Showing posts with label Trading. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Trading. Show all posts

May 31, 2012

Michael Douglas's Mind over Market

Michael Douglas has this wonderful interview on YouTube. Watching the interview reminded me of the points from his all-time famous book "Trading in the Zone".

Thinking in probability

This is about not expecting to win every time. He mentioned that when we are trading with an edge, we swap positions to be the casino. We will win in the long run like how casinos work. Trend following strategies are known to have long periods of drawdowns. The key is to stay in the game, believe in yourself and your system.

In the zone

Someone says humans always look for comfort. Our behaviours change base on the outcome. We tend to take the easier path. That's how our brains are programmed to work, especially in times of duress. This concept of "in the zone" basically tells us to practise so hard that we subconsciously do what we have to do when we are in a trade, when we are experiencing the pressures from the market, to not let our conscious brain determine out next course of actions but instead leave the decision making to the subconscious part of our brain.

May 16, 2012

Scott Andrews shows that gaps can be traded!

I got to know about Scott Andrews (aka The Gap Guy) from Corey's blog.

In a presentation I gave to a group of over 140+, I talked about how I sieved out better quality trading resource. Traders who demonstrate success of their trading strategy/system with statistics always catch my attention. Scott Andrew is one such trader. Furthermore, he specializes in something close to my heart - GAPS. Yeap, I traded gaps for over a year before giving it up altogether.

During that time, I also did a fair amount of research on gaps. But I never thought of doing it Scott's way. Well, in the first place, I was taught to trade gaps in a unorthodox way. Scott fades gaps primarily. He has with him tons of statistical research on which gap patterns are risky and which gap patterns have a high probability of winning. His statistics are significant because of the large sample size. I am blown away.

Now, Scott shares some of his research at his blog - this is free :-) He also runs a paid service at MasterTheGap.com. But allow me to point you to the free Gap Trading Video section where videos related to gaps are posted up daily. A free great learning resource! You may also want to check out his presentation at the Traders' Expo 2009 that talked about 10 patterns that every trader should know. Also check out his trading results.

I am truly inspired.

May 15, 2012

Unconventional Trading Strategies

In our search for THE trading strategy, I guess many of us have come across dozens of more conventional trading strategies that made use of:

  • technical indicators (ADX, MACD, Stochastics etc)

  • price action

  • support and resistance lines

  • candlestick patterns (doji, harami, evening star etc)

  • chart patterns (double top, flags, pendants, cup and handle etc)

As I got more acquainted with expert advisors (EA), I was exposed to some trading strategies, which I termed as "unconventional" trading strategies. Basically,  in unconventional trading strategies, they don't use any of the things listed above! So allow me to share some of the unconventional trading strategies that I have come across.

Correlation Trading

In correlation trading, people trade base on the relationship between the same or different trading instruments. I ever heard a course out there teaching people to buy a currency and sell another highly-correlated currency. Supposedly, this will cancel the effect of the currency price fluctuations and the profits will come from the swap. Not a bad idea...one don't have to care about which direction is the currency moving (aka non-directional trading) - provided the 2 currency pairs are REALLY moving in correlation, that is... But my this friend got a hell lot of problem...

Trading mean reversion

My encounter with the PID EA taught me the concept of mean reversion. The main idea is that there is a high chance that price will move back to the average price (more details at investopedia). Interestingly, Dr Brett has the statistics to show that "a disciplined trader can make a living simply trading this pattern".


Gambling and information theory applied to trading

A online buddy introduced this concept to me recently. I have not really dwell into this yet. Basically, some genius managed to represent gambling concepts mathematically such that the parameters can be manipulated and optimization can be done. Another genius applied this to trading. One such application is in Kelly Betting, that applies to money management.


Trading based on probability or other mathematical models

The Hedgecow EA trades base on a such a probability model. The high level concept is that it is highly unlikely to consistent lose for too many trades. So when there is a lose trade, we will increase lot size for the next trade. More details can be found here.

Disclaimer: I am not recommending any EA here. I am just illustrating some novel trading concepts that I have learnt from some of the EAs that I come across. In fact, PID caused many to get margin calls last year.

What Makes Learning Trading Truly Difficult

Rogue information

Some of our time are also sucked up by articles or teachers that teach rubbish.

Too many parameters to tune

I truly believe what's underlying that makes trading difficult is simply because there are too many parameters to tune. By parameters I am talking about:

  • type of instrument - options, stocks (local or overseas) , futures, forex, CFD, warrants etc

  • timeframe to trade - 5 min, 15 min, 30 min, hourly, 4 h, daily etc

  • lot size - a couple of position sizing techniques are mentioned in Dr Van Tharpe's book

  • entry strategy - which timeframe to enter, what and how many indicators to use, which candlestick/chart pattern to look out for?

  • exit strategy - we have the same amount of choices as for entry strategy

If you were to mix and match the above, we have unlimited possibilities! Not to mention there are over hundred types of indicators and candlestick/chart patterns! Now, how much time do we really need?

Difficult to discuss

When aspiring traders come together, we usually talk about what work and what don't. However, because of the short acquaintance, traders usually don't spell out the entire context. For instance, a aspiring trader sharing with his friend may say: "The MACD indicator works for forex.". But... in what timeframe, what parameters, which currency pairs etc. I think you know what I mean. And those who are listening to him may take his "recommendation" and go back to do their own testing and wasting time as a result.

When something doesn't work it is normal

In my personal opinion, this is the most challenging issue to tackle. Let me illustrate with the following scenario:

I backtested a system, and it worked for historical data. And when I traded it live, things don't turn out as well. Explanation: Well, past performance don't gaurantee future result, market condition changes, anyway, best traders only have success rate of 60% at best, etc

If I come to think of it, we can't have a clue to what's working what not!?!?

Do you have any personal experience to share?

May 14, 2012

How much capital is needed to begin trade full time?

Well, I am a salaried-worker currently. As in, I receive a salary every month. I guess in trading, there has to be a paradigm shift. Trading profits may or may not come in every month on time! I did a quick search of the equity curves that I had come across (and still remember!):

  • InfinityYield Forex - equity curve tells us that we may not make profits every week

  • BK Forex Advisors - equity curve tells us that we may not make profits every month

  • Ray Barros - equity curve tells us that we may not make profits every year

So what does this mean?

To live off trading, we need a good sum of starting capital

Let's use OptionPundit's equity curve as case study. Let's use his May 08 to Apr 09's results for discussion sake. That will be average of 5.5% gain monthly (which is quite good!).

Let's say I need US$5000 to maintain my family's and mine current lifestyle. I would require US$90909 in trading capital.

We also need to cater additional funds for our livelihood

We have seen from the above equity curves that no trading strategy can guarantee profits weekly, monthly nor yearly. So, in reality, we will have to set aside funds to tide over those months when the trading account suffers from losses. Even if we look at OptionPundit's equity curve, there was a month with 1.7% profit (not to mentioned -13% for Aug 08!) which will not give us the US$5000 to pay for our bills, mortgages, food etc.

So what is the GOOD SUM of capital to start with?

So our objective now as a part time trader should be accumulating that six figure amount so that we can trade full time. And...forget about starting with US$3000 capital and go full-time after demo trading for 6 months...

May 13, 2012

Trading Concepts That SHOCKED Me Recently

Seriously. I mean. Well, I have heard people mentioned some of the following concepts before. But you know, in another moment, we would hear others saying the opposite. This is how trading is like. Now, allow me to spark some new controversy:

Most, if not, all trading strategies don't work

Now we have strategies based on fundamentals, technical indicators, mere price action, or even magazine covers... Have you ever come across a trading strategy that has a success rate of 80% or more? Now, I have to qualify this. If it is a trading strategy based on daily charts, then it has got to have that success rate for more than 3 years. If it is a trading strategy based on 5-minute charts, then it has got to have that success rate for more than 3 months. Ok, the above values are fictitious, but you get what I mean. The period for judging the success rate of that strategy has to be significant enough. One hit wonders don't count.

If you subscribe to tradersinterview.com, you would hear that most of the successful traders trade with strategies that wins at most 60% of the time, and that is considered very good already!

Then came along a EXPERT expert advisor (EA) developer friend. Since he started EA development 2 years back, he had coded over 30 strategies into EAs (some from well-known forex educators too) and unfortunately, not many could even hit the 50% mark.

Most, if not, all technical indicators don't work

For the same EA developer friend, getting EAs to backtest with technical indicators is a simple task. And when he does backtesting with an EA, he is not merely looking at 6 months or 1 year or historical data. He can get his EA to run over 5 or 10 years worth of historical data in 1 night! From his very mouth: "INDICATORS DON'T WORK".

Trailing stops are not the most effective

This one is difficult to stomach. It seemed so profitable at first. You know, when you are profitable, keep on adjusting your stops as the price continues to move in your direction and capture as much profits as you can. This same EA developer friend (again!) has deduced from his EA that for the long term, trailing stops are not as effective as "soft stops" (This is proprietary, so don't ask me what is it).  Mainly because it is tough to determine the right value to trail behind with as the market changes and this limits profits.

It is difficult for humans to trade emotionlessly

This is from Ray Barros. He shared that even traders at his level can also be affected by emotional disturbances. In particular, he shared an instance of how he forgot to put a stop when he had to rush to the airport on hearing that a relative is critically ill. In the end, a winning position turned into a losing position. How true, certain circumstances is really inevitable.

Position sizing is the key

If you had attended our meetup back in Feb 09, you would have already be blown away by a pro EA developer friend's presentation. Here are his presentation slides (Registering for an account at Meetup.com and joining the Automated Forex Meetup group is required to download the slides). In essence, he showed the equity graph of trading a pivot strategy without and with proper position sizing. And the equity graph with proper position sizing applied is a up, up and away 45% equity graph!

Ebb and flow

This concept is up for discussion. Only 2 traders told me about this to date. Ray Barros discussed Ebb and Flow in his blog. Essentially, the concept behind is to take a larger position when things are going your way and vice versa.

Now, any other proven concepts that you would like to share?

May 12, 2012

7 Habits of Highly Effective Trading Groups

I believe most of us agree that trading can be quite a lonely activity. It is usually I... I... I... For instance, I won on the last trade, I lost on the last trade, I backtested, I read about etc... In fact, one would be fortunate if he/she could find someone to talk to about trading! This is where trading groups come in. Well, I have been in a couple of different trading groups so far. I've got to admit that most of the trading groups that I was a member of eventually dissolved or disbanded (Well, currently, there is this special one which is still full of steam!). So I thought I could share on my belief on how we can make trading groups effective (or even more lasting, for that matter :-P).

  1. Look for members trading the same strategy/system - Well, most (if not, all) of the trading groups that I was involved in were formed after I attended some trading courses. Mainly because the students wish to form some sort of a support group to help each other and to learn from each other. It is crucial that members of a trading group are trading the same strategy or system. Actually, it is almost also important that they are trading the same timeframe. I have seen when members were not trading the same strategy/system, there would likely be no constructive comments and discussions and in certain cases resulting in some time-wasting disputes.

  2. Have a projector around - When having a discussion on trading, it is almost inevitable that we would need to look at some charts, website etc. Can you imagine a group of 20 crowding in front of a 15" monitor while someone is sharing some information on his notebook?

  3. Be seated in an effective manner - Most people don't really focus on the seating arrangement because usually finding a good location for group members to come together regularly is already as difficult as it is. We have to be aware that the larger the group, the more important is the seating arrangement, especially for effective communication flow and knowledge transfer. Personally, I feel the typical classroom style is good enough. But my most preferred seating arrangement is one in which everybody is seated in a circle and facing outside, with our notebooks of course.

  4. Set an objective for each meeting - If not, most meetings would turn out to be casual chit-chat sessions. In general, when trading groups meet, it could be for live trading (provided the trading timeframe allows) or for discussion. Activities for meetings can include:

    • Sharing past trade results, charts and thought process before and after trade execution

    • Suggest improvements to strategy/system and get members to go back and backtest for each to verify if there really is an improvement

    • Suggest new strategy/system (proven)  and rally members to backtest/demo trade together

    • Watch training videos together, followed by discussion of the videos

    • Summarize and share concepts from a new trading book... etc

  5. Decide on mode for trading together - This is for "live" trading sessions where group members come together to trade together. There are a few proposed modes for trade as a group:

    • Signal each other when there is a trade setup

    • Trade first, evaluate the outcome later

    • Trade a common pool of funds. At any one time, one person will be trading, the others will be analyzing and providing advice.

  6. Develop good trading group culture and rules - One of the things I don't encourage is to say something is working when it is only based on one or two tries or based on hearsay.

  7. Have fun! - Well, that's why we had the trading group in the first place right? Remember to organize activities that don't involve trading

May 11, 2012

Which Currency Pairs to Trade?

During the 1-day course by Ed Ponsi, he touched on the criteria to decide which currency pairs to trade. I thought I will just put things in perspective and provide some links as to where to look for the information that we need.

Spread

Spread is like the commission that we have to pay for our trades in forex. It is part of our business cost in trading. Different brokers offer different spreads for the various currency pairs. Let's take CMS Forex currency spreads as a guide (quite indicative for spread across different brokers). Spreads could range from as low as 2 pips for EUR/USD to 8 pips for GBP/JPY. As a rule of thumb, currency pairs with the smaller spreads is certainly more attractive. However, one should also look at the price movement range (the average true range or ATR is a good guide)  for his trading timeframe (if it could cover the spread easliy). Those trading daily timeframe charts can look at currency pairs with larger spreads because the spreads would be relatively small compared to the profit potential.

Correlation

Ed Ponsi suggested to not open positions in correlated currency pairs at the same time. For instance, EUR/USD and USD/CHF are known to have very strong negative correlation (ie, when EUR/USD moves up, there is almost 90% chance that USD/CHF will move down). So when one go long on EUR/USD and short USD/CHF at the same time, he is almost like having positions on a single currency pair! If the trade goes against him, it is almost certain that he will lose on both currency pairs.

Metaf.net provides a good tool for determine the correlation between the different currency pairs. The bigger the number in the table would mean the 2 currency pairs are highly correlated with each other. If there is a '-' sign in front of the number, it just means that the 2 currency pairs are negatively correlated, like the case for EUR/USD and USD/CHF.

From this data, I actually found 1 currency pair to be least correlated with the other major currency pairs (based on daily data). Want to know which one? Leave me a comment with your email :-P

Pic - Which Currency Pairs to Trade?Currency Strength

Ed Ponsi mentioned during the seminar that during this period, he will not trade with USD/JPY. During times of recession like this, USD and JPY are traditionally the strongest currencies. USD because traders are buying US treasury bonds as a safe haven. JPY because of traders no longer wish to be in carry trades. When 2 strong currencies are paired up together, it will be tough to determine who will win the tug-of-war. Ed Ponsi prefers to look at currency pairs that are made up of a strong currency and a weak currency so that there will be long periods of trends. Trends are forex traders' best friends! Ed Ponsi also mentioned his favourite currency pair to be GBP/JPY at this point in time.

ForexPeaceArmy offers a calculator that calculates the relative strengths of the major currencies based on their price movements. I find this is a good gauge to find out which currencies are stronger and which are weaker.

Rollover

Every currency has an interest rate tied to it (as dictated by the individual central banks). FX Street has a good table on worldwide interest rates.

The basics of rollover (aka swap) in forex trading can be best explained with an example:

AUD interest rate is at 4.25% and JPY interest rate is at 0.3% at the moment

Let's say we are long AUD/JPY. We will receive positive rollover as we are long the currency with the higher interest rate (ie, the AUD). The idea is we will receive money for the position that we are holding (for the duration of time that the position is opened). The amount that we will receive is broker-dependant however.

Do not underrestimate this rollover amount. We may be able to pay for the spread with that! Hence, alleviating the cost of opening and closing our trades!

Now we have a better idea of how to choose which currency pairs to trade 8-)

May 10, 2012

Trading Short Timeframes Vs Long Timeframes

In my last post, I discussed about how can one know that he/she is trading a unsuitable timeframe. And I found 2 other articles that supported my claim:

  • Glen De Vadder wrote about how can one determine which chart timeframe is suitable. He broke down chart timeframes to 3 main types, namely, intraday, swing/position and long-term. In summary, aspiring traders will a job should go for swing/position or long-term timeframes - hourly charts and above.

  • The team from PFX is more for trading long timeframes. They mentioned about the spread - yes, trading short timeframes incur more trading cost in terms of the spread because more trades are taken and of course, the emotional stress that comes along with short term trading.

One interesting point to note. Both articles mentioned about rollover, but from a different standpoint. In my interpretation, rollover is a double-edge sword. Whether you collect or is charged a rollover depends on the position and the currency pairs that you are trading. So we will have to take note of this if we are holding our positions overnight.

One point that is still not addressed any where is: whether trading short timeframes or  trading long timeframes is more profitable?

I would think they are equally profitable. Let's see if we can convince ourselves.

From the USD/JPY daily chart, the 60-day average true range (ATR) is around 90 pips to 200 pips

The 60-day ATR for a 5 min USD/JPY chart is around 15 pips to 5 pips.

So when trading the daily charts, my stop loss would have to be at least 200 pips while my stop loss for the 5 min charts would just have to be at least 15 pips.

Let's say I have a strategy that gives me 1:1 risk-reward ratio with a success rate of 60%. In addition, let's say the strategy, when applied on the daily chart, takes 3 days to close with a winner and makes 200 pips. In order for me to make 200 pips in 3 days on the 5 min chart, I would need to make 200/15 = 14 winners. But all in all I have to make 24 trades since 60% of my trades are usually winners.

So I would need roughly 8 trades per day on the 5 min charts to match a win on the daily charts. So which is more profitable? In my opinion, once I made 200 pips on the daily charts, it is a done deal. Imagine I have to make 24 trades on the 5 min charts to make that same profits...

May 9, 2012

Signs To Tell That You Are Trading A Unsuitable Timeframe

Trading 5 min charts has more money-making opportunities?

You can be trained to trade in any timeframe?

Think again. I also went through what most aspiring traders went through. I used to think trading the 5 min timeframe was suitable for me because of the adrenaline rush, as there were more entry opportunities. Most men like this type of adrenaline rush :-P However, I still feel that trading the shorter timeframe is good for brushing up trading skills. After trading the 5 min timeframe for a period of time, my observations tell me that the 5 min timeframe may not be suitable for me. Let me share my observations with you.

I have a full-time nine-to-five job. Most aspiring traders do (some own businesses of course). I realized I have been missing out on many good trade setups because they happen during the time when I am working! Good trades are hard to come by. Missing out on good trades really takes a  toll on my psychology.

I did try to force myself to trade while working. I adjusted my work schedule and tasks such that I would be able to monitor the charts as frequent as I can. You think this helped? NO! It made things worse. On one hand, I felt stress from my job. On the other hand, because it wasn't easy for me to find time to monitor the charts, somehow my brain started to see things. I saw trade setups that were not there! As a result, my trade quality took a hit.

You think I am able to trade after work? Ya, ya...forex is a 24-hour market right? Bad news. In my part of the world, by the time I reach home after work, it is almost close to the US market opening hours. Prior to the US market opening and even during the US market hours, there are often market-moving economic news announcement that cause the forex market to behave haphazardly. We are often taught not to trade around high impact economic news announcements right?

Well, I can trade into the wee hours of the night right? Sad to say, the forex 5 min charts typically quietens down after around 10:30 EST. There may be some movement around 12:00 EST when the London market closes. After which, I had to wait all the way till 16:00 EST (around 4 am local time) for possible movements on the 5 min charts. Imagine you are home after a tiring day at work and got to stare hard at the computer screen all the while. Stressful isn't it? Both physically and psychologically.

A fellow trading course mate also showed me the evidence that a suitable timeframe is crucial to one's trading success. We learnt the same 5 min chart trading strategies but he had much greater successes! Upon probing, I learnt that his working hours are totally opposite of mine! He works in the night only and has all morning and afternoon to trade.

Unfortunately, there is no one magic formula to determine which timeframe is the most suitable for you. The only way is to try trading the timeframe and evaluate yourself. Everyone's working hours is different, isn't it? :-P

May 8, 2012

Types of Expert Advisors

Based on my knowledge of experts advisors, I was trying to categorize them. It turns out that I cannot categorized them distinctly. Let's look at the various categories first:

Non-directional vs directional

Expert advisors that adopts non-directional strategies are usually based on hedging or non-directional trading models such as one based on the mean reversion theory. Directional expert advisors trade news, breakout, trend, range etc.

Indicator-based vs price action-based

Indicator-based expert advisors use one or more indicators in determining trade entries whereas price action-based expert advisors merely use price action, which can even be candlestick patterns or chart patterns.

Single currency vs multi currency

Some expert advisors trade with only 1 currency while others, especially hedging expert advisors, require trading with more than 1 currencies. The PID expert advisor (defunct now) needs to trade with 13 different currencies at a go!

Rule-based vs self learning

Rule-based expert advisors trade exactly in the manner that their programmers want them to trade. A breed of self learning expert advisors make use of machine learning techniques to learn about the market and adjust themselves to trade accordingly. An example of such an expert advisor is the Bogie. The Bogies uses neural networks to "improve perceptive intelligence on order entries".

Fully automated vs semi automated

There are some expert advisors that can (or they claim they can) run on their own 24-by-7 without human intervention. Of course that is the ideal case. Most fully automated expert advisors require optimization regularly so as to stay in tune with the current market conditions. Some expert advisors, on the other hand, are developed for the purpose of semi-automation. For some expert advisors, one may need to analyze the market and only deploy the expert advisor only if the conditions are right. In some cases,  the level of automation may just merely be to adjust stop loss to trail for profits.

Regular position sizing vs special position sizing

Position sizing is how an expert advisor determine how many lots to enter. Actually, I ran of ideas to term this properly. Let me describe what I mean and perhaps you can help to propose a good terminology :-P

Regular position sizing is determining how many lots to enter based on traditional position sizing techniques. For instance, the position sizing rule may be: the amount to risk for every trade is 5% of total account balance. And this is a hard and fast rule. The number of lots to enter only increases if the account balance increases.

Special position sizing adopts techniques such as Martingale or anti-Martingale (may or not may be on top of regular position sizing). For certain Martingale expert advisors, the number of lots to enter for the next trade doubles after every losing trade!

It is good to know more about your expert advisor and understand how your expert advisor works.

Feb 23, 2012

Too Young for Trading?

A 17-year-old blog reader asked me recently if he is too young to start learn trading and how can he start. That got me thinking. Mmm, how would I teach my girls if they expressed interest in trading?

You need to have spare money

Well, how young one may start to learn trading depends on when he can save up the capital to start trading. Nowadays, this barrier is lowered greatly with forex brokers that allow trading of nano lot sizes. A broker I know of allow trading of any lot size and this allows starting capital of US$500 and still allow proper money management to be applied.

It is easy to lose everything

This is up to individual. I was thinking some parents may like to let their children understand the risk of trading. Let them start trading without any rules. Let them fiddle and familiarize with the trading platform. Let them experience margin call, let them experience account blow-out. US$500 is cheap to learn all that.

You've got to execute the trades without fail, even if you've lost the last 10 trades!

After that, I would give my girls a decent trading system (including money management rules) that they can trade without interfering their studies (and their studies also don’t interfere with their trading too!). I would monitor that that trade the system consistently even if they experience losing streaks. Children are unpolished gems. I would think children are more likely to follow trading systems.

Side dish

Also, importantly, treat it as a means of bonding with our children, a game that we can play together!

Is this how you will teach your children how to trade? Or would you even teach them at all?

Feb 21, 2012

Successful Traders and Professional Gamblers

Books such as "The Way of the Turtles", "The New Market Wizards" and "The Market Wizards" tell very nice trading battle stories. These books are really about the war stories of the many successful traders of our times.

The 3 books seem to resonate that professional gamblers (poker, black-jack etc) have a high chance of becoming successful traders. All 3 books describe trading as very similar to professional gambling.

In professional gambling, gamblers:

  • Bet small when the odds are unknown. This is their risk management strategy.

  • Will have many losses

  • Bet bigger when the odds favour them. For instance, professional black jack gamblers have strategies to count the cards and know when the odds favour them. This is their edge.

It is with this edge that turns the game into a positive expectancy game. In the long run, the professional gamblers will win, provided they stick to their rules strictly and patiently.

As you can observe, trading borrowed many terms from professional gambling: risk management, edge, expectancy etc.

Hence, it is so important to trade with a edge. By trading with an edge, we know that we will be profitable in the long run, and we will not suffer from trade execution paralysis - especially we have lost many trades consecutively. As we know that we will ultimately come back because we trade with an edge.

The next question is: How to trade with an edge?

Feb 20, 2012

The Most Expensive Trading Book?!

Well, we know trading books are notoriously expensive. I believe this is inarguably THE MOST expensive book on trading. Well, at least the most expensive one I have come across so far. Let me know if you have come across one that is more expensive than this: Day Trading With Short Term Price Patterns and Opening Range Breakout by Tony Crabel.

A new copy is retailing on Amazon for a whopping $1,293.18! See below:


Tony Crabel's book is a classic that talks about breakout strategies - ORB, NR4, NR7 etc.

BUT!!! I manage to find the ebook version through Google! Save me $1,293.18!

Feb 19, 2012

Our Students Has Traded Successfully Since

Many trading educators like to claim this.

First up, how many students? Remember there is only 5% successful traders in the world? Does it mean all the successful traders come from your classes? :-D

I remember a popular forex trainer once admitted truthfully that after having conducted so many classes (and mind you, it is really MANY), there is only a handful of students whom he knew begin to trade well. He cited perseverance as the key to trading success for his students. He offered to check his students results but they just dwindle along the way.

Feb 18, 2012

US Unemployment - Let's Visualize It

Double dip recession...market recovery...sometimes I just get so sick of what the analysts are saying everyday. I still remember back in end 2008 when many were saying that the subprime crisis was just a storm in a cup. The total value involved in the subprime crisis was only a fraction of the entire US economy? Sigh, I have learnt to just take "advice" with a pinch of salt.

Numbers don't ring a bell? Let's try graphics. See here for an animated visual representation of the US unemployment numbers throughout US (up to May 2010). Quite scary when things get glimmer, doesn't it?

So I guess the US government still has a lot of work to do.

Then again.

From Sam Stovall's theoretical model, the market cycle precedes the economic cycle. SO, the stock market has to pick up before we see improvements in the economic numbers, don't we?

Then why those analysts are basing on economic numbers to predict the stock market?

Feb 17, 2012

Approaching the market with the right attitude

I have asked myself many times over.

Why Ed Ponsi's strategies in his book Forex Patterns and Probabilities are so simple but yet he is able to make money trading forex?

Why Linda Raschke mentioned in her book Street Smarts that we only need to be good in 1 strategy to be profitable?

Again, Curtis Faith brought up the same idea of simplicity in trading in his book Way of the Turtle:
...The funny thing is that most of the principles that Richard Dennis taught us were not new. Some were basic principles that had been espoused by other famous traders since before Richard was born. Yet the very simplicity of the principles we were taught in some respects was a hindrance for those of us who tried to follow them in those initial months. People have a tendency to believe that complicated ideas are better than simple ones. Many find it hard to comprehend that Richard Dennis could have made several hundred million dollars by using a handful of simple rules...
Why Fibonacci levels work like miracle for Joe DeNapoli but not for everyone?

Why not everyone makes money trading complex concepts like Gann or Elliot waves?

Why so many traders say K.I.S.S? Keep it simple and sweet?

There is a lot to learn from Jesse Livermore's attitude and approach to the market. I really take my hat off him for recording the prices with pen and paper. And the rules are not trivial at all. I believe many of us started with studying the strategies to approach the market but how many of us started with studying the market itself? I also realized that it is not wrong to begin with a strategy. However, the focus should always be on the market. Beginning with strategy helps us to zoom in and to filter out the noise such that we can concentrate on a part of the market and develop our research of the market from there. Can you imagine Jesse Livermore merely traded with the quotes from the ticker tape? No charts at all. He treated the stock prices like a giant puzzle, like how we play Sudoku or any other games. And that should be the right attitude - To crack the market puzzle, a piece at a time, using a strategy that we personally believe in.

Feb 11, 2012

3 Steps To Achieving Consistent Profits With An Expert Advisor...

We have to take a step back and think about if this statement is possible at all.

Personally, I have forward tested more than 5 expert advisors in demo accounts. After some time, I decided on running the most promising one on a live account. Right after I set up everything, funded live account and leased the expert advisor and all, I saw reports from a very popular forum that people had suffered up to 80% losses in their accounts almost overnight...when the expert advisor was catching the correct tops and bottoms and making phenomenal profits for the last few months or so. This has really shaken my belief about expert advisors.

Kathy Lien mentioned at one of her seminars that she used to work in big banks and she revealed that banks are spending millions of dollars to find the "switch".  A "switch" that will allow their sophistically developed trading software to switch between trend trading strategies and range trading strategies as the markets alternate between the two states.

William Boatright (2nd runner-up in Autmoated Trading Championships 2007), mentioned in an interview that when he tried to optimize his expert advisor for trading trends, it would not perform as well for trading ranges and vice versa.

Another clue would be...have you ever wondered why there are so many discussions and forums on the Internet actively engaging to find THE expert advisor? And those people have been evaluating experts advisors after expert advisors for so many years already...

Having said that, I still believe it is still possible to achieve consistent profits with expert advisors. Below are the 3 essential steps on how to do it:

  1. Still be able to do market analysis manually - pull out your indicators, watch the supports and resistances and the candlestick patterns...you must be able to tell if the market is trending or ranging in the first place.

  2. Understand how the expert advisor works - for 2 reasons. Firstly, so that you know when you can deploy the expert advisor (remember, they don't work in all conditions). Secondly, so that you can intervene when necessary. That is, you would want to close all the positions earlier (be it in profit or losses) when the market is entering a stage which the expert advisor will not perform well. I termed this "cyborg trading" - half man, half machine :-P

  3. Optimize the expert advisor regularly - another reason for knowing your expert advisor well. Expert advisors usually come with a set of programmable parameters which is configurable, depending on market conditions, to let the expert advisor be able to perform at its best (but still, it is either best for trending or best for ranging, no one set of parameters for both).

For me, I took a break from expert advisors.

Feb 10, 2012

Quantitative Trade Journaling

Every one of us keeps a trade journal (or some call it trading diary), or it is highly recommended that we should keep a trade journal :-P Most trading books and websites that teach trading talks about keeping a trade journal. Trade journals serve the following purpose:

  • If we keep the screen captures of your charts, we can review and refine your entries and exits (especially after a string of losses). If we record what we are thinking when we place those trades, we can even review our psychology or mentality when placing the trades.

  • Allow us track and keep records of our weekly, monthly or yearly performance and results, especially by specific trading strategies or trading systems. A good way to access the profitability of a trading strategy or system is by its expectancy. You can read about this and also about various methods of position sizing from Dr Van Tharp's book"Trade Your Way to Financial Freedom". These useful data are not provided out-of-the-box from our brokerage account statements or history and hence, can only be derived from our journal.

Most trade journals keep track of information such as entry time, entry price, exit time, exit price, lot size etc. Now, may I introduce 2 other useful parameters which I feel should be included in trade journals especially for aspiring traders!

Keeping track of our discipline

In a seminar, Ray Barros introduced his 3-1-0 method of journal keeping. In a nutshell, It is a means to quantitatively access at the end of each month if we have been following our trading plan religiously.

We can use any system for this. For instance, I can grade myself a 'A' if I followed my trading plan exactly for a particular trade. 'B' if I did not follow my trading plan completely. 'C' if I did not follow my trading plan at all. The idea is to get as many 'A's as possible every month!

Tracking our profit potential

Next, we also need a way to quantify how well did we perform for a particular trade. I got this idea from Dr Alexandra Elder's books. He used a A-B-C system to grade how well did he capture profits in a trading channel or Bollinger Band.

So what I did was, I will give myself a 'A' if I capture more profits that what I should get. "Capturing more profits" may mean I took an entry at a better price or I used trailing stops to capture more profits etc. Basically, I got more profits than what I could as per my trading plan.I will give myself a 'B' if I got the amount as stipulated in my trading plan. A 'C' if I got lesser than expected. 'A's and 'B's are fine but I will need to do some self-reflection if my percentage of 'C's is increasing as the months go by.

With a more quantitative method of trade journaling, we could, besides just tracking our performance, have a gauge to access our discipline and move nearer to a having a trader's psychology!