You Can't Become Rich In Your Pocket Until You Become Rich In Your Mind
Home My photos Forex My trading Contacts
   
 

So when you have a bad trade, you don't dump it immediately

==== How do you determine when the market is near such an extreme? ====

One of my favorite patterns is the tendency for the markets to move from relative lows to relative highs and vice versa every two to four days. This pattern is a function of human behavior. It takes several days of a market rallying before it looks really good. Thats when everyone wants to buy it, and thats the time when the professionals, like myself, are selling. Conversely, when the market has been down for a few days, and everyone is bearish, thats the time I like to be buying.

I also track different indicators. I dont think the specific choice of indicators is that critical, as long as you have a good feel for interpreting the indicators that you use. Personally, I pay close attention to the tick [the difference between the number of issues whose most recent tick was up and those whose most recent tick was down], TRIN [a measure that relates the price and volume of advancing issues to the corresponding figures for declining issues], and premium [the premium, or discount, of stock index futures to the theoretically equivalent cash index price]. For example, if the tick is at an extreme level and falling- -480, 485, -490, -495-and then just pauses--495, -495, -495- and the other indicators I watch are also oversold, Ill often go in and buy at the market. Sometimes, Ive actually bought the low tick of the day using this method.

I really have no fear of buying into breaks or selling into rallies. Sure, once in a while the market will keep on going, and Ill immediately be down a full point or more on the S&P. However, by waiting for a sufficient extreme, even in such situations, the market will often snap back enough to let me out near even. Perhaps my number one rule is: Dont try to make a profit on a bad trade, just try to find the best place to get out.

==== So when you have a bad trade, you don't dump it immediately. ====

Thats right. I find that I can usually get out at a better price if I have a little patience, since the reason I got into the trade in the first place was because the market was so overdone that a reaction seemed overdue. Once Im out, its easy for me to get back in. If I buy back at a higher price, I just look at it as a fresh trade.

==== When did you set up your home trading office? ====

About three months after leaving the floor.

==== After spending years surrounded by people on the floor,, did you find it difficult to adjust to the isolation of trading from home? ====

For the first four years, being off the floor was great-no distractions, no outside opinions. Last year, however, the isolation started to really bother me. I got lonely. I tried talking to other traders on the phone during. the day, but I found that it was distracting and lowered my productivity. I also tried establishing a trading office with another trader, which worked great for a while until he left to establish a trading operation in New York. And I tried hiring an assistant, but it didnt add to my bottom line. Now I try to deal with the isolation by scheduling projects outside

of the trading day in order to keep me involved with the outside world. F m a member of the Market Technicians Association and I try to attend every meeting. I have also worked with a programmer to develop neural network trading indicators, which Im now using as a market tool. [A key characteristic of neural network programs is that they are not static; rather, they evolve as they leam from the data.] This project has also led to lots of calls to other people across the country who are working on applying neural networks to trading.

I recognize that isolation has become a problem, and I keep on trying to find different solutions. I think that eventually I might like to have one or two traders sharing my office again.

==== Since youre primarily a trader of stock index futures, Im curious about what your experiences were during the incredible crash of October 1987. ====

Ironically, I stopped trading about a month before the crash. I had a phenomenal year up to that point, making more than half a million dollars, which was nearly twice as much as I had made the year before. I couldnt believe how well I was doing. I had caught all the major market swings. I had a feeling that I had just been too hot and shouldnt press my luck anymore. At the same time, I had the opportunity to apprentice with a horse trainer whom I had been working with. I decided that it would be a good time to take a trading hiatus.

==== So you werent involved in the market at the time of the October 1987 crash? ====

Not exactly. I had no positions at the start of that week. However, during the period in which I had stopped trading, I called my husband (hes a market maker on the Philadelphia Stock Exchange) each morning to find out what was happening in the markets. When I called him from the stables that morning, he said, Youd better get home and watch this day! All the world markets have crashed, and it looks like the Dow Jones is going to open 200 points lower! When I heard that, I thought to myself, Boy, this is great. This is the buying opportunity Ive been waiting for. I rushed home and turned on the news. Everyone was talking panic,

panic, panic. Silly old contrarian me is thinking, This is terrific. Lets see how low we can open the market. As you recall, the market kept plummeting all through the day. I had to force myself to hold back from buying. Finally, in the early afternoon, I couldnt wait any longer. I bought one S&P futures contract. In the final hour of trading, I kept on buying, as the market moved lower. By the end of the day, I was long ten contracts.

==== When the market closed, were you down for the day? ====

Oh sure. The market closed near its lows. I was down about a $100,000.

==== Did that bother you? ====

No, not really. Of course, I was a little annoyed with myself for not being more patient, because I could have gotten a better average price if I had waited. However, I really wasnt concerned about the initial loss on the position. The futures market was at such a large discount relative to the cash stock index that I was sure it would open higher the next day, which it did.

==== Did you get out on the higher opening? ====

I took profits on only part of the position. My plan was to stay long. I thought that we had seen such a level of stupidity in the market, with people virtually throwing away stocks that had value, that I felt it just had to be a selling exhaustion point. As one example, I remember when I first went down to the floor of the Philadelphia Stock Exchange, Salomon Brothers stock was trading at $32. It eventually ran up to over $60. Here it was on the day of the crash down to $22. To me, it seemed ridiculous that people were pricing stocks that way.

==== You make it sound like you completely shrugged off the panic that engulfed the markets that week. ====

I dont think I underestimated the risk of the trade when I bought ten S&P futures on the day of the crash. However, in retrospect, I certainly was naive in having faith that the markets, clearing firms, and banks would continue to function. The subsequent realization that if the Fed had been less aggressive, my clearing firm, along with many others, could have gone bankrupt, obliterating my account equity in the process, really shook me up.

==== Does it ever bother you when you lose? ====

Not at all. It never bothered me to lose, because I always knew that I would make it right back. I always knew that no matter what happened, I could go into any marketplace, with any amount of money, and make a living.

==== Could you describe the mistakes youve made in your trading career that served as learning experiences? ====

My own particular weakness has always been being a bit premature on entering positions. As the saying goes, The pioneers are the ones with the arrows in their backs. Ive learned to think to myself, Patience, patience, patience. I try to wait until things set up just right before I take a trade. Then, when Im ready to take the trade, I slowly count to ten before I pick up the phone. Its better to have the wrong idea and good timing than the right idea and bad timing.

Another mistake Ive frequently made is participating in too many markets at one time, which leads to sloppy trading. Ive also found that its my smallest positions that cause my biggest losses, because they tend to be neglected. Its natural to be cautious and attentive to big positions. With the small positions, its easy to fall into the trap of being complacent. My awareness of this pitfall has made me more careful with such positions.

I realize that Im only human, and that Ill always make mistakes. I just try to make them less frequently, recognize them faster, and correct them immediately!

==== What percentage of your trades are profitable? ====

About 70 percent.

==== Is your average winner also larger than your average loser? ====

On my short-term trades, on a per contract basis, my average win is about $450 (the figure would be higher if I included longer-term trades), and my average loss is just over $200.

==== With both the percentage and average magnitude of your winning trades outdistancing the losers by a better than two-to-one ratio, it sounds like you would be profitable in every month. ====

Every month! My philosophy is to try to be profitable every day! Of course, I dont quite achieve that consistency, but thats my goal. Im probably profitable nearly every week. Remember, I do this for a living, and I use my own money. I really value the fact that Ive learned to trade as a craft. Like any craft, such as piano playing, perfection may be elusive-Ill never play a piece perfectly, and Ill never buy the low and sell the high-but consistency is achievable if you practice day in and day out.

==== I assume that, in part, your consistency can be attributed to the intensity with which you follow the markets. When you described your trading earlier, it sounded like you virtually followed a market tick by tick* I assume this type of approach must limit the number of markets you can trade. How many markets do you follow at one time? ====

It varies. I analyze twenty markets. But at any given time, I trade no more than about six markets.

Ideally, I would like to trade every market, every day, but I know thats physically impossible.

==== Couldnt you train assistants to apply your methodologies to the markets you can`t watch? ====

Ive tried that. I hired and trained someone for a year. He was the nicest person you could hope to meet. Any organization would have been proud to have him as an employee. He was extremely hardworking and loyal. He was in perfect physical shape-he ate well and practiced karate every day. Emotionally, he was on such an even keel that I never once saw him get angry at anyone. I put a lot of time and effort into training him. I even gave him his

own account, because I thought that the only way he could learn to trade was by doing it. Unfortunately, it didnt work out.

==== What went wrong? ====

He didnt seem to have any passion for trading. He couldnt pull the trigger. I think he didnt like the idea of taking risks. [Linda describes a typical conversation with her assistant:]

OK, Steve, whats your game plan for today?

I think Im going to buy wheat today, he says, explaining his reasons for the trade. Thats great! I say, trying to encourage him.

At the end of the day, I ask him, Did you buy the wheat? No, he answers.

Well, what did you do? I watched it go up.

[She laughs wholeheartedly at the recollection.]



Archives
Forex Trading. Currency markets

Day Trading. Stock Investing

Trading Stock. Buffet. Investment

Intraday Trading. Profitable Investments

Swing Trading Signals. Invest in Stocks

Money, Finance, Power, Inflation

   
   

Previous Issues

200802-13Linda Bradford Raschke is so serious about trading that she traded right through the last day of her pregnancy

200802-12What would you say to the trader who says, I'm making money overall, and I'm using stops to limit my losses, but I still have a lot of anxiety about trading

200802-11When I first met Tom Basso, I was immediately struck by his incredible ease about trading

200802-10They don't approach trading as a business

200802-09I hired other traders, taught them what I did, and gave them my capital to trade

200802-08Ironically, I actually ended up losing money on the trade

200802-07Victor Sperandeo talked his way into an option trading position

©2007 Olesia HomeMy photosForexNewsMy tradingContacts