1) Understand the true realities of the markets. 2) Be responsible for your own trading destiny. 3) Trade only with proven methods. 4) Trade in correct proportion to your capital. 5) Manage risk. 6) Stay long-term oriented. 7) Keep trading in correct perspective and as part of a balanced life. The common theme is self-control. As I’ve often said, if you can master yourself, you can master the markets.
Archives of “Education” category
rssThe spectrum of information.
Martin, The Risk Takers-Book Review
Individual traders are often told that they should view their activity as a business. But what exactly does this mean? After all, one business after the other fails; presumably these aren’t the best models. Renee and Don Martin, successful entrepreneurs themselves, come to the rescue with The Risk Takers: 16 Women and Men Share Their Entrepreneurial Strategies for Success (Vanguard Press, 2010). No, it’s not a new book, but I hadn’t read it and I suspect most of you haven’t either.
With two exceptions, the entrepreneurs founded their companies—Curves, Alvarado Construction, Kinko’s, Liz Lange Maternity, Geek Squad, The Corcoran Group, World Wide Technology, Build-A-Bear Workshop, John Paul Mitchell Systems, Spanx, Amy’s Kitchen, Trilogy, Invacare, Tova, The WW Group (Weight Watchers), and (the author’s own) The Cal-Surance Companies.
Many—actually, probably most—of the entrepreneurs were dreadful students. Many went from rags to riches, sometimes back to rags again before they ultimately triumphed, but I won’t recount any of these personal journeys. Rather, I’m going to pull out a few quotations that may have applicability to the trading business, although I’ll point out how some of them can steer the trader wrong. (more…)
S&P 500 valuations (based on forward P/E) have improved dramatically this month
Never Invest in Something You Cannot Understand
One lesson from Warren Buffett has served me particularly well over the years:
“Never invest in a business you cannot understand.”
Of course, this can be extended across much of the financial world. As a general rule I adhere to “never invest in something you cannot understand”. I bring this up as the Chinese stock market collapses. Their stock market has cratered 40%+ in just a matter of weeks. It’s a truly breathtaking collapse. And it reminds me of my own personal experience in Chinese stocks during the 2007 bubble.
In my book I go into some detail about the story, but the short version is that I shorted the Chinese stock market bubble without fully understanding what was going on in the market. At the time there was a discrepancy between mainland China shares and Hang Seng traded shares and the markets traded differently due to a government induced arbitrage that was occurring between the two. I had literally timed the Shanghai peak to the day, but the Hang Seng market continued to trade higher. And so I was caught short in a vicious bubble during which I rode a 20% rally higher which eventually unwound entirely and left me relatively unscathed, but emotionally scarred. (more…)
Price To Book :How Far From 2008-09 Lows
The Market Makes You Feel Bad Majority of the Time
- Unless you nail it right exactly, you will feel frustration / regret / fear in all other outcomesTraders are always choosing among the lesser of the evils. Feeling regretful is practically inescapable.
- When you get the trade direction wrong
- When you got out too early
- When you got out too late
- When you miss a trade
- Regret Theory says that people have the desire to avoid future regret when they make their decisions.
The knowable versus the unknowable – focus on where you get the maximum return on time
ETF Creation and Redemption
The Stock Market as a Beauty Contest
“The stock market is the type of beauty contest in which you choose the girl that most others will find most beautiful, not the girl you find most beautiful.” most difficult.
This points to a key difference between long-term investing using fundamental analysis and trading. In essence the trader/speculator skill’s lies in seeing how others will view events and makes his bets accordingly. This is the case even if someone with an intermediate term horizon relies on fundamentals in their analysis. In contrast the long-term investor (horizon measured in next few years) implicitly trusts not in his or her ability to anticipate how others will react but assumes superior knowledge in anticipating the future fundamentals of a company will enfold and considers if the security is likely to provide a superior return over that longer horizon given how the market usually perceives such a future state on the assumption that the usual influences on a stock short-term will at some point reflect the future values perceived by such an investor. To the extent that the market is driven by the former, opportunities can occur. For example, in a market downturn long-term opportunities may arise but the market could continue falling because of a near-term focus of most market participants. Accumulating a position over time would allow one to avoid buying the possibility of buying at even better future prices while avoiding the possibility of not taking advantage of current prices entirely should the market have reached bottom. Naturally a long-term investor has to be prepared to hold (avoid leveraging) his or her position and for periods of low or negative returns. Naturally that same fundamental investor will improve his or her performance to the extent that he or she can predict how traders will react and impact near to intermediate term price movements to time their own transactions.