Thought of the Day (December 26, 2009)

The market is a loosely organized crowd whose members bet that prices will rise or fall. Since each price represents the consensus of the crowd at the moment of the transaction, all traders are in effect betting on the future mood of the crowd. That crowd keeps swinging from indifference to optimism or pessmism and from hope to fear. Most people do not follow their own trading plans because they let the crowd influence their feelings, thoughts, and actions.

Bulls and bears battle in the market, and the value of your investment sinks or soars, depending on the actions of total strangers. You cannot control the markets. You can only decide whether and when to enter or exit trades.

– Alexander Elder, Trading For A Living

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Tradecraft – It’s Time to Cut Your Losses

“CUT YOUR LOSERS and let your winners run.”

It’s a trading rule as old as the market itself. But while amateurs and pros alike are familiar with the saying, few have thought about the logic behind it. A few weeks ago we talked about the importance of letting your winners run. This time, we’ll focus on the first and more difficult half of the formula: taking losses.

The human mind is a powerfully manipulative beast, and the biggest problem most people have is that their inner beast interprets losing trades in exactly the wrong fashion. Simply put, we ignore the reality of losses while simultaneously counting our winning chickens before they’re hatched. Within our portfolios, we too often treat a paper loss as a temporary phenomenon, while a paper gain is wrongly seen as money in the bank. This is a logical fallacy to which almost all of us fall pray. But the truth is, a gain is only a gain once you’ve taken it, while a loss is a loss whether it’s realized or on paper.

The stock market, like many areas of our lives, moves in trends. Weak stocks tend to get weaker or, at least, stay weak. If you’re in the enviable position of being able to take a risk, with more than 10,000 publicly traded securities out there, why opt for an already losing trade? As we pointed out over the past few months, there’s always a bull market somewhere — even if it’s not in Microsoft (MSFT), Merck (MRK) or the washed up names of the Standard & Poor’s 500. When a stock is declining, it’s telling you something — don’t buy me. (more…)

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Thought of the Day (December 25, 2009)

Remember that you can always take a day/week/month off if the market does not look right to you. You don’t have to trade just so you feel that you are working. I take many “breaks” when things don’t look right to me. In fact, numerous times I will do all my research, get up at 5:00 AM and be ready to execute my game plan, only to find out that what I was planning on doing was not doable, for whatever reason, i.e. missed an entry, big gap up/down, bad vibes, etc.

When these conditions present themselves, I will call the local golf course, get an early tee time, and leave the trading desk. I do that, because I know that if I stayed around when I am in the wrong mental state of mind, I could make costly mistakes. I’d rather hit a white ball and get frustrated beyond belief scoring in triple digits than stick around when things don’t feel right.

The beauty of the stock market is that there are always new opportunities to make a trade.

– Tony Oz, Stock Trading Wizard

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Thought of the Day (December 24, 2009)

My objective as a trader has always been to obtain and maintain the freedom secured by financial independence: consequently, my goal has been to make money consistently, month in and month out, year after year. I have always approached my career as a business, and a prudent businessman wants to first cover his overhead each month and then concentrate on achieving a steady growth in earnings. Rather than striving for the big hit, I protect capital first and work for consistent returns, and take more aggressive risk with a portion of profits. Not accidentally, the big hits still come along; but they come along without excessive risk.

– Victor Sperandeo, Trader Vic – Methods of a Wall Street Master

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Thought of the Day (December 23, 2009)

Brokers, exchanges, and advisors run marketing campaigns to attract more losers to the markets. Some mention that futures trading is a zero-sum game. They count on the fact that most people feel smarter than average and expect to win in a zero-sum game.

Winners in a zero-sum game make as much as losers lose. If you and I bet $10 on the direction of the next 100-point move in the Dow, one of us will collect $10 and the other will lose $10. The person who is smarter should win this game over a period of time.

People buy the trading industry’s propaganda about the zero-sum game, take the bait and open trading accounts. They do not realize that trading is a minus-sum game. Winners receive less than what losers lose because the industry drains money from the market.

– Alexander Elder, Trading For A Living

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Tradecraft – The Triumph of Free Markets

GIVEN THE PERFORMANCE of most Americans’ investments over the last few years, big business makes an easy target for the ratings-hungry news media and a bloated government eager to prove it does more than take up two channels on my local cable system.

But while the media relish the chance to spin the recent scandals at WorldCom (WCOME), Enron (ENRNQ), Xerox (XRX) and the rest into splashy “trend pieces,” and while some pols shake their heads with righteous indignation, the real story behind the recent financial scandals isn’t the failure of the free market, but rather its triumph.

Fraud isn’t a way of life — it’s a fact of life. Go to any grocery store and you’ll see a handful of bounced checks taped on the wall. In business large and small, there will always be a tiny minority intent on not playing by the rules. In fact, I would even suggest that there’s less fraud in American business than there is sexual abuse in the clergy or embezzlement in politics, largely because American business is by far the most transparent and honestly analyzed of the three. (more…)

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Thought of the Day (December 22, 2009)

I set protective stops at the same time I enter a trade. I normally move these stops in to lock in a profit as the trend continues. Sometimes, I take profits when a market gets wild. This usually doesn’t get me out any better than waiting for my stops to close in, but it does cut down on the volatility of the portfolio, which helps calm my nerves. Losing a position is aggravating, whereas losing your nerve is devastating.

– Ed Seykota, Market Wizards

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