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Friday, February 20, 2015

from The Complete Turtle Trader

The Turtles’ core axioms

  • “Do not let emotions fluctuate with the up and down of your capital.”

  • “Be consistent and even-tempered.”

  • “Judge yourself not by the outcome, but by your process.”

  • “Know what you are going to do when the market does what it is going to do.”

  • “Every now and then the impossible can and will happen.”

  • “Know each day what your plan and your contingencies are for the next day.”

  • “What can I win and what can I lose? What are probabilities of either happening?”


Richard Dennis made his first million by age 25 and $200 million by age 37. He was the lead turtle teacher with a unique view: “Trading was more teachable than I ever imagined. Even though I was the only one who thought it was teachable. It was teachable beyond my wildest imagination.” Great investors conceptualize problems differently than other investors. These investors don’t succeed by accessing better information; they succeed by using the information differently than others.




“I don’t think trading strategies are as vulnerable to not working if people know about them, as most traders believe. If what you are doing is right, it will work even if people have a general idea about it. I always say you could publish rules in a newspaper and no one would follow them. The key is consistency and discipline.” 

- Richard Dennis




http://turtletrader.com/trader-dennis/

1trader @jcspe85 Twitter Policy



With increasing Twitter popularity I have attracted trolls, haters, psychos, with some creating multiple aliases. So, unfortunately I have to set rules for followers.


  • I am employing a zero tolerance policy for negative comments. Immediate block. I am NOT tweeting recommendations. I am NOT asking for debate on my trades, regardless of your agenda. I am not on Twitter to learn how to trade.
  • Do not ask for screenshots of PnL or positions. Immediate block. If you do not believe me, then unfollow. If you do not find value in my FREE tweets, then unfollow.
  • NO directed tweets @jcspe85 during 1st half hour of trading during regular hours. Also, ONLY tweet me if it is about a stock I trade. Otherwise DM @jcspe85f and I may answer AH.
  • The reason I don't follow anyone back on @jcspe85 is because I trade multiple positions in stocks, futures and options simultaneously. At the moment, I don't have time to read questions AND tweet trades and commentary.  
  • If you have a question, then follow @jcspe85f and DM. I will answer AH. Use Google or Investopedia or search YouTube or search @jcspe85 Twitter feed before you DM. I will also discuss specific trade ideas during pre-mkt or AH, provided you already have a premise for the trade and include your premise information in your DM.

Many traders have given positive feedback on my blog posts. As indicated before, I will continue to provide unique, original content on Twitter and my FREE blog. These are lessons and tips which I have learned over the past 30 years. This is my contribution to the trading community.


Eventually, I will reveal my plans for traders who are interested in my book, training(mentoring) & possibly other paid services. Due to my personal trading requirements, I will have to hire assistant(s) to handle tweeting, questions, etc. I have managed/run trading desks before, so this is nothing new.



If you are not interested in paid services, that is OK. If you are a loyal member of another subscription service, that is OK. I will provide an additional layer of trading expertise, including advice on the psychology of the trade. I will share the lessons I learned from my experiences in multiple trader training/education programs.  This should not only improve trader profitability but possibly shave years off a trader's learning curve. I want to duplicate a similar success which was written about in The Complete Turtle Trader, the true story of how a group of ragtag students, many with no Wall Street experience, were trained to be millionaire traders.


Please note that my trading is and will always be my primary source of income.
Revenue from ANY and all of the above projects to HELP traders will not change my lifestyle.

Thank you.


1 Trader

Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Trading Losses and How to Prevent Them from Occurring



Every trader has experienced losses in their trading account. The first few months or years of a trader's career should be spent on containing losses as much as identifying opportunities and maximizing gains.  I am not speaking of the first loss or the small loss, but the continuous string of losses or a single devastating loss.  

As an advanced trader I remind myself daily:

A stop loss order is my body armor. Taking manageable losses will not hurt me. Losses are part of the game, EVERY day.


For novices, taking stop losses are part of the learning experience. There is only one major rule a novice should have in mind, revert back to paper trading if a certain maximum % loss is exceeded. For whatever reason, external or internal, there is something amiss. Don't take more losses to figure out what is wrong. Plus, mental focus may be insufficient, so taking some time off allows for a mind to reset. Paper trading consistency should be at 60% winning trades or greater before attempting to trade real money again.




Once you have become a breakeven-profitable trader, then you still have to be diligent about limiting losses. At this point in the game, it is easier to self-reflect on why losses are happening. Besides having made an incorrect trade determination, here are a list of reasons on why traders set themselves up for making losing trades by not being in the trading zone

  1. Mentally unprepared, less than optimal mindset.  
  2. Not recognizing stress.  Not seeking stress relief.
  3. Environment is uncomfortable or bothersome.
  4. Relationship struggle or unresolved conflict.
  5. Inadequate sleep.   Late wake up.
  6. Not taking breaks throughout the day.
  7. Failure to maintain a relaxed but confident state.
  8. Poor health and/or lack of aerobic conditioning.
  9. Inadequate record keeping.  Not reviewing trades.
  10. No maximum daily loss limit amount.
  11. No maximum # of sequential losing trades limit.
  12. Not acknowledging or owning up to a loss.
  13. Lack of social interaction.
  14. Poor diet, excess caffeine and/or sugar intake.
  15. Excessive research and/or studying.
  16. Catastrophic personal loss. (death, divorce...)
  17. Overconfidence after large profit(s).
  18. Revenge trading, trying to make back a loss.
  19. Not following daily routine.
  20. Unscheduled intrusion by others.
  21. Harboring feelings of trader remorse.
  22. Over-exposure to opinions of others, including social media, Twitter, CNBC, etc.
  23. Basing self worth on trading performance.

This is just a brief list of conditions which predicate losses when trading.

I will expand on this in my book, Trading Secrets from a Market Maker Trader.

Please leave comments.



© 1 Trader and jcspe85.blog.com, 2015. 



Sunday, February 08, 2015

Reduce Daily Trading Stress: Relax, Refocus, and Make More Money





YOGA!  
To reduce trading stress

by Claudia Altucher

Giving my Day-Trader Friend a Yoga "Tip"

Yesterday I was talking to an old friend of mine who is now a full-time day-trader. He is a witty and funny guy who spends his days looking at monitors and watching stocks go up and down with his stress level along for the ride. "It can be brutal" he confessed, "got any yoga tips for a guy like me?" 

Back home I wondered about his state of mind while so much is at stake, what can he do to:

1- Relax,
2- Refocus, and
3- Make more money.

Traders are like warriors, they need to be fully focused and yet be relaxed to make the best decisions, they need a yoga mind, a centered disposition, sharp concentration, and strong nerves.

I decided to come up with a yoga strategy that will take them down into silence, release all tension, refocus and come back with a flush of balanced energy, AND that would only take a few minutes, as I guess Mike will not give me more than that.

This is it, and there is only one warning, do not do it if you just ate...

1- Step away from the computer, sit in another chair, no monitors, and close your eyes. You can do it. Breathe normally, but just a bit deeply for at least 5 breaths.

Benefit: You are giving your eyes a rest. You are becoming aware of your breath. This is the relaxing part, where you are re-connecting with your body.

2 - Roll your neck gently in circles, without forcing anything, this is not the gym, is actually a moment to relax. Let the tension in your shoulders slowly melt away. Breathe normally but a little deeper than in step 1.

Benefit: It will relax the muscles in your shoulders, and release tension.  Still relaxing.

3 - Now let your whole torso drop between your legs in front of you, place the hands on the floor for support if you want to, and just let all the tension melt. Play there, let the jaw relax, the face muscles melt, and stay here, breathing, for as long as you can. Feel all tension melting, allow yourself to let it all go.

Benefit: It lets all the tension melt away. The slight inversion will help clear your system (all inversions aid in cleansing the system)  It will empty your mind and give room for new ideas to come.

4- Slowly roll back up to sitting, do it slowly otherwise you will get dizzy. Once back into a straight spine position stretch your arms overhead and breathe. Stretch up as much as you can, then let the arms come down on the exhale but keep your back straight.

BenefitBlood will circulate throughout your body in a refreshed way, your breathing will deepen, your mind will begin to re-focus.  Thoughts may come up, do your best to keep them away for a few more minutes.

5- Lay down on the floor. Yes, you read that right. Bend your knees and relax your neck. Put your arms on the floor parallel to your torso for support and push your pelvis up into the air. This is a gentle back bend. Stay here for a few breaths, and go deeper with it. Then come down. Repeat 3 times.

Benefits: your spine will re-awake, it will begin to energize you, your mind will be clear and fresh with new energy.  Ideas will begin to spark in your brain, stay with this, don't go into thinking mode yet. You will get even greater results if you dare do step 6. just be gentle

6 - Roll your hands up and put the palms next to your ears and come up for a full back bend (or wheel). Do not force anything.  It might be that you are not able to lift your head off the floor, that is OK, just go as far as you can. If it hurts stop, go only to where you can. If you are afraid of this pose respect the intuition and simply repeat step 6.

Benefits: Congratulations for taking this step. This pose awakens your whole nervous system, it will help you re-focus, give you a boost of energy, and make you look younger. Do not skip step 7 or 8.

7.- Sit down legs straight in front of you and pour your torso over your legs while trying to keep the legs as straight as possible.  Release tension from the backbending here.

Benefits: this is the counterpose to the extreme backbending, and it will restore the nervous system back to a neutral, centered position.

8 - Lay down on the floor and relax completely for at least a minute. Let thoughts go, and rest.

Benefits: You are balancing the passive and intense energy before you get back on that desk much wiser and centered.  Go ahead, let the flush of new fresh ideas come into your mind, go get it!

So there you go,  now put your hands up in the air, away from that mouse and keyboard, and step away from the computer!

Please visit earthyogi blog for more helpful information.  
Find Claudia Altucher on Twitter @ClaudiaYoga




SIMPLE CHAIR YOGA 







This yoga-friendly, ball chair can be purchased at Target for $99.

Tuesday, February 03, 2015

the typical trading floor




Have you ever seen a trading floor?
No, we’re not talking Liar’s Poker here…
We have all seen the so-called “pit traders” on CNBC yelling and screaming at each other. But what’s it like on a typical trading floor at a large bank that you might work at?
Usually, you’ll see one large open room – no cubicles. On the outskirts of the trading floor you’ll see conference rooms and occasionally the offices of the Managing Directors.
On the floor itself, you’ll see rows of really long desks that are sectioned off per person. Traders within the same group will naturally sit within close proximity of each other. So you might see the foreign exchange group in one area, the credit group in another, and the equity guys somewhere else.
But you’ll notice something unique about each trader’s desk: the monitors. No, not that they are eco-friendly and conserve energy – just that there are so many monitors on each desk and that some of them are blinking constantly.
Got Monitors?
If you've never worked in trading before, you might think there’s no reason you would actually need between 3 and 8 monitors – the other 7 must be for playing World of Warcraft, right?
Wrong.
Partly, it’s for showing off: some traders view the number of monitors they have as a status symbol on the trading floor. Hey, even if you can’t see my BMW, my 8 monitors mean that I own a really expensive car, right? Or at least that our P&L is higher than that of the other group over there with only 2 monitors.
The actual rationale – status symbols aside – is that speed is extremely important in trading, and you don’t want to waste time toggling between windows. 
You need to be able to look up and know that Apple surged 4% in the last 10 minutes.
Then you need to monitor the market news and major headlines coming in through Bloomberg – is some analyst raising their forecast for the number of iPhones sold? Was there an announcement that just came out regarding Apple’s contracts with AT&T and Verizon? Did consumer spending numbers just come out?
As an active prop trader, you’re multi-tasking all the time and constantly thinking about these kinds of questions, assessing risk, and making quick decisions.
Bloomberg
Bloomberg is an expensive news/finance information service that all banks and trading firms have access to.
Beyond just watching the news, you also need to track stocks you’re interested in and see their prices updated in real-time – so you use another monitor for that. These screens are constantly blinking as the prices of securities are changing every second.
Bloomberg has a price feature that lets you organize and track stocks by sector (Technology, Financials, Energy, etc.) and lets you see where everything is trading.
You can also get a real-time heat map of the market, so you can see which sub-sectors of the S&P are up, and by how much.
Trading Platform
Next, you use another monitor to actually make your trades – this might be Merrill’s MLX platform, Goldman’s REDIPlus platform, FlexTrade, Fidessa, or anything else.
If you’re trading equity derivatives, you need to enter your orders for stocksputs, and calls quickly and monitor any pending orders that are waiting to be filled.
Why do you need an entire monitor just for making trades?
Because you might be trading over 100 individual stocks, and each of those stocks might have over 20 positions in option contracts, with various maturities and strike prices.
Depending on what you’re trading, you might actually need 2 monitors to track everything.
Option Valuations / Other Calculations
If you’re not trading derivatives, you won’t need to value options – but you may well have to make other calculations, whether you’re valuing bonds, analyzing the yield curve, or back-testing a trading strategy.
While the “math” itself is not quite rocket science, it goes beyond what most bankers deal with. While investment bankers may come from liberal arts, finance, or engineering backgrounds, derivatives traders primarily come from mathematical / engineering backgrounds.
Your firm might have a proprietary way of valuing options, developed by a senior IT programmer (see, the back office may have some merits after all) – and depending on what you’re trading, it might be very complex.
Getting these programs working properly can be difficult because they need to be synced up with other programs you use. Getting the # of shares and contracts held, exposure to risk, and other variables linked together dynamically rarely works perfectly – and this complexity means you’ll be calling the back-office tech guy or floor IT guy to fix technical issues quite frequently.
Messages
Of course, you’ll also need a monitor for Outlook – the standard email program at banks – to handle email and see incoming messages from broker and the rest of your team.
The Rest of Your Desk
So what else is on your desk?
Just like at a bank, you get a phone terminal along with a headset and regular phone – but be careful about the conversations you have, because anything between brokers and clients is recorded.
Talking about bottles may not get you fired – but you probably want to postpone talking with your model(s) until later. Even if it’s not recorded, everyone else on the desk will hear what you’re saying.
The phones are also connected to CNBC audio, so you can listen to what’s going on in the news throughout the day.
So What Else Do You Do On the Phone Besides Chatting with Models?
For one, the phone actually rings quite often – especially between the trading hours of 9:30 AM and 4:00 PM.
Most of the time, brokers call to tell you what their clients are looking to buy and sell and see if you have any interest. Some of this is shifting to online chat instead, but it’s still common for brokers to call to get your attention on larger orders.
Sometimes junior traders will screen the phone calls first before bothering the traders – you already have to multi-task a lot, and getting called every 20 seconds makes your job even tougher.
Forget About the Bathroom – or Trips to Starbucks
This also brings up another key point and a major difference between banking and trading: most traders hate leaving their desks for fear of missing out on something important.
  • Lunch breaks are limited to 15 minutes (and often the junior guys or interns will go get the food for them).
  • Bathroom breaks are rare unless you really need to go.
  • Forget about 10 trips to Starbucks during the day: bankers can do that only because they have so much down time.
  • No friendly chats with the cute marketing intern – at least not until the market is closed.
This also means that it’s common for traders to gain weight: they pretty much just sit there all day, eyes glued to the monitors, only taking the occasional break to eat.
If you walk up and try to talk to a trader, half the time he won’t even look at you: this might seem rude to you, but to him not paying attention for even a few seconds might result in a loss of thousands or tens of thousands of dollars.
And part of it is just habit: they’re so used to having their eyes glued on the screen that it’s almost weird to look away from it.
Hey, if you had that much money on the line constantly, you probably wouldn't give the time of day to bright-eyed interns or newbie traders either
Zeke Lee (I did not write this article but every bit of it is accurate)

Monday, February 02, 2015

Improve your Cognitive Recognition of TRADING rules, charts and notes




When you have tons of information to remember and its all typed into notes on your computer word processor, its not at the front of your mind.  Daytrading requires making split-second decisions.  Recalling every rule, every chart pattern, every upgrade, every price target, etc. is a daunting task.  As you increase your trading knowledge you get inundated with all of these inputs.

How can you remember it all?


This comes to mind
  • repetition (costly to keep taking losses)
  • study and review books or notes or videos(not enough time)
  • print out rules and place in plain view(words don't stand out)
  • blog about your trading day(suddenly each day sounds the same)


But what helps my memory the most is to do the following:




These simple steps will reduce the stress from slow and/or poor memory recall.  You should be able to make quicker decisions and stop repeating mistakes.


"taking notes with a pen and paper, rather than a laptop, leads to higher quality learning, as writing is a better strategy to store and internalize ideas in the long haul."


Please provide me feedback in the comments section of this post after you try this for a week.

Good trading!

© 1 Trader and jcspe85.blog.com, 2015. 

Sunday, February 01, 2015