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31 décembre 2014 3 31 /12 /décembre /2014 00:10

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Un article de  MARK HULBERT publié ce jour dans le NYT. Fama ou pas Fama ?
 

"INVESTORS collectively spend around $100 billion a year trying to beat the stock market. That’s the finding of a rigorous effort to measure the total costs of Americans’ efforts to surpass the returns they would have received by simply holding a stock index fund. The huge price tag helps explain why beating a buy-and-hold strategy is so difficult.

The study, “The Cost of Active Investing,” began circulating earlier this year as an academic working paper. Its author is Kenneth R. French, a finance professor at Dartmouth; he is known for his collaboration with Eugene F. Fama, a finance professor at the University of Chicago, in creating the Fama-French model that is widely used to calculate risk-adjusted performance.

In his new study, Professor French tried to make his estimate of investment costs as comprehensive as possible. He took into account the fees and expenses of domestic equity mutual funds (both open- and closed-end, including exchange-traded funds), the investment management costs paid by institutions (both public and private), the fees paid to hedge funds, and the transactions costs paid by all traders (including commissions and bid-asked spreads). If a fund or institution was only partly allocated to the domestic equity market, he counted only that portion in computing its investment costs.

Professor French then deducted what domestic equity investors collectively would have paid if they instead had simply bought and held an index fund benchmarked to the overall stock market, like the Vanguard Total Stock Market Index fund, whose retail version currently has an annual expense ratio of 0.19 percent.

The difference between those amounts, Professor French says, is what investors as a group pay to try to beat the market.

In 2006, the last year for which he has comprehensive data, this total came to $99.2 billion. Assuming that it grew in 2007 at the average rate of the last two decades, the amount for last year was more than $100 billion. Such a total is noteworthy for its sheer size and its growth over the years — in 1980, for example, the comparable total was just $7 billion, according to Professor French.

The growth occurred despite many developments that greatly reduced the cost of trading, like deeply discounted brokerage commissions, a narrowing in bid-asked spreads, and a big reduction in front-end loads, or sales charges, paid to mutual fund companies.

These factors notwithstanding, Professor French found that the portion of stocks’ aggregate market capitalization spent on trying to beat the market has stayed remarkably constant, near 0.67 percent. That means the investment industry has found new revenue sources in direct proportion to the reductions caused by these factors.

What are the investment implications of his findings? One is that a typical investor can increase his annual return by just shifting to an index fund and eliminating the expenses involved in trying to beat the market. Professor French emphasizes that this typical investor is an average of everyone aiming to outperform the market — including the supposedly best and brightest who run hedge funds.

Professor French’s study can also be used to show just how different the investment arena is from a so-called zero-sum game. In such a game, of course, any one individual’s gains must be matched by equal losses by other players, and vice versa. Investing would be a zero-sum game if no costs were associated with trying to beat the market. But with the costs of that effort totaling around $100 billion a year, active investing is a significantly negative-sum game. The very act of playing reduces the size of the pie that is divided among the various players.

Even that, however, underestimates the difficulties of beating an index fund. Professor French notes that while the total cost of trying to beat the market has grown over the years, the percentage of individuals who bear this cost has declined — precisely because of the growing popularity of index funds.

From 1986 to 2006, according to his calculations, the proportion of the aggregate market cap that is invested in index funds more than doubled, to 17.9 percent. As a result, the negative-sum game played by active investors has grown ever more negative.

The bottom line is this: The best course for the average investor is to buy and hold an index fund for the long term. Even if you think you have compelling reasons to believe a particular trade could beat the market, the odds are still probably against you."

Maintenant la question : seriez vous prêts à croire un universitaire de Chicago....???

 

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26 octobre 2007 5 26 /10 /octobre /2007 00:08

Un article de Brett

A valuable point about trading psychology and performance was made by Jeff in his comment to my recent links post. Jeff quoted an excellent article from Teresa Lo, in which she cited William Eckhardt's observation that "what really matters is the long-run distributions of outcomes from your trading techniques, systems, and procedures". Further, Eckhardt observes that, if you make a bad trade and maintain good money management, you won't get hurt too badly. But if you miss a good trade, that opportunity is lost forever. Moreover, it may be that those missed good trades that makes the difference to those "long-run distributions of outcomes."

I'm glad that Teresa posted that perspective and that Jeff picked up on it. So much of success, whether it's writing books, trading, or advancing in a career, boils down to consistently pursuing opportunities when they present themselves. The majority go nowhere, but it's the few that work out that can make all the difference.

So it is in trading. I'm in the process of reading Michael Covel's new book The Complete Turtle Trader, which highlights the opportunity theme in a different context. (By the way, I like the book quite a bit and will write a review shortly). The Turtles had no magic formula for crystal-balling which markets would trend and which wouldn't. Instead, they diversified their capital and went with relative strength. Many of the the strong markets reversed and whipsawed them. But it was the few, good trending markets that provided the lion's share of the profits and more than compensated for the losses due to chop.

We often focus on bad trades and trying to eliminate those. What doesn't show as readily in our P/L summaries are the missed opportunities: the occasions in which we failed to take trades either because of fear, risk aversion, discouragement, or because we hit our loss limits for the day or week. That's Eckhardt's point: if you manage your losses, the odds are pretty good they won't put you in the poorhouse. But if you fail to seize opportunity, you'll never make the big leagues.

If you are truly serious about a trading career, seize every opportunity you can. If you have the chance to trade with really good traders, go for it. If you have the opportunity to talk with a successful trader, jump at it. A new idea? A new market? Keep looking for where opportunity may lie: the difference between success and failure may just be the one or two promising paths you take the time to investigate.

Brett

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14 octobre 2007 7 14 /10 /octobre /2007 21:56
  • Daily Speculations - This is the website of Victor Niederhoffer and Laurel Kenner.  It is an outgrowth of their Spec List--an email distribution list among quantitatively oriented speculators--and highlights many of the best Spec List postings.  Nuggets of market wisdom abound, but the best takeaway is a model for how to think scientifically about markets.

    Vertical Solutions - Henry Carstens' site is a treasure-trove of insights for system developers and those interested in trading systems.  He outlines the performance of his own systems and offers articles on how to develop and evaluate systems.  

    StockPickr - This very creative site developed by James Altucher enables you to track professional and would-be professional portfolio managers and see what they're buying.  It's an excellent way to obtain trade ideas and research whether the stocks you're interested in are hot or not.  Some excellent portfolios based on stock screens are featured regularly.

    Seeking Alpha - Excellent compilation of articles and blog posts organized by various topics and market sectors.  You can have links in defined categories emailed to you as a way of staying on top of market news.  Very broad coverage from quite a few excellent contributors; probably my favorite way of staying on top of emerging trends.

    InstantBull - A very complete and well-organized aggregator site that compiles bulletin board posts, blog posts, and market research.  If you have a stock you want to research, you can find links for fundamentals, analyst ratings, relevant blog posts, and bulletin board talk.  Great research tool.

    Trade 2 Win - This is a trading forum that provides high quality articles for discussion.  It's an active community and, as a contributor to the site, I can vouch for the editorial integrity of John Forman, who heads up content.  The Traders' Knowledge Lab archives dozens of articles, and the Traderpedia is, to my knowledge, the first trading wiki on the Web. 

    Trading Markets - Eddie Kwong does an excellent job keeping fresh, free content on this site, with articles from an array of well-known contributors.  I contribute to this site as well and like the way it has evolved.  A new feature includes over 20 trading blogs, with a range of technical and fundamental slants. 

    Trading Education - This is a relatively new site, with solid editing from Darrell Jobman, former editor of Futures Magazine.  I've written one article so far with them and find their approach to be professional.  It appears that good writers will be on the site, including Robert Colby; publisher Lane Mendelsohn (son of the well-known software developer, Louis)

    The Kirk Report - Charles Kirk does a fantastic job of digging up interesting articles and information from all over the Web and assembling them in one place.  His blog is a kind of Drudge Report for traders--a great combination of interesting and useful info.  Kirk also has a service for paying clients that offers insights into stock selection and market forecasts.

    Trader Mike - Trader Mike offers a blog that features stock selection and market commentary.  His past entries are archived, and he offers a very useful directory of other blogs.  He's been at this since May, 2003 and has accumulated an impressive set of resources.

    CXO Advisory Group - This blog is more sophisticated than the average offering.  It outlines research and trading strategies, offering original research and trading models, including an interesting "reversion to value" model and a model based on "real earnings yield".  I particularly like the inflation forecast feature.

    Abnormal Returns - This is a wide ranging blog that scours the Web for worthwhile links to financial stories and offers analyses and perspectives.  The entries are categorized by subject, with topics ranging from academic finance and behavioral finance to various trading markets. 

    The Big Picture - Barry Ritholtz offers linkfests and a variety of interesting and provocative views on markets and the economy.  His "Apprenticed Investor" series is designed to help traders think more professionally about markets.

    Daily Options Report - Adam Warner offers an entertaining and incisive look at options trading and strategies, modeling how a knowledgeable player thinks about those markets and cutting through Wall St. BS.

    Alpha Trends - Brian Shannon integrates video into his blog to create an effective tool for teaching about markets and reviewing current market patterns.  It's an excellent way to track technical trading patterns as they occur.

    A Dash of Insight - This is truly an insightful blog, written by an experienced money manager.  Jeffrey Miller, Ph.D. isn't shy about asking tough questions about markets, traders, strategies, and the economy.  

    ETF Trends - ETFs increasingly allow individual traders to construct their own global/macro trading strategies, literally opening the world of investment opportunities to the stock trader.  Tom Lydon's site does a great job of tracking the various ETFs and developments in the rapidly changing ETF world. 

    Ticker Sense - Here's an excellent research-oriented blog from Laszlo Birinyi's organization.  Lots of good posts on historical tendencies in the markets, strength and weakness among sectors, and trader sentiment--especially the weekly poll of bloggers.

    Random Roger - Roger Nusbaum offers incisive commentary on everything from ETFs to the economy, international markets, and portfolio management.  I find his reasoning clear and fresh, providing new angles for viewing the markets.

    Carl Futia - Carl's blog tracks market patterns with several unique methodologies.  He is one of the few market commentators steeped in the work of the late George Lindsay and actively applies Lindsey's work (as well as his own) to current markets. 

    Thoughts From the Frontline - John Mauldin's blogsite was first brought to my attention by Jim Dalton, whose book Mind Over Markets is a fantastic trading resource in itself.  Mauldin's commentaries combine economic, market, and psychological insight--an excellent example of how to think creatively about markets.

    MSN Money - This portal has a wide range of useful news, personal finance, and investing information.  The most useful feature for me is the commentary section of the investing pages.  Jon Markman's SuperModels articles, featuring market commentary and stock selection using quantitative criteria, are a gold mine in themselves.  Buried on the site, but referenced in Markman's work, is the impressive StockScouter selection system.

    Fallond Stock Picks - Declan Fallond makes use of the Trade Ideas screen and offers an insightful blog for those interested in stock picking.  He includes stock scans, breakout stock ideas, and much more.

    The Essentials of Trading - John Forman offers a detailed and insightful blog, elaborating on his fine book The Essentials of Trading.  Many good ideas about mentoring here, in addition to market views and ideas about risk management.

    Footnoted - Very interesting site featuring the work of Michelle Leder, who authored the book Financial Fine Print.  The site is a blog that tracks highly revealing footnotes in the financial statements of firms.  Very important research for stock pickers.

    Stock Blogs - Here's a very complete listing of trading-related blogs, organized by category, including technical analysis, fundamental analysis, and blogs devoted to specific markets. 

    Dr. John Rutledge Blog - This blogsite describes its topics as "Technology, Policy, Economics, Investing, and Business".  It provides a practical take on economics as it affects the investment world and, as such, offers yet another model for thinking about markets.

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    25 juillet 2007 3 25 /07 /juillet /2007 07:50

    Un article de Charles Santord

    From an early age, we are all conditioned by our families, our schools, and virtually every other shaping force in our society to avoid risk. To take risks is inadvisable; to play it safe is the counsel we are accustomed both to receiving and to passing on. In the conventional wisdom, risk is asymmetrical: It has only one side, the bad side. In my experience -- and all I presume to offer you today is the observations drawn on my own experience, which is hardly the wisdom of the ages -- in my experience, this conventional view of risk is shortsighted and often simply mistaken.

    My first observation is that successful people understand that risk, properly conceived, is often highly productive rather than something to avoid. They appreciate that risk is an advantage to be used rather than a pitfall to be skirted. Such people understand that taking calculated risks is quite different from being rash.

    This view of risk is not only unorthodox, it is paradoxical -- the first of several paradoxes that I'm going to present to you today. This one might be encapsulated as follows: Playing it safe is dangerous. Far more often than you would realize, the real risk in life turns out to be the refusal to take a risk. In other words, the truly most threatening dangers usually arise when you shrink from confronting what only appear to be the most threatening dangers. What is widely regarded as playing it safe turns out not to be safe at all.

    What I'm offering here is not a surefire, guaranteed formula for success. No such formula exists. It never will. If anyone ever tries to sell you one, keep your money in your pocket. For life, above all else, is a risk. I'm not trying to dispel that risk with a bottle of Charlie Santord's Magic Elixir. I can only arm you with a little food for thought. I do have a few suggestions. You may not wish to follow them. But if you'll think about them, I'll consider our time together most productively spent.

    We all know that modern civilization owes much to the ancient Greeks. As the 20th century draws to a close, it's difficult to single out a Greek thinker who speaks more directly to us than Heraclitus. All is flux, nothing stays still, said Heraclitus some 2,500 years ago. Nothing endures but change.

    Most of us have come to believe that nothing endures but change, but its consequences still deserve some reflection. Obviously, if change is the fundamental rule of life, then resistance to change is folly -- doomed to defeat. Just as obviously, if change is our constant, then uncertainty is an inescapable part of our lives. Uncertainty is unavoidable. Life is unpredictable. The very essence of life is the unexpected and the unintended, the unanticipated turns that we may metaphorically ascribe to Fate or Destiny or Providence.

    Therefore, unless we wish to be tossed about like so much flotsam on the waves of inescapable change, we must place ourselves squarely in the midst of change. We must learn to ride the current of change rather than to swim against it -- although people who haven't taken the trouble to learn how the world really works will think we're doing exactly the opposite.

    In other words, risk is commonly thought of as going against the current, taking the hard way against high odds. In a world of constant change, however, a world where Heraclitus said we can never step into the same river twice, taking risks is accepting the flow of change and aligning ourselves with it. Remember the first paradox: Risk only looks like reckless endangerment. For those who understand reality, risk is actually the safest way to cope with a changing, uncertain world.

    To take a risk is indeed to plunge into circumstances we cannot absolutely control. But the fact is that the only circumstances in this life that we can absolutely control are so relatively few and so utterly trivial as hardly to be worth the effort. Besides, the absence of absolute control -- which is impossible in any case -- does not entail the absence of any control, or even significant control.

    There, again, is the paradox: In a world of constant change, risk is actually a form of safety, because it accepts that world for what it is. Conventional safety is where the danger really lies, because it denies and resists the world.

    I trust you understand that when I say risk is actually safety, I'm talking about a certain sort of risk. I'm not advising that you leap off tall buildings in the hope that the operation of constant change will reverse the law of gravity in mid-flight. I'm speaking rather of a sort of risk that actually aligns you with the direction of change.

    To be more specific, I believe firmly that the sort of risks that put one in a position to control one's lot in a world of incessant change are the risks that attempt to add something of value to that world. To create value, to focus one's efforts on increasing the fund of that which is worthwhile, involves (as we shall see) a sort of risk. And yet, paradoxically, it provides you with the greatest control over a changing world and maximizes your chances to achieve a truly meaningful personal satisfaction.

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    23 mars 2007 5 23 /03 /mars /2007 13:43

    Michael Bryant est un trader conférencier bien connu aux states. Il développe un logiciel "adaptrade software" orienté moneymanagement / taille de la position et dirige www.adaptrade.com . Une version demo est disponible sur le site .

    Position sizing

    Fixed fractional position sizing

    Fixed ratio position sizing

    Position sizing optimization

    Monte Carlo analysis

    Trade dependency

    Significance testing

    Equity curve trading

    Performance statistics

     

    Bonnes lectures  www.jctrader.com  Le money management est la clé du succès

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    22 mars 2007 4 22 /03 /mars /2007 13:32
     

     

    1. Introduction to money management.
    2. Risk management.
    3. The importance of the stop loss.
    4.
    Introduction to position sizing.
    5.
    Position sizing examples.
    6.
    Summary.

    Voici quelques articles consacrés au concept du money management que l'on peut trouver sur le site www.stafor.afm.com

    Bonne lectures  www.jctrader.com Le money management est la clé du succès

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    21 mars 2007 3 21 /03 /mars /2007 10:53
       
    Some Practical Thoughts About Money Management Written by Chuck LeBeau

    We get a lot of questions about various complex money management (MM) formulas and our preferences. We don't comment on this subject very often because money management is such a personal issue that it would be impossible to give any universal advice that would be specific enough to have value. Everyone seems to have different goals and tolerances for risk, not to mention varying amounts of capital for trading.

    However we do have some basic thoughts and opinions that might be helpful in picking a suitable MM strategy that will help you to become a winner.

    Be careful about trying to use formulas that are designed to optimize the returns. In my experience I have found that the most successful traders, over the long run, are not seeking to maximize their returns. The best traders are always seeking to carefully control their risks and to achieve as much consistency as possible. They look for methods to achieve consistent returns with low drawdowns and they are willing to accept smaller returns in the process. My policy has always been to worry about the risk and the consistency first and then to accept whatever returns that prudent approach will allow. I'm sure I will never win any trading contests and I have never bothered to enter one. In my opinion, no one should ever trade like the winner of a trading contest. I apologize for getting off on a different subject here. Lets get back on track and talk about trading in the only contest that matters - the trading that you do every day.

    In recent years the strategy of risking a small percentage of capital on each trade has become quite popular and deservedly so. This MM strategy, often referred to as fixed fractional trading, reduces our dollar amount of risk as we experience losses and increases our risk level as we earn profits. The possibility of ever going to zero with such a strategy is virtually nonexistent. However this strategy has an inherent weakness that tends to constantly work against us. If we assume an equal number of winners or losers in a sequence this popular strategy produces net losses if the winners are not larger than the losers. To keep things very simple lets just look at a series of five wins followed by five losses with the wins being equal to the amount we risk. Lets also keep the math really simple and begin with starting capital of 100 and risk 5% of our current capital on each trade. I think that most traders would assume that if they had five losers followed by five winners they would be even. Unfortunately that is not the case.

    Here are the numbers: Risk is always 5% of current capital. (I'm going to round the numbers to two decimals.)

    Capital $ Risk W/L Account balance
    100.0 5.00 L 95.00
    95.00 4.75 L 90.25
    90.25 4.51 L 85.74
    85.74 4.29 L 81.45
    81.45 4.07 L 77.38

    OK we are already tired of losing. Let's have five winners in a row and see if we can get our money back.

    Capital $ Risk W/L Account balance
    77.38 3.87 W 81.25
    81.25 4.06 W 85.31
    85.31 4.27 W 89.58
    89.58 4.48 W 94.06
    94.06 4.70 W 98.76

    As you can see we had an equal number of winners and losers yet somehow we lost money. Perhaps it is because we had bad luck and got started in the wrong direction. Lets reverse the sequence of trades so that we start out on a winning streak instead of losing. Maybe that will help.

    Capital $ Risk W/L Account balance
    100.00 5.00 W 105.00
    105.00 5.25 W 110.25
    110.25 5.51 W 115.76
    115.76 5.79 W 121.55
    121.55 6.08 W 127.63

    Looks good so far. Starting off with winners looks much better than starting with losses. But now we have five losers coming up.

    Capital $ Risk W/L Account balance
    127.63 6.38 L 121.25
    121.25 6.06 L 115.19
    115.19 5.76 L 109.43
    109.43 5.47 L 103.96
    103.96 5.20 L 98.76

    Hmmm. It doesn't seem to matter if we start out with a string of winners or a string of losses. Somehow we wound up losing the same amount of money either way.

    Obviously we don't have a very good system at work here but it is not a losing system. With the proper MM strategy we should break even. Our winning trades are only equal to our risk and to have a winning system the winners need to be bigger than the losers. We are winning on only half of our trades and we would be profitable if we could win on more than half. Even though our system is not a good one you would think that it would at least be a breakeven proposition (we haven't included any costs) because the winners are always equal to the amount at risk and we win 50% of the time. That sounds like a breakeven system, doesn't it? But if we employ the popular money management strategy of risking a fixed percentage of our current capital we manage to turn the system into a loser. However, if we risked a fixed dollar amount on each trade the system results would improve and we would break even.

    The fixed percentage of risk approach to MM is a good one because it keeps us from going broke and it compounds our profits rapidly. Both of those are desirable characteristics but we need to be aware that they come at a price. We should realize that our recovery from drawdowns might not be as fast as we would like and that we can give back profits even faster than we made them.

    One strategy that can help solve the problem of giving back the profits too rapidly is to periodically sweep some of the profits out of the account and place them in some other place where they are adding to our diversification and reducing our risk. Now and then we should take some of the profits out and spend them on something that improves our quality of life. This important step gives the dollars at stake a new meaning and boosts our morale tremendously. What is the point of winning and losing and accumulating profits only to give them back at some later date? If we make it a practice to routinely sweep some of the profits our account will continue to grow but it will be compounding at a slower rate than if we left our profits at risk. However if we stumble into a losing streak we will be glad that we took out some of the profits and reduced our bet size.

    If we are good traders and we make it a practice to withdraw some of our profits on a regular basis we will eventually reach the point where we have taken out more than we started with. There are very few traders, particularly in futures, who can claim that they have truly beaten the market. Until you have taken out more than you started with the market can still beat you. Trading futures is a zero sum game and winners are few and far between. Taking out profits now and then rather than getting carried away trying to optimize the gains to infinity is contrary to what is being taught these days. Everyone is obsessed with finding formulas to optimize the returns. We need to remember that the trader who has the optimum gains today could easily be tomorrow's biggest loser. That is a game we don't need to play.

    I think we all need to take a step or two back and look at the big picture. Trading is not really just a game. The money is real. Lets make sure that we are true winners and not just habitual players. Take some profits now and then and put them out of harms way. When we have done this I can assure you that the game is a lot more fun and our trading will improve. Nothing builds confidence like knowing for sure that you are indeed a winner.

    Good Luck and Good Trading

    by Chuck LeBeau

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    20 mars 2007 2 20 /03 /mars /2007 10:28
       
    Start Thinking In Terms of Risk-Reward par Dr. Van K Tharp www.iitm.com

    One of the cardinal rules of good trading is to always have an exit point before you ever enter into a trade. This is your worse case risk for the trade. It's the point at which you would say, "something's wrong with this trade and I need to get out to preserve my capital."

    Most sophisticated traders will have some sort of exit criteria that they like. However, if you are a novice and you just don't know, then I'd recommend 75% of your entry price if you are an equity trader. That is, if you buy a stock a $40, then get out if the stock drops to $30 or below. If you are a futures trader, then calculate the average true range over the last ten days and multiple that result by three. If the contract drops to that level, then you must get out of the position.

    Your initial stop defines your initial risk. In the example of our $40 stock, your initial risk is $10 per share and I call this risk 1R (where R stands for risk). And if you know your initial risk, then you can express all of your results in terms of your initial risk.

    So let's say that your initial risk is $10 per share. If you make a profit of $40 per share, then you have a gain of 4R. If you have a loss of $15 per share, then you have a 1.5R loss. And losses bigger than 1R will occur when you have a sudden big move against you.

    Let's look at a few more. What if the stock goes up to $140, what's your profit in terms of R? Your profit is $100 and your initial risk is $10, so you've made a 10R profit.

    It's quite interesting because portfolio managers like to talk about 10 baggers. By a 10-bagger, then mean a stock that they bought at $10 per share that goes up to $100 – in other words a stock that goes up in value 10 times. However, I think a 10R gain in much more useful to think about and much easier to attain.

    When our 1R loss was $10 per share, then the stock had to go up by $100 to get a 10R gain. But to fit the portfolio manager's definition of a 10 bagger it would have had to go up 10 times the price you bought it for, going from $40 per share to $400. But what would that $460 gain be in terms of R-multiples when your initial risk was $10? That's right, it would be a 36R gain.

    What I'd like you to do before next week is to look at all of your closed trades last year and express them as R-multiples. In other words, what was your initial risk? What was your total gain and loss? What's the ratio of each profit/loss to the initial risk? And if you didn't set your initial risk for your trades last year, then use your average loss as a rough estimate of your initial risk.

    Let's look at how 10 trades might be expressed as ratios of the initial risk. Here we have three losses $567, $1333, and $454. The average loss is $785.67, so we'll assume that this was the initial risk. Hopefully, you'll know the initial risk, so you won't have to use the average loss. I call the ratios that we calculate, the R-multiples for the trading system. This information is shown in the table below.

    PositionProfit or LossR-multiple
    1 $678 0.86R
    2 $3456 4.40R
    3 ($567) - 0.72R
    4 $342 0.44R
    5 $1234 1.57R
    6 $888 1.13R
    7 ($1333) -1.70R
    8 ($454) -0.58R

    When you have a complete R-multiple distribution for your trading system, there are a lot of things you can do with it. But we'll save that for next week's topic.

    Van K. Tharp, Ph.D.  www.iitm.com

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    19 mars 2007 1 19 /03 /mars /2007 10:18
       
    Keeping Some Fire Power In Reserve par Robert W. Colby  de TradingEducation.com 

    Reserves are funds in our account that are held back from trading, and usually parked safely on the sidelines in risk-less money-market instruments. The effect of holding reserves is to reduce net leverage. A workable rule of thumb that has evolved over time out of the real-world trading arena is to limit net leverage to 30%.

    To see how reserves, leverage and net leverage work together, employ the following formulas:

    Reserves = 100% - (Net Leverage / Leverage)

    Net Leverage = Leverage * (100% - Reserves)

    Leverage = Net Leverage / (100% - Reserves)

    where

    Reserves are cash or cash equivalents held back on the sidelines.

    We can solve these equations to find any of these numbers. For example, for a stock position where initial margin and leverage are both 50% and net leverage is held to 30%:

    Reserves = 100% - ( 30% / 50% ) = 1 - 3/5 = 1.00 - 0.60 = 0.40 = 40%

    For stocks, if we deposit initial margin of 70% into our account and confine our use of net leverage to 30%, as recommended, then

    Reserves = 100% - (30%/30%) = 1 - 3/3 = 1.00 - 1.00 = 0%

    If we entered a futures position using 75% leverage (and, of course, putting up 25% initial margin, which represents 100% minus the 75% leverage), and if the total value of this position amounted to only 40% of our available trading capital (therefore, we are holding back 60% of our trading capital in reserves on the sidelines), then the net leverage would be reduced proportionately to 30% (that is, 75% times 40%). Using the second formula,

    Net Leverage = Leverage * (100% - Reserves)
    Net Leverage = 75% * (100% - 60%) = .075 * 0.40 = 30%

    Again using industry standard (and quite reasonable) rules of thumb, if we wish to keep net leverage at 30% while holding 60% of our capital in reserve, we can put up 25% margin for each contract, and therefore employ 75% leverage for each contract. Thus, using the third formula,

    Leverage = Net Leverage / (100% - Reserves) = 30% / (100% - 60%) = 75%

    It has long been known that money management is the most critical consideration in trading and investing. Money management includes the prudent use of leverage. Sound rules and disciplines allow success to accumulate while minimizing the risk of ruin.

    Robert W. Colby
    TradingEducation.com

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    19 mars 2007 1 19 /03 /mars /2007 10:10
       
      Un article de Jim Wyckoff  de |  TradingEducation.com
    Employing Protective Stops to Manage Your Trades

    There is no absolutely perfect money-management tool in futures trading, although purchasing options on futures does limit your risk of loss to the amount paid for the option. Purchasing options does have its disadvantages, however, and I won't go into that in this feature. What I will focus upon in this educational feature is the placement of protective stops (a sell stop if you are going long and a buy stop if you are going short) in futures trading. Protective stops are not a perfect money-management tool, but they are very effective in helping to solve one of the most important elements of futures trading: When to exit a position.

    Before I discuss the advantages of using protective stops, I want to discuss a disadvantage about which many long-time traders are fully aware: Floor traders in the pits "gunning" for stops. This is a real phenomenon whereby "local" floor traders (those who trade for their own account) think they know where most of the resting buy or sell stops are located, and then attempt to push prices into those stops, set them off, and then let the corresponding price move run its course, only to then take profits on that move and the market price then returns to near levels seen before traders went gunning for the stops. This action by floor traders is not illegal or even unethical--it's just a part of futures trading. These floor traders have to pay a lot of money (or their sponsor pays their fees) to trade in the trading pits on the exchange floor. They do have some advantages over off-floor traders and, importantly, they also provide the needed market liquidity that all traders and hedgers appreciate.

    Floor traders gunning for stops is more an art than science, as market conditions have to be just right for their efforts to pay off. For "local" floor traders to push a market in their desired direction, outside fundamental factors need to be about in equilibrium and not having an influence on market prices. For example, any floor traders gunning for sell stops just under the current market price won't get the job done if there were a bullish fundamental development that would pushes prices higher. Remember, no one group of traders--not even floor traders--can influence market prices very much or for very long.

    Also, sometimes floor traders think they know where stops are located, and when they push a market and try to force a bigger price move, they do not find the stops and then they are forced to cover their trades at a loss.

    A longtime friend of mine and former Chicago Board of Trade grain floor trader, John Kleist-­now a highly respected grain and livestock market analyst--told me the following about locals gunning for stops: "Back in the 1970s and most of the 1980s were really the 'last hurrah' for locals wanting to gun stops. And it basically was in the 1990s when better (and more transparent) communication allowed important news to filter 'down' to the pits, rather than 'up' from the trading floor. Locals gunning for stops now is usually more effective in illiquid trading pits, such as the hogs or bellies--and less effective in soybeans and wheat, and very difficult in the corn pit. Gunning for stops has been replaced by locals coat-tailing the commodity funds and exaggerating price moves. Maybe that's the same effect but done a different way. Stops have to be relatively nearby current prices--i.e. support/resistance areas commonly used as 'public' stop areas, if the locals are to be effective. And, of course, if near major moving averages in the case of the funds."

    Okay, on to the advantages of futures traders employing protective buy and sell stops. As I said above, the major advantage of using protective stops is that--before you initiate the trade--you have a pretty good idea of where you will be getting out of the trade if it's a loser. If your trade becomes a winner and profits begin to accrue, you may want to employ "trailing stops," whereby you adjust your protective stop to help you lock in a profit should the market turn against your position.

    On specifically where to place your protective stop upon entering a trading position, one of the most popular and effective methods is to find a support or resistance area that is within your loss parameter for that particular trade. Here's an example: A trader decides to go long corn futures and he does not want to lose more than $250 per contract if the trade turns out to be a loser. He should try to find a technical support level that's around 5 cents below the present market price, and then place his sell stop just below that support level.

    I generally use the above formula when I place my protective stops. However, I know that the local floor traders also know where it would be most logical for most traders to place their protective stops. So, I will "tweak" my stop placement a bit to reflect this. For example, if I decide to go long corn and there is a solid support level that is within my loss-tolerance parameter, I will set my protective sell stop maybe a couple cents below that support level. My thinking would be that most other traders would set their protective stops about a penny below that solid support, and if floor traders were going to gun for stops, then they may not be able to hit mine if it's a couple cents below the solid support level. The disadvantage to this theory is that your stop may be hit anyway, if there were a bunch of stop triggered above my own stop and pushed prices lower. Also, my losing trade would be about $100 or $150 steeper per contract than if I had not tweaked my stop.

    Only rarely will I call my broker and change the position of a protective stop in a trade in which I'm "under water"--meaning it's a losing trade at the time. That would defeat the purpose of making your decision on how much of a loss you'll absorb BEFORE you make the trade and are in the heat of battle during a trade. Conversely, on winning trades that I have going, I may call my broker every day and tighten a protective stop, if the market is moving rapidly. 

    Jim Wyckoff
    TradingEducation.com

    Bons trades www.jctrader.com  Le money management est la clé du succès

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