRO under the CSA framework; no insider trading
Lot Sizes 1 contract = C$200 per index point (standard) • 1 contract = C$50 per index point (sector) • SCF = C$5 per point; SXM = C$50 per point • 1 contract = 100 shares/units, physically delivered via CDS
Trading Hours TSX cash session 9:30 AM - 4:00 PM ET; Montreal Exchange index futures (SXF) regular session ~9:30 AM - 4:15 PM ET plus an extended overnight session (from ~2:00 AM ET) for international price discovery; overnight US/global news impacts the gap open
Key Events Bank of Canada rate decisions on 8 fixed dates per year at 09:45 ET - major SXB/SXF mover; Monetary Policy Report (MPR) released with the January, April, July and October decisions • Annual Federal Budget (typically spring) - sector-specific and broad market impact; the Fall Economic Statement is also relevant • Monthly GDP releases by Statistics Canada (Canada reports GDP monthly, unlike most economies) • Monthly CPI data (Statistics Canada) and the monthly Labour Force Survey (employment) • FOMC decisions at 2:00 PM ET - a LIVE intraday event for Canada (shared Eastern time zone), not an overnight gap • Quarterly results of index heavyweights; Canadian bank earnings cluster (late February / late May / late August / early December due to Oct 31 fiscal year-ends)
Tax Implications Frequent intraday futures trading is generally treated as business income (taxed at full marginal rates); occasional or longer-term positions may be capital gains (50% inclusion rate confirmed for 2026 after the proposed two-thirds hike was cancelled). Treatment depends on facts - consult a CPA
Liquidity Notes News events can cause temporary liquidity gaps; mini and sector contracts are thinner than SXF; use limit orders

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I trade before or after news is released?

Trade after the news release, never before for beginners. Pre-news trading is essentially gambling on unknown outcomes. Wait for the announcement, let the initial chaos settle (2-10 minutes), then trade in the confirmed direction. Yes, you miss some of the initial move, but you avoid being wrong-sided on unpredictable outcomes.

How do I know what the market expects before news?

Research consensus expectations: 1) Bloomberg/Reuters economist polls for Bank of Canada decisions. 2) Analyst estimates for earnings (available on financial websites and broker research). 3) Economic forecast consensus for GDP, inflation, and jobs. 4) Pre-event commentary from financial media (Financial Post, BNN Bloomberg, The Globe and Mail). 5) Options-market implied expectations (requires more expertise). Building this research habit is essential for news trading.

Why does good news sometimes cause prices to fall?

This happens when: 1) The good news was already expected ('priced in') - no new information. 2) The good news was less good than expected - disappointment despite a positive headline. 3) 'Sell the news' - traders who bought the rumor sell on confirmation. 4) Good news masks bad underlying details. Always look beyond headlines to understand how news compares to expectations.

Which news sources should I follow for trading?

Essential sources: 1) The Bank of Canada website for monetary policy. 2) SEDAR+ and TMX for corporate announcements and filings. 3) Financial Post, BNN Bloomberg, and The Globe and Mail (Report on Business) for breaking news. 4) Reuters/Bloomberg terminals (if accessible). 5) X/Twitter for the fastest breaking news (verify before acting). 6) Statistics Canada for economic data releases. Have multiple sources to avoid missing critical news.

How long do news moves typically last?

It varies by news significance: Minor news: 15-30 minutes of impact. Moderate news (monthly data): 1-2 hours of clear direction. Major news (Bank of Canada, Federal Budget): 2-4 hours of primary move, and it can set a multi-day trend. Breaking crisis news: can create trends lasting days or weeks. Most news-driven momentum exhausts within the trading day, but significant events can reset market direction for longer periods.

How do I trade overnight global news affecting the next day's gap?

Approach: 1) Monitor US index futures (S&P 500 E-mini) and the MX extended session for overnight price discovery. 2) Assess gap size and likely type (continuation or fill). 3) Before the cash open, decide: trade the gap fill, gap continuation, or wait for clarity. 4) At the open, wait 10-15 minutes for volatility to settle. 5) Execute based on price-action confirmation. 6) Manage the position normally. For major overnight events, expect larger gaps and more volatile opens - reduce position size. Note that the US Fed itself is a live 2:00 PM ET event for Canada, not an overnight gap.

When should I fade news moves vs ride them?

Ride when: 1) The news is significant with a clear implication. 2) The move is confirmed by volume and momentum. 3) Multiple timeframes/assets are aligning. 4) The news creates a fundamental shift (not just sentiment). Fade when: 1) The news seems like an overreaction. 2) The initial spike shows immediate reversal candles. 3) Volume is declining on the spike. 4) The news is minor or misinterpreted. 5) The news was largely priced in. Default to riding; fading is higher risk.

How do I handle earnings season as a futures trader?

For index futures: 1) Track heavyweights' earnings dates (Royal Bank, TD, Shopify, Enbridge, the Big Six bank cluster). 2) Assess sector-concentration impact on the index. 3) Trade index/sector futures based on cumulative sector reaction - bank earnings often move SXB and SXF together. For single-stock futures: 1) Trade only large-cap liquid names. 2) Wait for the gap to settle before entering. 3) Use partial position sizing (higher volatility). 4) Trail stops aggressively - earnings momentum can reverse quickly. Consider options for defined risk on individual stock earnings.

How does Federal Budget day trading work?

The Federal Budget creates sector-specific and broad market moves. Preparation: 1) Identify key expectations (resource, financial, and infrastructure measures are often speculated). 2) Be ready for any outcome. Execution: 1) No position before the budget is tabled. 2) The first 30-60 minutes can be volatile - sector rotation is rapid. 3) Wait for the dust to settle before taking positions. 4) Trade sector futures (SXB, SXY, SXU) based on the budget's sector impact. 5) Expect reversals - initial reactions often overshoot. Consider options on budget day due to elevated volatility.

How do I manage a news trade that's not moving as expected?

If a position is not moving after 30-60 minutes: 1) Re-assess the news interpretation - was the market reaction different than expected? 2) Check if liquidity/volume dried up. 3) If the position is flat (not losing), you can hold but tighten the mental time stop. 4) If the position is losing but not stopped, consider exiting and reassessing. 5) If the position is slightly profitable but momentum is dead, take the small profit. Don't hold indefinitely hoping the news 'kicks in' - momentum trades should show results relatively quickly.

How do I build a quantitative news trading model?

Framework: 1) Data collection - historical news events with timestamps, content, and market reactions. 2) Feature engineering - sentiment scores (NLP), surprise factors, event type, time of day, market conditions. 3) Target variable - price change in the next 5/15/60 minutes. 4) Model selection - classification (direction) or regression (magnitude). 5) Training - walk-forward validation to prevent look-ahead bias. 6) Live testing - paper trade the model's signals for 2-3 months. 7) Integration - combine model output with real-time price-action confirmation. Expect the model to be directionally accurate 55-65% of the time.

What is the optimal options strategy for binary news events?

It depends on the IV level: High IV (>80th percentile) pre-event: straddles are expensive. Consider waiting for the post-event IV crush to sell premium, or use spreads to reduce vega exposure. Normal IV: a long straddle/strangle if expecting a large move with uncertain direction; calendar spreads if expecting an IV crush without a big move. Post-event: if the direction is clear, buy directional options for leverage; if volatility is high and you expect normalization, sell premium. Key insight: the IV regime should drive the strategy choice, not just the directional view. On the MX, SXO (index options) and equity options provide the toolkit.

How do I integrate cross-asset signals into news trading?

Build a real-time dashboard: 1) Bond yields (Government of Canada 10Y) - rate-sensitivity indicator. 2) Currency (USD/CAD, DXY) - foreign-flow and commodity indicator. 3) Commodities (crude oil, gold) - risk-sentiment and sector indicators given the energy- and materials-heavy TSX. 4) Global indices (S&P 500 futures, US VIX, VIXC). Signal integration: on a news release, observe which asset class reacts first and strongest. Use it as a leading indicator for equity direction. Confirmation: enter an equity position only when multiple asset classes confirm. Divergence: if equity moves but bonds/currency don't confirm, be skeptical of sustainability.

How do I manage tail risk in news trading?

Tail-risk management: 1) Position sizing - max 1% risk per event, max 2% total news exposure. 2) Hard stops - always in place, non-negotiable. 3) Portfolio hedging - consider OTM puts during event-heavy periods. 4) Correlation limits - don't have multiple positions affected by the same news. 5) Circuit breaker - automatic trading pause after a 3% daily loss. 6) Liquidity awareness - reduce size when spreads widen. 7) Black-swan acceptance - understand that extreme events can exceed any stop; size accordingly. News creates fat tails - plan for them.

How do I optimize news trading performance systematically?

Optimization framework: 1) Track every news trade: event type, timing, entry/exit, P&L, market conditions. 2) Analyze by category: which news types are profitable? Which timing windows work? 3) A/B test variations: different wait times, stop distances, position sizes. 4) Walk-forward optimization: periodically re-analyze and adjust parameters. 5) Edge monitoring: track rolling win rate and expectancy - declining metrics indicate potential edge decay. 6) Behavioral analysis: identify if your interpretations systematically differ from the market - adjust or avoid those news types. Systematic review quarterly, optimization annually.

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