Wednesday, April 6, 2011

The Seven Habits of Highly Effective Futures Traders


The Seven Habits of Highly Effective Futures Traders
Stephen Covey's The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People has been on the national best-seller lists for years--first as a hardback and then as a paperback. I wondered how its list might relate to commodity futures trading.
My interpretation of Covey's agenda is as follows: 1) Take responsibility for yourself and your life, 2) Act in light of your vision of success in life, 3) Act with proper attention to the correct priorities, 4) Act in a way that maximizes benefits for everyone, 5) Try to understand the other person before putting your point of view across, 6) Exploit the potential for cooperation among the people in your life, 7) Pay attention to maintaining and refining your physical, mental, social and spiritual dimensions.
While there does not appear to be any direct relationship between my commodity trading list and Covey's overall life experience list, there are some definite similarities and differences. It is well known that normally successful approaches do not work in trading. Additionally, life in general requires involvement and interrelating with other people, while trading is a more solitary endeavor. Here is my list of successful habits for traders.
ONE. Understand the true realities of the markets. Understand how money is made and what is possible. The markets are what is called chaotic systems. Chaos theory is the mathematics of analyzing such non-linear, dynamic systems. According to Edgar Peters, author of Chaos and Order in The Capital Markets, mathematicians have conclusively shown the to be non-linear, dynamic systems. Among other things chaotic systems can produce results that look random, but are not. A chaotic market is not efficient, and long-term forecasting is impossible. Market price movement is highly random with a trend component.
Unsuccessful and frustrated commodity traders want to believe there is an order to the markets. They think prices move in systematic ways that are highly disguised. They want to believe they can somehow acquire the "secret" to the price system that will give them an advantage. They think successful trading will result from highly effective methods of predicting future price direction. They have been falling for crackpot methods and systems since the markets started trading.
The truth is that the markets are not predictable except in the most general way. Luckily, successful trading does not require effective prediction mechanisms. Successful trading involves following trends in whatever time frame you choose. The trend is your edge. If you follow trends with proper money management methods and good market selection, you will make money in the long run. Good market selection refers to selecting good trending markets generally rather than selecting a particular situation likely to result in an immediate trend.
There are two related problems for traders. The first is following a good method with enough consistency to have a statistical edge. The second is following the method long enough for the edge to manifest itself.
TWO. Be responsible for your own trading destiny. Analyze your trading behavior. Understand your own motivations. Traders come into commodity trading with a view to making money. After awhile they find the trading process to be fascinating, entertaining and intellectually challenging. Pretty soon the motivation to make money becomes subordinated to the desire to have fun and meet the challenge. The more you trade to have fun and massage your ego, the more likely you are to lose. The kinds of trading behaviors that are the most entertaining are also the least effective. The more you can emphasize making money over having a good time, the more likely it is you will be successful.
Be wary of depending on others for your success. Most of the people you are likely to trust are probably not effective traders. For instance: brokers, gurus, advisors, system vendors, friends. There are exceptions, but not many. Depend on others only for clerical help or to support your own decision-making process.
Don't blame others for your failures. This is an easy trap to fall into. No matter what happens, you put yourself into the situation. Therefore, you are responsible for the ultimate result. Until you accept responsibility for everything, you will not be able to change your incorrect behaviors.
THREE. Trade only with proven methods. Test before you trade. When applied consistently, most trading methods don't work. The conventional wisdom that you read in books is mostly ineffective.
Notice that commodity authors never demonstrate the effectiveness of their methods. The best you can hope for is a few, well-chosen examples. The reasons for this is that they are lazy and their methods mostly do not work when tested rigorously.
You must be skeptical of everything you read. You must somehow acquire the ability to test any trading method you intend to use. The reliability of non-computerized testing is highly suspect. You must, therefore, use software that tests a particular approach or a variety of approaches. You must learn the correct way to test and evaluate trading approaches.
Have a good approach. Follow the four cardinal rules of trading. 1) Trade with the trend. 2) Cut losses short. 3) Let profits run. 4) Manage risk. These are well known cliches. Yet virtually all losing traders violate these rules consistently. Trading with the trend means buying strength and selling weakness. Most traders are more comfortable buying weakness and selling strength, the essence of top and bottom picking.
Trade good markets. Trend is your only edge. You must emphasize those markets which trend the best. This will maximize your statistical edge over time. I wrote a huge book (which I update every year) ranking the markets in historical trendiness.
FOUR. Trade in correct proportion to your capital. Have realistic expectations. Don't overtrade your account. One of the most pernicious roadblocks to success is a manifestation of greed. Commodity trading is attractive precisely because it is possible to make big money in a short period of time. Paradoxically, the more you try to fulfill that expectation, the less likely you are to achieve anything.
The pervasive hype that permeates the industry leads people to believe that they can achieve spectacular returns if only they try hard enough. However, risk is always commensurate with reward. The bigger the return you pursue, the bigger the risk you must take. Even assuming you are using a method that gives you a statistical edge, which almost nobody is, you must still suffer through agonizing drawdowns on your way to eventual success.
The larger the return you attempt, the larger your drawdowns will be. A good rule of thumb is to expect an equity drawdown of about half the percentage of your annual profit expectation. Thus, if you shoot for annual returns of 100 percent, you should be ready for drawdowns of 50 percent of your equity. Almost no one can keep trading their method through 50 percent drawdowns.
It is better to shoot for smaller returns to begin with until you get the hang of staying with your system through the tough periods that everyone encounters. An experienced money management executive has stated that professional money managers should be satisfied with consistent annual returns of 20 percent. If talented professionals should be satisfied with that, what should you be satisfied with? Personally, I believe it is realistic for a good mechanical system diversified in good markets to expect annual returns in the 30-50 percent range. This kind of trading would still result in occasional drawdowns up to 25 percent of equity.

FIVE. Manage risk. Manage the risk of ruin when you create your trading plan or system. Manage the risk of trading when you select a market to trade. Manage the risk of unusual events. Manage the risk of each individual trade.
The risk of ruin is a statistical concept that expresses the probability that a bad run of luck will wipe you out. On average, if you flip a coin 1,024 times, you will have ten heads in a row at least once. Thus, if you are risking ten percent of your account on each trade, chances are you will be completely wiped out before long. If your trading method is 55 percent accurate (and whose is?), you still have a 12 percent chance of being wiped out before doubling your capital if you risk 10 percent of capital per trade. For the mathematicians out there, this assumes that you win or lose the same amount on each trade. That is unrealistic, but I'm just trying to explain the risk of ruin problem. The point is that in order to reduce the harm caused by unavoidable strings of losses, you must keep the amount you risk on each trade to about one or two percent of capital. This makes trading with small accounts difficult. Two percent of $5,000 is only $100. That means with a $5,000, you should be trading with $100 stops. If you trade with $500 stops, your chances of avoiding meltdown from a bad series of trade are not good. Trading with small stops is usually ineffective because they are within the market's "random noise."
Another element of risk is the market you trade. Some markets are more volatile and more risky than others. Some markets are comparatively tame. Some markets, such as currencies, have a greater chance of overnight gaps which increases risk. Some markets have lower liquidity and poorer fills which increases risk. If you have a small account, don't trade big money, wild-swinging contracts like the S&P. Don't be above using the smaller-sized Mid-America contracts to keep risk in proportion to your capital. Don't feel you have to trade any market that might make a move. Emphasize risk control over achieving big profits.
The commodity markets are notorious for making locked-limit moves where the trader is stuck in his losing position. The market can go against him for days while he must helplessly watch his capital disappearing. This is certainly a reality, but the trader is not helpless to decrease the risk of it happening to him. Pay attention to the risk of surprise events such as crop reports, freezes, floods, currency interventions and wars. Most of the time there is some manifestation of the potential. Don't overtrade in markets where these kinds of events are possible.
The most important element of risk control is simply to keep the risk small on each trade. Always use stops. Always have your stop in the market. Never give in to fear or hope when it comes to keeping losses small. Never risk more than one or two percent of capital. Preventing large individual losses is one of the easiest things a trade can do to maximize his chance of long-term success.
SIX. Stay long-term oriented. Don't adjust your approach based solely on short-term performance. Our entire society emphasizes instant gratification. We are consuming are long-term capital. Eventually, this will lead to a decline in our standard of living over what it could have been with more attention to the future.
Most traders have such an ego investment in their trading that they cannot handle losses. Several losses in a row are devastating. This causes them to evaluate trading methods and systems based on very-short-term performance. Statisticians tell us that there is no statistical reliability to a test unless you have 30 events to measure. Short of a reasonable number of events, the outcome is wholly dependent on luck. As we saw in the risk of ruin discussion above, strings of losses are as certain as government inefficiency. Thus, the trader who chucks his system after four losses in a row is doomed to spend his trading career changing from one system to another. Don't start trading a system based on only a few trades, and don't lose confidence in one after only a few losses. Evaluate your performance based on many trades and multi-year results.
SEVEN. Keep trading in correct perspective and as part of a balanced life. Trading is emotionally intensive no matter whether you are doing well or going in the tank. It is easy to let the emotions of the moment lead you into strategic and tactical blunders.
Don't become too elated during successful periods. One of the biggest mistakes traders make is to increase their trading after an especially successful period. This is the worst thing you can do because good periods are invariably followed by awful periods. If you increase your trading just before the awful periods, you will lose money twice as fast as you made it. Knowing how to increase trading in a growing account is perhaps the most difficult problem for successful traders. Be cautious in adding to your trading. The best times to add are after losses or equity drawdowns. Don't become too depressed during drawdowns. Trading is a lot like golf. All golfers, regardless of their ability, have cycles of good play and poor play. When a golfer is playing well, he assumes he has found some secret in his swing and will never play poorly again. When he is hitting it sideways, he despairs he will never coming out of his slump.
Trading is much the same. When you are making money, you are thinking about how wonderful trading is and how to expand your trading to achieve immense wealth. When you are losing, you often think about giving up trading completely. With a little practice, you can control both emotional extremes. You'll probably never control them completely, but at least don't let elation and despair cause you to make unwarranted changes in your approach.
Since correct trading is boring, don't depend on trading as your primary stimulation in life. Unfortunately, the exciting aspects of trading, such as easy analysis and trade selection, are counterproductive. Good trading is repetitive and pretty dull. Thus, if you depend on trading for the major excitement, pursuit of fun will probably cause you to lose. If you can afford it, fine. If not, seek your entertainment elsewhere.
Here's a summary of my seven habits of successful traders. 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

Ideas For New or Unsuccessful Traders


Ideas For New or Unsuccessful Traders
Don't be too eager to trade in the beginning. Watch how the markets work for at least three to six months. Subscribe to a chart service and start watching market action from day to day. Pick a small universe of markets and update those charts by hand every day.
If you would rather follow price charts on your computer than subscribe to a published, weekly chart book, I suggest Omega Research's SuperCharts (800-556-2022). It is inexpensive yet extremely powerful. It has a wonderful tutorial feature that will analyze any chart and explain the important technical aspects. At the end of every day you can update your price data (futures, indexes and stocks) via modem for a very modest monthly fee.
I am constantly amazed at how many people try to trade without charts. They are the best way to understand market price action. You should pay special attention to trend. Of course, trend is only relevant in a particular time frame. On a daily chart I recommend picking a time frame between 15 and 25 days. Use the same one for all markets.
One important thing to notice as you watch price action unfold is how unpredictable the markets are. Mathematical analysis of historical market price action has shown that price changes are primarily random. There is a small trend component in most futures price action, however. It is this trend ingredient that allows traders to make money . . . but only if they follow trends.
Those who try to anticipate changes in trend rather than follow establish trends are doomed to failure. In addition, with only a few exceptions, trying to find bargains by buying weakness and selling strength is likewise a prescription for eventual disaster.
Frustrated traders are constantly looking for some secret that successful traders use to make money. The only secret is that there is no secret. Those who are successful in the long run all follow the four cardinal principles of trading. They are: (1) Trade with the trend, (2) Cut losses short, (3) Let profits run, and (4) Manage risk.
There are many ways to implement each of those four principles. The important thing is that you have the discipline to adhere to each of them all the time without exception. You can read about how a wide variety of experts execute each of those principles in my book, The Four Cardinal Principles of Trading.
By the way, books are your best value in commodity trading information. You get more ideas for your money from books. But don't assume that just because someone famous has written a book, all the ideas in it actually work. One of the unknown reasons why so many traders lose is that most of what you read in books, what I call "the conventional wisdom of trading," doesn't work. You must be extremely skeptical about everything you read. Insist on a rigorous demonstration that when the ideas are applied continuously for many years, they lead to profits. You almost never find this kind of proof in books.
Since most trading methods you will come across don't work over time, you must be careful not to trade with any approach you haven't tested rigorously on historical data. Notice that to test something, there must be objective rules. If you insist on trading with a subjective, seat-of-the-pants approach, don't be surprised if you eventually lose money. Your method probably has a negative statistical advantage. Just like a casino gambler, you will eventually lose.
Don't blindly assume that a system which appears to be profitable in historical testing will necessarily work in the future. The testing must be rigorous enough to weed out those curve-fitted systems that only work in hindsight. Most commercially-sold systems are of this variety. It is quite easy to create a system with a fabulous hypothetical historical record simply by creating the rules to conform to known historical price action. Computer-aided optimization is good for this. That's why you should be suspicious of complex systems and all optimization.
Determining whether a system is over-curve-fitted is not an exact science. A good clue is whether the system trades multiple markets profitably over a five-to-ten year period using the same trading rules. Those systems designed to trade only one or two markets or those that use different rules for different markets are not likely to be profitable in the future.
If you aren't going to use a system that comes with its own testing software, you will have to test your prospective approach yourself. This may involve hand-testing on charts, which is not especially reliable. There are computer programs with generic system testing ability. The previously-mentioned SuperCharts is a good example. Newsletters can be valuable in exposing you to various potential trading styles. A subscription to Commodity Traders Consumer Report(800-832-6065) can give you lots of information about newsletters, books and other sources of educational assistance. Published since 1983, it is the only objective source of performance information on advisory services. This information is invaluable if you intend to follow the trading recommendations of any advisory service. Be extremely wary about expensive products. There is no relationship between price and quality in futures trading information. While it is generally true in life that you get what you pay for, commodity product vendors prey on this assumption by pricing their mediocre wares at outrageous prices. People then buy them with the idea that one could not sell something for so much money if it wasn't good. Do not assume that whatever a system or seminar may cost, you will quickly earn it back from profitable trading. It seldom works that way.
One important reason 95 percent of traders eventually lose is that they are too lazy to do the work it takes to be successful. Another reason is that they have no plan or method. They are guessing, gambling and hoping. That just isn't going to cut it in speculation, which is one of the most difficult endeavors there is. However, if you work hard and work smart, you can be part of the 5 percent who are wildly successful.

Q: Do trading systems really work?

Q: Do trading systems really work?

A: Yes. Good systems that have not been over-optimized market-by-market do work. You must be careful to distinguish systems that work in hindsight testing from those that work in real-time trading. People assume that anything that worked over a long historical period will almost certainly continue to work in the future. That depends on the system and the test. There is no absolute relationship between historical performance and real-time future performance.

Q: Do I need a computer to trade?

Q: Do I need a computer to trade?

A: You cannot beat the markets by outsmarting them or other traders. Computers can make your analytical life easier, but successful methods are simple enough to apply without using a computer. Computers' real value, in my opinion, is their ability to help you test trading ideas historically. Most trading methods, even popular ones, do not work when put to a rigorous test. This is one of the great unspoken reasons why so many traders fail.

Q: How about day trading?

Q: How about day trading?

A: Find one person who has made a long-term career from day trading. Short-term price data is too random to exploit. This has been demonstrated mathematically. The only way to trade successfully is to follow trends. The trends you follow must be large enough so that the average trade result is greater than the costs of trading. Day trading does not permit you to do this on a consistent basis. Long-term trading is much easier. 

Q: What kind of returns should I expect from trading?

Q: What kind of returns should I expect from trading?

A: Risk is always commensurate with reward. If you are trying to "get rich quick," the high risks you will have to assume will probably break you. Commodity trading is not inherently risky. It is only as risky as you want to make it. Most people bust out because they can't control themselves and the urge to gamble. A disciplined person trading a solid, trend-following system with sufficient capital to diversify can reasonably expect consistent returns of 25 to 50 percent a year with drawdowns of 15 to 30 percent.

Q: Can I make a living trading?

Q: Can I make a living trading?

A: If you are an exceptional person, maybe you can after several years learning and studying markets. Just as you can't learn to drive a racing car by reading a book, you will need a certain amount of trading experience to learn about markets and trading psychology. You will also need sufficient capital so that you are not trading with "scared money.

Q: Are options a good way for a low-capitalized investor to try commodity trading?

Q: Are options a good way for a low-capitalized investor to try commodity trading?

A: Absolutely not. Buying puts and calls is a sucker play very similar to casino gambling. You can win in the short term, but the more you buy puts and calls, the more you will eventually lose. When you buy a put or call, only a professional trader or a floor trader will be selling it to you.
They do not sell unless the odds are in their favor.

Q: How do I choose a broker?

Q: How do I choose a broker?

A: Whatever you do, do not depend on a broker for trading advice. With few exceptions, they are salesmen not traders. If they could trade, they wouldn't be brokers. I suggest one of the major discount firms in Chicago. Unless you require some special service not every firm provides, choose the one that will give you the lowest commission rate.

Q: How much money do I need to start trading commodities?

Q: How much money do I need to start trading commodities?

A: Studies have shown that the more money you have to trade, the better your chances of success. While some vendors (who want to sell you something) suggest you can trade with any amount you may have, most experts agree that with less than $10,000 your success depends on luck. You just don't have enough to diversify and apply proper risk management principles. If you do not have $10,000 in risk capital, you should stay in "learning mode" and paper trade until you do.