rss

20 Trading Insights from Paul Tudor Jones

paultudor1. Markets have consistently experienced “100-year events” every five years. While I spend a significant amount of my time on analytics and collecting fundamental information, at the end of the day, I am a slave to the tape and proud of it.

2. I see the younger generation hampered by the need to understand and rationalize why something should go up or down. Usually, by the time that becomes self-evident, the move is already over.

3. When I got into the business, there was so little information on fundamentals, and what little information one could get was largely imperfect. We learned just to go with the chart. Why work when Mr. Market can do it for you?

4. These days, there are many more deep intellectuals in the business, and that, coupled with the explosion of information on the Internet, creates an illusion that there is an explanation for everything and that the primary test is simply to find that explanation. As a result, technical analysis is at the bottom of the study list for many of the younger generation, particularly since the skill often requires them to close their eyes and trust price action. The pain of gain is just too overwhelming to bear.

5. There is no training — classroom or otherwise — that can prepare for trading the last third of a move, whether it’s the end of a bull market or the end of a bear market. There’s typically no logic to it; irrationality reigns supreme, and no class can teach what to do during that brief, volatile reign. The only way to learn how to trade during that last, exquisite third of a move is to do it, or, more precisely, live it.

6. Fundamentals might be good for the first third or first 50 or 60 percent of a move, but the last third of a great bull market is typically a blow-off, whereas the mania runs wild and prices go parabolic.

7. That cotton trade was almost the deal breaker for me. It was at that point that I said, ‘Mr. Stupid, why risk everything on one trade? Why not make your life a pursuit of happiness rather than pain?’

8. If I have positions going against me, I get right out; if they are going for me, I keep them… Risk control is the most important thing in trading. If you have a losing position that is making you uncomfortable, the solution is very simple: Get out, because you can always get back in.

9. Losers average down losers

10. The concept of paying one-hundred-and-something times earnings for any company for me is just anathema. Having said that, at the end of the day, your job is to buy what goes up and to sell what goes down so really who gives a damn about PE’s? (more…)

35 Things Will Destroy Your Trading Capital

“What was the cause of the biggest draw downs in your trading accounts?”

  1. Having no exit strategy
  2. Being certain of your opinion on the direction of an asset
  3. Arrogance that you know how the trade will turn out
  4. Thinking that you are invincible
  5. Over-trading
  6. Believing that the market must go down based on a guru’s prediction
  7. Letting a guru convince you that you shouldn’t place a hard stop, but to wait for a reversal
  8. Incorrect position sizing
  9. Greed that causes you to trade too big and risk too much
  10. Margin
  11. No Hedges
  12. Not understanding that a Bull Market has ended
  13. Poor risk management
  14. Not knowing that earnings were about to come out on your stock
  15. Your ego takes over your trade
  16. You decide not to take your initial stop loss
  17. Believing a losing trade just has to reverse
  18. Buying a stock because it is a ‘value’ that drops another 50% from your entry
  19. Trading without a positive expectancy model
  20. Trading options without understanding how to place stops or use proper position sizing
  21. Thinking it “Has To Come Back”
  22. Buying and hoping
  23. Trading with no plan
  24. Not having trading rules for your system
  25. Not following your trading rules
  26. Averaging down
  27. Trading without an edge
  28. Keying error on the trade
  29. Not placing a stop
  30. Trying to out-guess the market
  31. Trading illiquid options
  32. Fighting the trend in your time frame
  33. Not fighting the natural impulses of greed and fear
  34. Using emotions for trading signals
  35. Using greed for position sizing

Four Phases of Traders

1. Being unconsciously incompetent. That’s when you don’t know anything about the markets. Unfortunately most people get in the markets, on the last wave of a bull market. The only thing required is to be in the markets. Everything is going up.
2.Consciously incompetent. That’s when you’ve realised that making money in the markets has nothing to do with buying low and sell it higher. So you start learning technical analysis. But you still loose money. 
3. Consciously competent. If you haven’t given up by now. You have started to gain experience. You can read the markets and feel the pulse. You’re discovering that there are more advanced things that you can use;Indicators. But unfortunately you still lose money. 
4. Unconsciously competent. That’s the zone guys. That’s where you’ve managed to put all the pieces together. You’ve been through it all. You’ve learned to master yourself, and you’ve done such a great job, that you’re trading without forcing yourself to do it. You’re relaxed, and all the pieces, are there. Think of the way you guys drive your cars. You don’t think of it, you just do it!

Honor your stops!

In high volatile environment (now), you would often be shaken out of positions, only to see them reverse back in the desired direction. This is not a reason not to honor your stop losses. It is just a reminder that either your timing was inappropriate or that you don’t have an edge in the current market environment and therefore you shouldn’t participate until things change. There are times to buy, there are times to sell, there are times to do nothing.

In bear market, honoring your stop loss will save you form disaster. It will assist you to preserve capital, so you could live to trade another day. In bull market, it will free out money for better trading opportunities.

The only reason to hold a stock in your portfolio is if you would buy it at its current level and there aren’t any better opportunities for your money.

We are experiencing a rare event of market destruction that will lay down the foundations for the greatest wealth-building opportunities in our life time.

After the darkest hour of the night, the sun will rise again.

Five key for profitable trading

There are five key things that make all the difference in profitable trading:

Focus on a system with bigger wins than losses, big wins makes robustness a much easier thing to find. A 1:3 risk/return ratio makes it much easier to be profitable even with more losses than wins.

Trade in the direction of the trend, in my experience buying dips in a bull market and selling into strength in a bear market is a much easier process than calling tops and catching falling knives.

Trade small versus your buying power, most systems fail because traders simple trade too big causing losses and being wrong to set them back far too much. Small losses are easy to come back from a string of big losses is fatal.

Trade price action not opinions. Be quick to cut losses and patient to ride winners. Getting stuck on what you think should happen could be fatal when the market disagrees with you.

Your goal as a trader is to find an edge over the 90% of traders that lose money, once you have that edge the more you trade the right signals the better chance you have of being profitable. Before you have an edge the volume of trades work against you as your luck runs out. 

12 Insightful Thoughts from “The Most Important Thing” by Howard Marks

1. People usually expect the future to be like the past and underestimate the potential for change.

2. When everyone believes something is risky, their unwillingness to buy usually reduces its price to the point where it’s not risky at all. Broadly negative opinion can make it the least risky thing, since all optimism has been driven out of its price.

3. In investing, as in life, there are very few sure things. Values can evaporate, estimates can be wrong, circumstances can change and “sure things” can fail. However, there are two concepts we can hold to with confidence: • Rule number one: most things will prove to be cyclical. • Rule number two: some of the greatest opportunities for gain and loss come when other people forget rule number one.

4. Very early in my career, a veteran investor told me about the three stages of a bull market. Now I’ll share them with you. • The first, when a few forward-looking people begin to believe things will get better • The second, when most investors realize improvement is actually taking place • The third, when everyone concludes things will get better forever

5. Investors hold to their convictions as long as they can, but when the economic and psychological pressures become irresistible, they surrender and jump on the bandwagon.

6. Even when an excess does develop, it’s important to remember that “overpriced” is incredibly different from “going down tomorrow.” • Markets can be over- or underpriced and stay that way—or become more so—for years.

7. If everyone likes it, it’s probably because it has been doing well. Most people seem to think outstanding performance to date presages outstanding future performance. Actually, it’s more likely that outstanding performance to date has borrowed from the future and thus presages subpar performance from here on out. (more…)

These 35 Mistakes can cost a trader a lot of money

“What was the cause of the biggest draw downs in your trading accounts?”

  1. Having no exit strategy
  2. Being certain of your opinion on the direction of an asset
  3. Arrogance that you know how the trade will turn out
  4. Thinking that you are invincible
  5. Over-trading
  6. Believing that the market must go down based on a guru’s prediction
  7. Letting a guru convince you that you shouldn’t place a hard stop, but to wait for a reversal
  8. Incorrect position sizing
  9. Greed that causes you to trade too big and risk too much
  10. Margin
  11. No Hedges
  12. Not understanding that a Bull Market has ended
  13. Poor risk management
  14. Not knowing that earnings were about to come out on your stock
  15. Your ego takes over your trade
  16. You decide not to take your initial stop loss
  17. Believing a losing trade just has to reverse
  18. Buying a stock because it is a ‘value’ that drops another 50% from your entry
  19. Trading without a positive expectancy model
  20. Trading options without understanding how to place stops or use proper position sizing
  21. Thinking it “Has To Come Back”
  22. Buying and hoping
  23. Trading with no plan
  24. Not having trading rules for your system
  25. Not following your trading rules
  26. Averaging down
  27. Trading without an edge
  28. Keying error on the trade
  29. Not placing a stop
  30. Trying to out-guess the market
  31. Trading illiquid options
  32. Fighting the trend in your time frame
  33. Not fighting the natural impulses of greed and fear
  34. Using emotions for trading signals
  35. Using greed for position sizing

Trading Wisdom – Jesse Livermore

“I think it was a long step forward in my trading education when I realized at last that when old Mr. Partridge kept on telling the other customers, “Well, you know this is a bull market!” he really meant to tell them that the big money was not in the individual fluctuations but in the main movements – that is, not in reading the tape but in sizing up the entire market and its trend.”

In all of “Reminiscences” this crucial idea that the Really Big Money is always earned by prudently riding the large trends over time and not in day trading every minute fluctuation is one of the central themes of the book. Livermore hammers this again and again, attacking it from countless angles and spicing up all of his amazing lessons with his own enthralling personal experiences.

This old and successful speculator that Livermore mentions, Mr. Partridge, would always politely tell the younger speculators who asked him trading questions that it was a bull market. The young speculators were always eager to trade, but Partridge was old and battle-scarred enough to know that no mere mortal could even hope to catch every individual fluctuation so the wisest strategy was just to ride the major trends. His simple reply, which would annoy the youngsters since they couldn’t yet perceive the deep wisdom in it, was to subtly advise them to just ride the primary trend and not worry about rapid-fire trading.

If a particular market happens to be in a primary bull trend, then just be long and don’t worry about trying to interpret and trade upon the essentially random day-to-day market noise. If a particular market is in a primary bear trend, then either sit out in cash or stay short and wait for the trend to fully mature and run its course. Don’t try to frantically outguess the primary trend everyday, just accept it and trade with it and you will win in the end.

Go to top