Tuesday, September 20, 2016

3 Pillars of Trading Performance

As an active trader, there are 3 key factors of your strategy that you need to pay close attention to. There’s no holy grail in trading, but tweaking and maximizing these 3 things can get you pretty damn close to one.
We refer to these factors as the 3 pillars of trading performance:3 Pillars of Trading PerformancePillar #1 – Edge
Edge is a concept that decades of trading literature have beaten to a pulp. You’ve heard it a million times:
“You need a positive edge to win long-term.”
And it’s absolutely true.
In trading, edge is your ability to select trades that perform better than random.
You can think of edge as the process used to generate and execute entry and exit signals. Professional traders spend a majority of their time on this process alone.
They’re constantly asking themselves questions like:
How can I refine my research to enter the absolute best fundamental plays?
How can I better time my exits and entries using quantitative cues?
How can I cut my losses through improved exit parameters?
The more they improve their entry and exit signals, the stronger their edge becomes.
To increase your own edge, relentlessly search for holes to plug in your trading process. This could involve a stronger focus on improving your fundamental analysis. Or maybe refining your profit taking approach. It could also mean tighter risk management or really any number of other factors that go into an effective trading strategy.
The stronger your edge, the more profitable you’ll be.
Pillar #2 – Frequency
Frequency refers to the amount of times your edge expresses itself in the market.
HFT firms may see a million opportunities a day to exploit their edge.
A deep value manager, on the other hand, may only see his edge show up a few times a year.
Frequency matters because the more opportunities you have to apply your edge, the higher your earning potential that year. Ideally you want to apply your edge as many times as possible.
But of course keep in mind that the optimal frequency will differ between strategies. If you expect to increase the frequency of your deep value strategy to a million opportunities a day, you’re out of your mind. At that point you’ll be investing in everything and anything, with concept of “value” thrown out the window.
This is where frequency can become a double-edged sword. The key is to increase it in a way that does not degrade edge.
Few people think about the trading process from the frequency angle. They tend to focus only on cultivating an edge, but never give any thought to how often that edge can be executed.
Look at your own trading process.
What type of edge are you developing?
Is its frequency optimal for your particular strategy?
For example, if you’re a deep value investor, are you looking at as many markets as you could be to find the best deals? If you’re only investing in US equities, would a trip into the foreign markets increase the frequency of the value propositions you’re able to find?
The more often you apply your edge, the more money you can extract from sweet Mr. Market.
Pillar #3 – Leverage
Leverage, like frequency, is rarely discussed, yet extremely important. It can mean the difference between average and superior performance.
Leverage simply means deploying extra capital above your cash level in the market.
Now a lot of people will tell you that using things like margin to add leverage to your trades is dangerous. And that may well be true for the green-behind-the-ear trader, but proper use of leverage for a professional is essential to their success.
Soros’ Quantum fund would routinely achieve leverage levels of 4 to 1. That means that for every million dollars in their account, Soros and Druck had 4 million in bets out in the market.
Here’s Soros himself on the concept of using leverage:
It is a rather unusual structure, because we use leverage. We position the fund to take advantage of larger trends – and then, within those larger trends we also pick stocks and stock groups. So we operate on many different levels. I think it is easiest if you think of a normal portfolio as something flat or two-dimensional, as its name implies. Our portfolio is more like a building. It has a structure; it has leverage. Using our equity capital as the base, we construct a three-dimensional structure that is supported by the collateral value of the underlying securities. I am not sure whether I am making myself clear.
Let’s say we use our money to buy stocks. We pay 50 percent in cash and we borrow the other 50 percent. Against bonds we can borrow a lot more. For $1,000 we can buy at least $50,000 worth of long-term bonds. We may also sell stocks or bonds short: we borrow the securities and sell them without owning them in the hope of buying them back later cheaper. Or we take positions – long or short – in currencies or index futures. The various positions reinforce each other to create this three dimensional structure of risks and profit opportunities.
If you want to blow the doors off the average performance you see in the market, you need to focus on increasing your leverage as much as possible.
Now the obvious caveat to this statement is that you should never press your leverage to a point where you risk bankruptcy. A proper risk management system will tell you the max amount of leverage you can apply per trade without going broke. For example, don’t go trade a 10 lot of E-minis on a $10,000 account. That would not be wise…
Intelligent uses of leverage are critical because they not only increase returns, but they can actually reduce overall portfolio risk too.
Ray Dalio was one of the first investors to popularize this concept (also known as risk parity).
Say Asset A returns 5% a year above the cash rate, with a volatility of 7%.
And Asset B returns 15% a year above the cash rate, but with a volatility of 30%.
Which is the better deal?
If you can’t apply leverage, and you want to make more than 5% a year, then you’re forced to go with Asset B.
But if you understand how to apply leverage, you could easily lever up 3 to 1 (borrow 3 units for every 1 unit you own). This would allow you to buy 4 units of Asset A instead of 1, transforming your returns to 20% a year with 28% volatility — a much better deal than Asset B’s 15% a year with 30% volatility.
Creative uses of leverage in your investment strategy will put you leagues above other investors without leverage.
An Optimization Problem
Once you understand the 3 pillars of trading performance, your goal should be to maximize each.
Maximizing your edge means winning more and winning larger. Maximizing your frequency means applying that edge more often. And maximizing your leverage means juicing your capital base.
But here’s where it gets tricky. You can’t blindly maximize each pillar individually. You’ll end up destroying your strategy and landing yourself in the poorhouse.
The problem is that each pillar affects the other. Adjusting one leads to a change in another one.
Say for example you decide to lengthen your investment timeframes. You believe higher time frames have less noise and stronger signals.
Great!
You end up increasing your expected value per trade through a larger edge. But before you run off to raise a few hundred million, you need to consider what are you’re giving up to achieve that higher edge.
The answer is that you’re giving up your frequency.
If you make $2 a trade on higher timeframe monthly charts, which provide a frequency of 25 trades a year, you’ll make 50 bucks.
But what if that same strategy on lower timeframe daily charts made $.50 a trade, with a frequency of 200 trades a year? The daily program, despite the lower edge (profit per trade) would generate $100 a year in profits. That’s twice the returns of the higher timeframe strategy!
In this case the strategy with the smaller edge actually makes more money per year. This is why those pesky HFT’s do what they do. Yes, smaller timeframes are noisy, making it harder to create a meaningful edge, but if that smaller edge has a higher frequency than a larger edge, then it may actually be optimal.
This is why optimization becomes difficult. You can beef up your edge by adding more criteria or filters to produce a better signal, but by being more selective, you decrease the frequency of your entries.
It may actually not be in your best interest to beef…
You see a similar problem when reversing the frequency/edge relationship.
Say you want to jack up the frequency in which you apply your edge. To do this, you start looking for more and more chart set-ups. But at the same time, you start loosening your trade criteria further and further.
At a certain point you realize that every tea leaf and chart candle has become a trade, and before you know it your trading edge erodes into oblivion.
In this case, increasing frequency hurt you because your edge degraded in the process.
There are even more problems when it comes to leverage optimization.
As we explained before, the goal with leverage is to maximize as much as possible without exposing yourself to bankruptcy risk. There are many different ways to creatively (and safely) do this.
Say for example you have a lukewarm strategy that uses stock and ETFs. And its returns end up being the same as any standard buy-and-hold passive strategy. If this is the case, the strategy isn’t worth it. Might as well throw your money into a Vanguard fund or something.
But here’s where leverage can make all the difference. You may be able to take that same strategy, and instead of using stocks and ETFs, use futures to apply concentrated leverage. All of a sudden you might have something halfway decent on your plate.
Here’s another example. Say your strategy’s entry signals vary in strength.
Sometimes the signal is pure and sexy like the dime standing at the end of the bar. And other times it’s muddled and a little drab, but what the hell, you’ve been in a dry spell lately so it’s still worth your time.
Having the ability to leverage up or down depending on the strength of your signal can lead to much better performance. Your best trades can have the most oomph behind them, while your lesser trades can hang back a bit.
If you’re not thinking about leverage, you need to start. You’re missing out on a crucial pillar that will help juice your performance to Market Wizard heights.
The next time you approach your trading process, go at it with the 3 pillar optimization problem in mind.
Recite these three questions to yourself on a weekly basis:
How can I increase the expected profitability (edge) of each my trades?
How can I optimize my trade frequency?
How can I leverage my current capital?
And when it comes to optimization:
Are the three pillars of my strategy flexible?
If so, can I manipulate one and still come out with a juiced up bottom line?
Start to look at your trading process from a multi-dimensional point of view. Focusing on improving a particular setup or exit methodology is good and all, but that’s just one part of the puzzle. It’s playing a 2-D game. You need to look 3D and beyond…
Think in 3D
How do you approach trading? For our methods click here.

Tuesday, September 13, 2016

10 Powerful Principles for Profitable Trading


10 Powerful Principles for Profitable Trading

Regardless of the quality of your trade entries and exits, it is the overlying principles that you use in your trading that will determine your success. Here is the big picture that will help you become a better trader starting right now.
  1. When you enter a trade, you should already have a 50/50 chance of being right on the direction after entry due to randomness. Your first job is to bring your win rate up to a higher success rate than randomness.
  2. You need to structure your trades so that your wins are big and your losses are small. A stop loss will keep your losses small, and exiting your winning trade with a trailing stop will enable you to have big wins. Big wins and small losses can make you profitable even with a 50% or less win rate.
  3. Trade a position size that you are comfortable with holding, even if it means losing money. Keep your internal emotions in check at all times.
  4. Set your stop loss far enough away from your entry so you are stopped out when you are wrong, not due to the normal range of price action.
  5. Trade inside a time frame you are comfortable with.
  6. Trade a method that matches your market beliefs.
  7. Enter only when your stop loss and your price target give you a great risk/reward ratio, where the risk is worth the reward.
  8. Exit a trade when the risk/reward begins to skew against you.
  9. Trade quantified signals that work historically, and don’t rely on anyone’s opinions or predictions.
  10. Never lose more than 1% of your trading capital if you are wrong. Your wins can be as big as you can make them.

Books List

1.     The Three Skills of Top Trading
2.  

The Ten Tasks of Top Traders

  1. Daily self analysis:   Successful trading is 40% risk control and 60% self-control.
  2. Daily mental rehearsal:   Practice being disciplined in your mind before you trade daily.
  3. Developing a low risk idea:   Trade with the odds on your side with a defined risk.
  4. Stalking:   Wait for the entry. Utilize patience and don’t pull the trigger to soon.
  5. Action:   Take the entry when the signal is hit. Do not freeze up. Be definitive.
  6. Monitoring:   Keep an eye on what is happening with your position.
  7. Abort:   Be ready to cut your losses, when you are wrong and hit your stop loss.
  8. Take profits:   Use trailing stop or profit target when one is hit. Allow the market to take you out.
  9. Daily briefing:   Think through your trading & what you did right/wrong based on your trading plan.
  10. Periodic review:   Is your trading working? Do adjustments need to be made?

A Stop List for Traders

A Trader's Stop List
  1. Stop breaking your trading rules. Discipline is an edge.
  2. Stop trading such big position sizes. Risk management and self control is an edge.
  3. Stop trying to predict what will happen next and learn how to react to what is happening.
  4. Stop worrying about other’s trades and trade your own system.
  5. Stop thinking every dip will be a crash and every rally will go straight up.
  6. Stop buying junk stocks and quit selling momentum stocks short.
  7. Stop holding a losing trade past your stop loss level.
  8. Stop buying too late in an uptrend and quit selling short too late after a plunge.
  9. Stop trading your opinions and start trading some quantified signals.
  10. Stop being a perma-bull or perma-bear and be a perma-system follower.

7 Steps on the Path to Success


7 Principles of Success
Photo Credit: Andy Walton

People measure success in many different ways. Some people measure it in money, Possessions, careers, love, power, security, or fame. I measure success by how happy I am. Freedom makes me happy, and so do my friends and family. I love learning new things and doing things I am passionate about. In life, we will only get back what we give. We will only be rewarded for the risks we take. Only time separates us from our goals.
What is your plan for happiness? Follow these steps and realize joy in your lifetime.
  1. Don’t do things half-way. Only do things that you are passionate about. If you can’t do something with all of your heart, then continue to look for your true calling. Then do it to the best of your ability.
  2. Know where you are going. If you don’t know where you are going, your decisions and destinations will be a random result of your environment.  Goals take time, perseverance, and effort. Most people never accomplish anything because they quit too early, don’t work hard enough, and don’t finish.
  3. Don’t get lost. The path to happiness and success will be treacherous and foreboding at times. Don’t go down the wrong path for too long. Remain agile enough to change direction quickly.
  4. Don’t allow losers into your life. You must conserve your energy for your passions. You have a limited amount of time and energy to invest in the things you want in life. Invest your energies into the people and the projects that share and/or understand your passions.
  5.  Choose who you spend your time with carefully. You are the average of the people you spend the most time with, and you will become like them. They will influence you for good or bad. Accept the right people into your life, and both of your lives will be the richer for it.
  6. Visualize your happiness. Every night when you go to bed, imagine how you want your life to be in the future. Experience it, believe it, lock on to that as your goal. Then focus on becoming the person that can live the life of your dreams.
  7. Happiness is found in accomplishment. Living the life you choose is satisfying, and you will be happier while exploring your life journey, rather than working a job. Waking up each morning with the freedom to spend your time and energy the way you chose is the embodiment of success 

The Power of Quitting

“It’s not the daily increase but daily decrease. Hack away at the unessential.” -Bruce Lee
Quitting is not always the wrong thing to do. There is a time when you have to decide what you want and go get it, you do not stop until you reach your journey to your destination, this is when you are on the right path, following your passion, making progress, and loving the journey. There are other times to stop if you hit a dead end or you are heading in the wrong direction. People that eventually win learn to know the difference. There is a time to press through temporary pain to achieve long term success and a time to quit wasting your time with diminishing returns on a path that is just not working out and has little chance to work out because there is no joy, success, or progress on the wrong path.
Sometimes a marriage can not be saved through counseling it is just not going to work for many reasons. Sometimes a restaurant owner has worked 70 hour weeks for three years for the privilege of losing money and in deep debt, they are better off getting a job and at least get paid for there time and effort. No matter how much the Ford Motor Company believed in the Edsel or the federal government believed in the Chevrolet Volt they were making a mistake by continuing to produce them.
Cutting losses short is smart in all areas of life because it frees up resources to be used more wisely whether it is time, money, or energy.
Here are ten things that traders should stop doing where perseverance is the wrong thing to do.
  1. Quit letting trades go through your original stop loss, you were wrong, get out. When you start hoping and stop managing your stops you are losing money, losing discipline, and fighting a trend.
  2. Quit over trading, only take the very best entries and trade the very best stocks in your system.
  3. Quit making up stories about why you decided to hold your position instead of taking your stop when it was hit. Trade your plan.
  4. Stop trading your opinions and start trading what the price action is saying.
  5. Stop following people in social media that cause you to be biased and trade badly and lose money.
  6. Stop looking financial news networks for trading and investing advice, they are for news and entertainment.
  7. Stop trading so big that your emotions are more involved in your trades than your mind.
  8. Disconnect your ego from your trading. You determine your risk size and entry the market chooses whether you win or lose.
  9. Quit riding an emotional roller coaster, your emotions should stay level whether winning or losing. If not, trade smaller.
  10. Quit buying falling knives and shorting rocket stocks, wait for confirmation and a reversal before trying to short an uptrend or buy in a downtrend.
  11. Quit trading your emotions and replace them with valid signals.
  12. Quit having big losses and keep all losses small.
  13. Quit asking for trade ideas and start looking for a trading system.
  14. Quit agonizing over trading decisions and write a trading plan.
  15. Quit listening to traders who claim to know the future and start following traders who make money trading in the present.
Sometimes in life what you quit is more important than what you start. Quitting the wrong things frees up your time, energy, and passion to pursue the right 

7 Good Ways To Exit a Trade

In trading, the money is not made in the entry, it is in the exit. The art of the exit is crucial to a trader’s success in the markets. Profits can disappear if you do not take them at the right time, and small losses can become huge losses if you do not cut them short. Small profits can become huge profits if you let them run until they truly stop moving in your favor. Keeping capital tied up in a trade going nowhere can cause you to miss out on other great opportunities.
So what is a trader to do?
  1. Use stop losses. Only risk losing 1% of your total trading capital on any one trade through the placement of stops and position sizing, and when you have lost that 1%, get out. Position sizing, stop losses, and understanding volatility is the key to proper risk management.
  2. Enter trades at break out points to new highs, off key price support levels, or key moving average support levels. If it loses that support later and fails to retake it, then sell it.
  3. Buy when a stock is one ‘R’ multiple above a key support level, and sell if it falls back and loses that support level. (One ‘R’ multiple = 1% of total trading capital).
  4. Use a ‘stale’ or ‘time’ stop: Set a time limit on how long you will give a trade to move a certain amount, if it fails to move enough fast enough, get out.
  5. Volatility stop: Stop out if the market or your stock has a big expansion in its daily price range, or starts moving against you the full daily range. You either cut your position down in size, or get out due to increased risk based on volatility expansion.
  6. Trail a stop loss behind your winner. When it reverses and hits that stop, you sell. A trailing stop can be a moving average or a percentage you your gain.
  7. Sell your position because you have found a much better trade with a better probability of success, or a bigger upside.
The key is to always have a plan to get out of every trade before you get in. Before each trading day begins, think about what you will do based on where your trade is at, and where it may go.

Formulas for Managing Trading Emotions

I  truly believe the hardest thing about real trading has not been the math, the method, or picking the right stock, currency, commodity, or futures contract.  The most difficult thing about trading is dealing with the emotions that arise with trading itself. From the stress of actually entering a trade or the fear of loss as a trade goes against you. Even winning trades can be stressful as the fear of losing the paper profits that you are holding with a winner can even effect a trader. Then most importantly the ability of dealing with the emotional lows of a string of losses or the highs of many consecutive wins  can cause a trader to lose their confidence or discipline. The bottom line is how you deal with those emotions will determine your long term success in trading more than any other one thing.
To manage your emotions first of all you must trade a robust trading methodology after you have confirmed that it will be a winner in the long term with your edge if you stay disciplined. You also must trade your method with proper position sizing and risk management to keep the volume down on your emotions and ego. If you have that the next step is the management of your emotions.
We must understand that every trade is not going to be a winner and not blame our self for equity drawdowns if we are trading with discipline.
Do not bet your entire account on any one trade, in fact risking only 1% of your total capital on any one trade is the best thing you can do for your stress levels and to bring your risk of ruin to virtually zero. (This is based on your stop loss placement, not 1% position sizing).
With that said here are some examples of emotional equations to better understand why you feel certain emotions strongly in your trading: (The ‘=’ sign should be read as ‘equals’ and the ‘-‘ symbol read as ‘minus’ to understand the formulas here).
Losing Money – Trading Better = Despair
Do not despair look at your losses as part of doing business and as paying tuition fees to the markets.
Expectations – Reality= Disappointment 
Enter trading with realistic expectations. You can realistically expect 15% -20% annual returns on capital with great trading after you have experience and have done the necessary homework. More than that is possible but you will have take on more risk and be one of the very best traders or investors to achieve greater returns than this.
Disappointment in a loss+ Caused by lack of Discipline = Regret
If you followed your trading plan and lose money because the market did not move in your direction so be it, but if you went off your plan and traded based on your feelings and opinions then you should feel regret and stop being undisciplined.
Winning Trades – Fear of Ruin = Enjoying your Trading
Trading is much more enjoyable when you are risking 1% of your capital in the hopes of making 3% on your capital with a zero chance of ruin or have a very high winning percentage with very small losses when wrong. It is not enjoyable when you are putting a huge percentage of your capital on the line in each trade and are only a few bad trades away from your account going to zero or a big draw down.
 Understanding what makes money + Years of successful trading = Trading Wisdom
To get good at trading you have to trade real money. Wisdom comes from putting real money on the line for years and proving to yourself that you can come out a winner in the long term.
Belief through back testing + Experience of winning with it for years = Faith in your system
Whether  any individual trade is a winner or loser should not influence your faith in your system and trading method. You should trade in a way that each trade is just one trade out of the next 100. Much of emotional trading can be overcome when you do not have doubts about your method. When you believe in your method, system, risk management, and your own discipline, you will overcome many of the emotional problems that arise in the heat of trading during a live market.
Most new traders will be very surprised at the emotions that rise up during active trading when real money is at risk, I hope this blog post gives many a heads up on this factor and how to overcome it.