Thought of the Day (December 29, 2009)

Neurotic traders use trading for the “high” it gives them. These people have a need to be always on the edge. They trade during the day, bet on professional sports at night, go to the racetrack on weekends, and even plan their vacations around gambling. For them, the thrill is in the bet, not the outcome. Their mind is always on the next game, the next trade, wherever money can be won or lost. They have no goal beyond the moment…That is the underlying psychology of impulsive behavior, and it is the exact opposite of the healthy psychology of successful traders.

– Victor Sperandeo, Trader Vic II: Principles of Professional Speculation

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Thought of the Day (December 28, 2009)

On Wall Street, wise men, as well as fools, can be easily drawn into booby traps. In fact, in my experience a perrson’s years and quality of education have very little to do with making big money investing in the market.

The more intelligent people are, the more they tend to think they know what they are doing — and the more they will have to learn the hard way how little they really know about outsmarting the stock market. The few people I have known over the years who have been unquestionably successful making money in stocks were decisive, decision-making individuals without huge egos.

The market has a simple way of whittling all excessive pride and overblown egos down to size. After all, the whole idea is to be completely objective and recognize what the marketplace is telling you, rather than try to prove that the thing you said or did yesterday or six weeks ago was right. The fastest way to take a bath in the stock market or go broke is to try to prove that you are right and the market is wrong.

– William O’Neil, How to Make Money in Stocks

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LIKE ESPRESSO AND chocolate truffles, investment advice comes in small doses these days. Even after watching the stock market crumble over the past few years, a positive mention in Business Week or analyst comments on CNBC still satisfies most people’s criteria for “research.”

But the truth is that, when considering a stock — or any financial instrument, for that matter — factors like the company’s earnings, the Federal Reserve, the economy or Abby Joseph Cohen simply aren’t that important. More than anything else, your existing position should influence how you invest and allocate your assets.

There is a bullish and bearish argument for every investment, and nobody knows the future. For every reason the stock market might now be at a bottom, there are just as many signs suggesting the worst is yet to come.

The thing to remember is that, as participants in a free market, we aren’t trading stocks as much as we are trading our positions. It’s a subtle difference that’s lost in the “buy, sell or hold” ethos that continues to dominate most people’s financial planning. The real question isn’t whether or not I want to buy XYZ, but whether I want to buy XYZ — and how much — considering my current positions and all the alternatives to buying XYZ, including buying nothing at all. (more…)

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Thought of the Day (December 27, 2009)

You can’t win without an edge, even with the world’s greatest discipline and money management skills. If you could, then it would be possible to win at roulette (over the long run) using perfect discipline and risk control. Of course, that is and impossible task because of the laws of probability. If you don’t have an edge, all that money management and discipline will do for you is guarantee that you will gradually bleed to death. Incidentally, if you don’t know what your edge is, you don’t have one.

– Jack Schwager, The New Market Wizards

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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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