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Number 26- Dangerous Number ?


Is it a Coincidence???



China Earthquake
26th July 1976

Gujrat Earthquake
26 January 2001.

Tsunami in Indian Ocean
26th Dec 2004

Mumbai attack 26/11
26th November 2008

Taiwan earthquake
26th July 2010

Japan Earthquake
26th February 2010

Now Nepal earthquake
26th April 2015.

Why is it Always “26” ?
Is it a mere Coincidence or A Timely Reminder From God..Need to Think on it Seriously!!!

The Rhodes earthquake 26 June 1926

North America earthquake 26 Jan 1700

Yugoslavia earthquake 26 July 1963

Merapi volcanic eruption 26 Oct 2010

Bam , Iran earthquake 26 
Dec 2003 ( 60,000 dead )

Sabah Tidal waves 26 Dec 
1996 ( 1,000 dead )

Turkey earthquke 26 Dec 
1939 ( 41,000 dead )

Kansu , China earthquake 26 Dec 1932 ( 70,000 dead )

Portugal earthquake 26 Jan 1951 ( 30,000 dead )

Krakatau volcanic eruption 26 Aug 1883 ( 36,000 dead )

Aceh Tsunami 26 Dec 2004


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Zubulake and Lee, The High Frequency Game Changer

The High Frequency Game Changer: How Automated Trading Strategies Have Revolutionized the Markets by Paul Zubulake and Sang Lee (Wiley, 2011) is not an engaging book. It was definitely not written for the retail investor. Instead, it reads like a series of mini-reports from a consulting firm. It should therefore come as no surprise that the co-authors are a senior analyst and the managing partner at Aite Group, “an independent research and advisory firm focused on business, technology, and regulatory issues and their impact on the financial services industry.”

Rather than write a standard review, I’ll pick out two data points from the book that I think might be of general interest.

The number of electronic trade messages quadrupled between December 2006 and 2010. “If U.S. equities continue their pace, Aite Group expects message volumes to average 1.2 billion messages per day by 2011. The market already saw peak days approaching this number in late 2008. … Options pricing is exponentially worse than equities market data volumes. Current … OPRA data peaks exceed 1 million messages per second. Aite Group expects OPRA will generate peaks exceeding 2.2 million messages per second by the end of 2010.” (p. 47) I don’t know whether this projection came to pass, but the infrastructure demands are evident. No wonder some brokers charge for cancelled options orders.

I wrote about the importance of high performance databases in an earlier review. Zubulake and Lee confirm this: “Speed is essential for firms running strategies that feature both real-time and historical data. Aite Group estimates that 90% of quantitative trading firms currently maintain or are developing at least one trading strategy that requires playing back historical data in conjunction with real-time data.” (p. 113) Sure beats trying to keep all that history in your head!

Simple Formula For Performance.

Potential is what everyone has inside them, it is the education, learning, development, support and time put in that enables one to continually develop their capabilities. This can increase, at least until either physical or mental limitations constrain further growth. 
Interference is what detracts from potential to reduce performance. This can be down to any number of reasons, perhaps environmental or external factors, physical or mental hurdles or limitations, poor execution of process, inadequate self-management. Many of these can be deatlt with in some way; however, the greatest threat in most cases is from attitude and mindset. Perhaps it could be something as simple as seeing yourself failing and recalling the look of an angry parent, a doubting physical education teacher or a school bully from your younger years who always told you that you did not have what it takes. – This creates that painful memory which instils that moment of hesitation or self-doubt just when you least need it. – Who hasn’t at some time during their trading had that pang of self-doubt, or lacked the self-belief or confidence just at a crucial moment, and then looked back with regret and heartache, in some cases leading to a whole cycle of self-doubt and poor decisions, execution and position sizing.

Read these 12 Books to become A Better Trader/Investor

1. The Talent Code by Dan Coyle.  There are four ingredients for being good at anything, thus trading.  Domain knowledge, critical feedback, sustained energy, and purposeful practice.  Train with these ingredients to find trading success.  

2. Golf if Not a Game of Perfect by Bob Rotella.  Confidence trading a $GOOG or $SPY is something built and essential.  This book, written by a top sports golf psychologist, helps you learn to build real confidence.  

3. The Daily Trading Coach, by Dr. Brett Steenbarger.  Dr. Steenbarger is the Coach K of coaching in the trading world.  

4. Bounce by Matthew Syed.  This book studies why a small cluster of young lads in England became the best table tennis players in the world.  This read emphasizes the importance of great coaching for elite performance.  

5. Drive by Daniel Pink.  When we were young our parents preached, “Find something you love and do it.  The rest will take care of itself.”  Dan offers a better thought, “Do what you do.”  If you are not trading, then how can you really love trading?  In today’s world the barrier for entry into trading is almost nothing.  Paper trade, open a small account, back-test.  But you should be trading if you love trading.  Do what you do!
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How to become contrarian?

contrarian11. Come to the market with a trading plan. Most traders don’t have a plan built around high odds trade set ups. Thus, they trade random patterns.

2. Put in the necessary work. You can’t be like most traders and just show up to the markets expecting to make big money in a short period of time. Don’t be like most traders; become contrarian. It takes hard work and study. Prepare yourself to trade well.

3. Enter on reactions, not on breakouts. Most traders see the market begin to move and then jump in. These dog-piling events are made-to-order for professional traders to act. They unload when the herd is buying, and stock up when it is selling. Adopt a professional’s attitude and look to sell into strength and buy into weakness.

4. Work on the mental side of trading, not just the technical side. Understanding how to read the chart is vital, of course. But it is not enough. Once the technical side is learned, trading becomes 100% psychological. Most traders think psychology is unimportant until it is too late. Be contrarian and put time in to learning the mental skills needed to trade well.

5. Keep learning. Not just about the markets but about your own performance, too. Most traders take a losing trade and sweep it under the rug. They try to forget about it. Likewise, they don’t bother to study their winning trades. They have little idea of why one trade worked and another didn’t. Be contrarian: review your trading and keep a journal.

Becoming contrari (more…)

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