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Aiming for the Right Target in Trading
By
Walter T. Downs
When trading goes right, it can be a great
feeling. When trading goes wrong it can be a
nightmare. Fortunes are made in a matter of
weeks and lost in a matter of minutes. This
pattern repeats itself as each new generation of
traders hit the market. They hurl themselves out
of the night like insane insects against some
sort of karmic bug-light; all thought and all
existence extinguished in one final cosmic "zzzzzzt".
Obviously, for a trader to be successful he must
acknowledge this
pattern and then break it. This can be
accomplished by asking the right questions and
finding the correct answers by rational
observation and logical conclusion.
This article will
attempt to address one question:
"What is the
difference between a winning trader and a losing trader?"
What follows are
eleven observations and conclusions that I use in my own trading
to help keep me on the right track. You can put these ideas into
table form, and use them as a template to determine the
probability of a trader being successful.
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OBSERVATION # 1
The greatest number of losing traders is found in the
short-term and intraday ranks. This has less to do with the time frame and more to do with the fact
that many of these traders lack proper preparation and a well thought-out game plan. By
trading in the time frame most unforgiving of even minute error and most vulnerable to floor manipulation
and general costs of trading, losses due to lack of knowledge and lack of preparedness are exponential.
These traders are often undercapitalized as well. Winning traders often trade in mid-term to long-term
time frames. Often they carry greater initial levels of equity as well.
CONCLUSION:
Trading in mid-term and long-term time frames offers
greater probability of success from a statistical point of view. The same can be said for level of
capitalization. The greater the initial equity, the greater the probability of survival.
OBSERVATION # 2
Losing traders often use complex systems or methodologies
or rely entirely on outside recommendations from gurus or black boxes. Winning traders often use very
simple techniques. Invariably they use either a highly modified version of an existing technique or else
they have invented their own.
CONCLUSION:
This seems to fit
in with the mistaken belief that "complex" is synonymous with
"better". Such is not necessarily the case. Logically one could
argue that simplistic market approaches tend to be more
practical and less prone to false interpretation. In truth, even
the terms "simple" or "complex" have no relevance.
All that really matters is what makes money and what doesn't.
From the observations, we might also conclude that maintaining a
major stake in the trading process via our own thoughts and
analyses is important to being successful as a trader. This may
also explain why a trader who possesses no other qualities than
patience and persistence often outperforms those with advanced
education, superior intellect or even true genius.
OBSERVATION # 3
Losing traders
often rely heavily on computer-generated systems and indicators.
They do not take the time to study the mathematical construction
of such tools nor do they consider variable usage other than the
most popular interpretation. Winning traders often take
advantage of the use of computers because of their speed in
analyzing large amounts of data and many markets. However, they
also tend to be accomplished chartists who are quite happy to
sit down with a paper chart, a pencil, protractor and
calculator. Very often you will find that they have taken the
time to learn the actual mathematical construction of averages
and oscillators and can construct them manually if need be. They
have taken the time to understand the mechanics of market
machinery right down to the last nut and bolt.
CONCLUSION:
If you want to be
successful at anything, you need to have a strong understanding
of the tools involved. Using a hammer to drive a nut in to a
threaded hole might work, but it isn't pretty or practical.
OBSERVATION # 4
Losing traders
spend a great deal of time forecasting where the market will be
tomorrow. Winning traders spend most of their time thinking
about how traders will react to what the market is doing now,
and they plan their strategy accordingly.
CONCLUSION:
Success of a trade
is much more likely to occur if a trader can predict what type
of crowd reaction a particular market event will incur. Being
able to respond to irrational buying or selling with a rational
and well thought out plan of attack will always increase your
probability of success. It can also be concluded
that being a successful trader is easier than being a successful
analyst since analysts must in effect forecast ultimate outcome
and project ultimate profit. If one were to ask a successful
trader where he thought a particular market was going to be
tomorrow, the most likely response would be a shrug of the
shoulders and a simple comment that he would follow the market
wherever it wanted to go. By the time we have reached the end of
our observations and conclusions, what may have seemed like a
rather inane response may be reconsidered as a very prescient
view of the market.
OBSERVATION # 5
Losing traders
focus on winning trades and high percentages of winners. Winning
traders focus on losing trades, solid returns and good risk to
reward ratios.
CONCLUSION:
The observation
implies that it is much more important to focus on overall risk
versus overall profit, rather than "wins" or "losses". The
successful trader focuses on possible money gained versus
possible money lost, and cares little about the mental highs and
lows associated with being "right" or "wrong".
OBSERVATION # 6
Losing traders
often fail to acknowledge and control their emotive processes
during a trade. Winning traders acknowledge their
emotions and then examine the market. If the state of the market
has not changed, the emotion is ignored. If the state of the
market has changed, the emotion has relevance and the trade is
exited.
CONCLUSION:
If a trader enters
or exits a trade based purely on emotion then his market
approach is neither practical nor rational. Strangely, much
damage can also be done if the trader ignores his emotions. In
extreme cases this can cause physical illness due to
psychological stress. In addition, valuable subconscious trading
skills that the trader possesses but has no conscious awareness
of may be lost. It is best to acknowledge each emotion as it is
experienced and to view the market at these points to see if the
original reasons we took the trade are still present.
Further proof that this conclusion may have validity can be seen
in even highly systematic traders exiting a trade for no
apparent reason, and pegging a profitable move almost to the
tick. Commonly, this is referred to as being "lucky" or being
"in the zone".
OBSERVATION # 7
Losing traders
care a great deal about being right. They love the adrenaline
and endorphin rushes that trading can produce. They must be in
touch with the markets almost twenty-four hours a day. A friend
of mine once joked that a new trader won't enter a room unless
there is a quote machine in it. Winning traders recognize the
emotions but do not let it become a governing factor in the
trading process. They may go days without looking at a quote
screen. To them, trading is a business. They don't care
about being right. They focus on what makes money and what
doesn't. They enjoy the intellectual challenge of finding the
best odds in the game. If those odds aren't present they don't
play.
CONCLUSION:
It is important to
stay in synch with the markets, but it is also important to have
a life outside of trading. It is a rare individual who can do
anything to excess without suffering some form of psychological
or physical degradation. Successful traders keep active enough
to stay sharp but also realize that it is a business not an
addiction.
OBSERVATION # 8
When a losing
trader has a bad trade he goes out and buys a new book or
system, and then he starts over again from scratch. When winning
traders have a bad trade they spend time figuring out what
happened and then they adjust their current methodology to
account for this possibility next time. They do not switch to
new systems or methodologies lightly, and only do so when the
market has made it very clear that the old approach is no longer
valid. In fact, the best traders often use methodologies that
are endemic to basic market structure and will therefore always
be a part of the markets they trade. Thus the possibility of the
market changing form to the extent that the approach becomes
useless, is very small.
CONCLUSION:
The most
successful traders have a methodology or system that they use in
a very consistent manner. Often, this revolves around one or two
techniques and market approaches that have proven profitable for
them in the past. Even a bad plan that is used consistently will
fair better than jumping from system to system. This observation
implies that stylistic foundations of a trader's market approach
must be in place before consistent profitability can occur.
OBSERVATION # 9
Losing traders
focus on "big-name" traders who made a killing, and they try to
emulate the trader's technique. Winning traders monitor new
techniques that come on the trading scene, but remain unaffected
unless some part of that technique is valuable to them within
the framework of their current market approach. They often spend
much more time looking at how the market seeks and destroys
other traders or how traders destroy themselves. They then trade
with the market or against other traders as these situations
arise.
CONCLUSION:
Once again, we can
note that the individuality of a trader and his comfort level
and knowledge regarding his system are far more important than
the latest doodad or Market guru.
OBSERVATION #10
Losing traders
often fail to include many factors in the overall trading
process that affects the probabilities of overall profit.
Winning traders understand that winning in the markets means
"cash flow". More cash must come in than goes out, and anything
that effects this should be considered. Thus a winning trader is
just as thrilled with a new way to reduce his data-feed costs or
commissions as he is with a new trading system.
CONCLUSION:
ANYTHING that
affects bottom line profitability should be considered as a
viable area of study to improve performance.
OBSERVATION #11
Losing traders
often take themselves quite seriously and seldom find humor in
market analysis or the trading environment. Successful traders
are often the funniest and most imaginative people you will ever
meet. They take joy in trading and are the first to
laugh or relate a funny story. They take trading seriously, but
they are always the first to laugh at themselves.
CONCLUSION:
Its no wonder that
one of the first things psychiatrists test for when treating a
patient is whether or not the patient has any sense of humor
about his affliction. The more serious the tone of the
individual, the more likely that insanity has set in.
SUMMARY OF
CONCLUSIONS AND OBSERVATIONS
Both winning and
losing traders consider trading a game. However, winning traders
take the game not as a diversion but as a vocation which they
practice with an intensity and dedication that rivals the work
ethic of a professional athlete. Since the athletic metaphor
seems appropriate, I will sum up on that note.
If trading were a
game like basketball perhaps novice traders would realize more
readily that what appears as effortless ease of the professional
trader in sinking three-point shots is in fact the product of
endless hours spent shooting hoops in deserted back yards and
empty playgrounds.
As in
sports, the governing factors are internal and external. We deal
with the market and ourselves. Both are like weapons and they
can be used proactively or destructively. Each and every trade
should be taken with professional care and planning.
In order to bring
these observations home in an even more compelling form, lets
add an element of ultimate risk to life and limb and say that
our "sport" is more like target practice with a handgun. While
it is certainly important to hit the target, it is more
important to make sure the gun isn't pointed directly at
ourselves when we pull the trigger.
Minute differences
in how we take aim in the markets can have amazing impact on the
final outcome. The difference is clear: One method is accurate
target practice. The other is Russian Roulette.
Copyright@1999
Walter T. Downs All Rights Reserved. Distribution is allowed
with due credit to the author. |