THE DNUF EGDEH EDGE Wiley Trading Advantage THE Trading without Fear / Richard W. Arms, Jr. Neural Network: Time Series Forecasting of Financial Markets I E. Michael Azoff Option Market Making / Alan J. Baird DNUF EGDEH Money Management Strategies for Futures Traders / Nauzer J. Balsara Genetic Algorithms and Investment Strategies / Richard Bauer Seasonality: Systems, Strategies, and Signals / Jake Bernstein The Hedge Fund Edge / Mark Boucher EDGE Managed futures: An Investor's Guide / Beverly Chandler Beyond Technical Analysis / Tushar Chande The New Technical Trader / Tushar Chande and Stanley S. Kroll Trading on the Edge I Guido J. Deboeck Trading the Plan I Robert Deel The New Science of Technical Analysis / Thomas R. DeMark MAXIMUM PROFIT/MINIMUM RISK Point and Figure Charting / Thomas J. Dorsey GLOBAL TREND TRADING STRATEGIES Trading for a Living / Dr. Alexander Elder Study Guide for Trading for a Living / Dr. Alexander Elder The Day Trader's Manual / William F. Eng The Options Course: High Profit £f Low Stress Trading Methods I George A. Fontanills e OhpTtions Course WorkboI oGk eo. AFrgoe ntanills Trading 101 / Sunny J. Harris Trading 102 I Sunny J. Harris rAnalyzineg and Forehcasting Futurces Prices /u Anthony F.o Herbst B kraM Technical Analysis of the Options Markets / Richard Hexton Pattern, Price & Time: Using Gann Theory in Trading Systems / James A. Hyerczyk Profits from Natural Resources: How to Make Big Money Investing in Metals, Food, and Energy / Roland A. Jansen New Commodity Trading Systems & Methods / Perry Kaufman Understanding Options / Robert Kolb The Intuitive Trader / Robert Koppel McMillan on Options I Lawrence G. McMillan Trading on Expectations I Brendan Moynihan Intermarket Technical Analysis I John J. Murphy oniletsaC .G kraM dna srewoP .J kraM / noitidE dr3 ,stekraM laicnaniF gnitsaceroF Neural Networks in the Capital Markets I Paul Refenes Cybernetic Trading Strategies / Murray A. Ruggiero, Jr. The Option Advisor: Wealth-Building Techniques Using Equity and Index Options / Bernie G. Schaeffer Gaming the Market / Ronald B. Shelton Option Strategies, 2nd Edition I Courtney Smith Trader Vie II: Principles of Professional Speculation I Victor Sperandeo Campaign Trading / John Sweeney The Trader's Tax Survival Guide, Revised / Ted Tesser The Mathematics of Money Management / Ralph Vince Portfolio Management Formulas / Ralph Vince The New Money Management: A Framework for Asset Allocation / Ralph Vince Trading Applications of Japanese Candlestick Charting I Gary Wagner and Brad Matheny Trading Chaos: Applying Expert Techniques to Maximize Your Profits / Bill Williams New Trading Dimensions: How to Profit from Chaos in Stocks, Bonds, and Commodities / Bill Williams JOHN WILEY & SONS, INC New York Chichester • Weinheim • Brisbane • Singapore • Toronto Acknowledgments ® .repap eerf-dica no detnirp si koob sihT Copyright © 1999 by Mark Boucher. All rights reserved. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. .adanaC ni ylsuoenatlumis dehsilbuP Two broad groups of people deserve recognition and thanks for -snart ro metsys laveirter a ni derots ,decudorper eb yam noitacilbup siht fo trap oN del evah taht efil ym ni stneve eht rof dna koob siht fo gnikam eht mitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, record- 6791 eht fo 801 ro 701 noitceS rednu dettimrep sa tpecxe ,esiwrehto ro gninnacs ,gni up to it. The first people are what I term "the wind beneath my -buP eht fo noissimrep nettirw roirp eht rehtie tuohtiw ,tcA thgirypoC setatS detinU wings." These are the people who directly helped me in ways that lisher, or authorization through payment of the appropriate per-copy fee to the Copy- made this book possible. The second group is what I term "the xaf ,0048-057 )879( ,32910 AM ,srevnaD ,evirD doowesoR 222 ,retneC ecnaraelC thgir (978) 750-4744. Requests to the Publisher for permission should be addressed toe sothhw eelpoep era esehT ".dnats I hcihw no ssentaerg fo sredluohs YN ,kroY weN ,eunevA drihT 506 ,.cnI ,snoS & yeliW nhoJ ,tnemtrapeD snoissimreP ton ems ub ootme prnloenhee d ffnoia tn eeb sah yltceridni krow Q ©ERWMRIELP E:liaYM-.EC ,8O00M6-05.8 )212( xaf ,1106-058 )212( ,2100-85101 only in putting this work together, but also in developing the con- This publication is designed to provide accurate and authoritative information in cepts described in many of the chapters. -bup eht taht gnidnatsrednu eht htiw dlos si tI .derevoc rettam tcejbus eht ot drager Among those who have been the wind beneath my wings, I lisher is not engaged in rendering professional services. If professional advice or nosrep lanoisseforp tnetepmoc a fo secivres eht ,deriuqer si ecnatsissa trepxe rehto want to thank my parents, particularly my mother, who through- .thguos eb dluohost em pleh ot gnihtyna ecifircas ot gnilliw neeb sah efil ym tuo achieve my dreams. I want to thank my significant other, Anita s seCrgnoCa fo tyraarbiLloging-in-Publicatio:atnaD siht fo enon troppus dna pleh tnetsisnoc esohw tuohtiEwllis , -2691 ,kraM ,rehcuoB would have been possible. I am grateful to my coworkers for all The hedge fund edge : maximum profit/minimum risk global trend srehto dna sronnoC yrraL uoy knahT .troffe dna krow drah rieht .rehcuoB kraM / seigetarts gnidart y f)eigmartnasvdta gnkidarnt yeliaW( —h .mtc o.p sla I .troppus larom gnireffo dna gnidaerfoorp rof .xedni sedulcnI ,nituS luaP dna oraliP ynoT ,ssenisub dnuf egdeh eht ni srentrap )r8 e(-pa8al3pk5. 81-174-0 NBSI whose faith and support led me into this industry. And I want es- .seireS .II .eltiT .I .sdnuf egdeH .1 HG4530.B68 1998 -er esohw ,dneirf dna rentrap ym ,nosnhoJ moT knaht ot yllaicep 332.64'5—dc21 98-18230 search, faith, fascination, and support made this possible. Printed in the United Stat-ehs toof Afom esrticrao.ffe suoiverp eht yb decnahne yltaerg si koob sihT 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 21 ers who act as the shoulders of greatness on which this effort vi ACKNOWLEDGMENTS edutitarg htiw egdelwonkcad fn otasreu tmmsroi sFIt , .sdnats the contribution of Mr. "X," a great European money manager. He asked to remain anonymous, but near the end of his life, he shared with me his knowledge and system for financial success. Mr. X, your work will indeed live on and not just with me. Next I thank Marty Zweig and Dan Sullivan for their work on avoiding negative periods in U.S. markets, which provided a model of what to strive for, both internationally and across other -alerroc lufrednow esoht lla rof ,ytraM sknaht ,oslA .sessalc tessa rof htnom hcae htiw rettelswen ruoy dellif uoy seiduts noit Contents decades—I saved them all and sought to apply my own reworking of them to our master models. William O'Neil has done tremendous work on stock selection ni skcots gnimrofrep-pot eht dnif ot syaw gnizisahpme ,airetirc no krow gnireenoip enod sah olleippaC knarF dna ,tekram hcae the importance of institutional discovery in the odyssey of a Introduction 1 nosleN ,elihwnaeM .ecnenimorp ot ytirucsbo morf esir s'kcots ksiR fo ecnatropmI ehT 2 Freeburg has applied a never-ending, incredible stream of timing How It All Started 5 systems to a whole host of asset classes providing me with many ta elpoep eht lla ot detbedni ylsuodnemert ma I ,oslA .sthgisni retsaM tekraM a ezingoceR ot woH 6 Bank Credit Analyst for their rigorous work and insight into the Understanding Is Key to Success 9 liquidity cycle acrossk mooost Btra dsaibhleT m anrkie hts coan othrep gploAbe. eht fo weivrevO 9 My heartfelt thanks go to Ludwig von Mises, Ayn Rand, and -oce nairtsuA fo nor iitseaehvtlr efrsloeefr sdpsr abhtoR yrruM sehcaorppA tnemtsevnI lanoitidarT fo ksiR ehT 1 16 nomics, the ideals of capitalism, and truth. I am grateful for the tekraM lluB mreT-gnoL a fo stceffE ehT 16 work of Paul Pilser for putting economic myth in its place and seitiuqE ni snruteR mreT-gnoL 19 bringing forth the theory of alchemy. I want to acknowledge Stanley Kroll for his work on money management andst ekJraaMy raeB tsniaga noitcetorP 26 dna elcyc ytidiuqil eht fo gnidlem tnaillirb sih rof rekcabahcS skcotS pihC eulB 28 .noitceles dnuf lautum Investment Criteria 30 ot woh em gnihcaeter rof snibboR ynoT knaht I ,yllaniF High Returns and High Consistency—The Tradeoff 35 change and grow and for exposing me to some of the ideas on Summary ton sah ohw ereht tuo enoyna si ereht fI .desab si krow siht hcihw 41 evah I srotavonni taerg eht fo yna fo egdelwonk eht fo knurd tey acknowledged here, let me encourage you to partake immediately 2 Liquidity—ThesemirP yllaicifitrA tahT pmuP Investment Flows .tnemhcirne nwo ruoy rof 43 Understanding the Austrian Interpretation of M.B. the Liquidity Cycle 45 The Liquidity Cycle Illustrated with an Island Economy 48 STNETNOC iiiv CONTENTS ix 15 seimonocE nredoM ni elcyC ytidiuqiL ehT 891 smargorP laicoS suortsasiD Timing the Liquidity Cycle 62 202 seiciloP egaW muminiM 98 seguaG cimonocE gnidnatsrednU Economic Freedom Index 204 Implications for U.S. Markets 100 When Investing, Look for Countries with Summary 106 Low Impediments to Growth 206 Profiting from Understanding Distortions 207 3 Index Valuation Gauges—Do Not Ignore the 902 snoitrotsiD .S.U emoS Price You Pay 111 Evaluating Government/Media Hype 220 Using Index Valuation Gauges 111 722 sdnerT dna semehT raluceS Limitations of Index Valuation Analysis 115 Examples of Secular Themes and Trends 230 Using Gauges for Mutual Funds 116 Summary 239 Valuation Gauges for International Markets 117 Summary 122 d na gSnoL aihretirCo noitcreleS yttiuq—E 7 How Profits Are Magnified 240 4 Macro Technical Tools—Making Sure the Tide 142 . sdnuF lautuM 421 noitceriD thgiR eht ni gnivoM sI 542 noitceleS kcotS laudividnI The Argument for Technical Analysis 125 842 sratS dexiF dna sroeteM gniyfitnedI Taking a Wider View 128 Equity Fuel 261 031 sdnerT mrifnoC ot sisylanA lacinhceT gnisU 562 htworG tsniaga ecirP gnirusaeM Reading the Message of the Markets 132 072 sdohteM yroehT oiloftroP nredoM 431 sisylanA lacinhceT fo weivrevO 372 . dohteM gnidarT kcotS 641 slooT lacinhceT fo msicitirC gnirewsnA Summary 285 Summary 150 782 mehT tiolpxE ot sledoM dna sessalC tessA rehtO 8 yenoM dna ygetag Rrisnkt—SiSonun diatnoC 5 Outperformance and Asset Allocation 287 Management Methods and the Principles of Building a Portfolio 293 Character Necessary to Achieve Them 151 Exploring Asset Classes 294 251 seluR tnemeganaM yenoM Summary 327 Principles of Character 161 htgnertS evitaleR labolG dna sledoM noitacollA tessA 9 6 The Essence of Consistent Profits—Understanding 166 Analysis—Const923ructi noiloftrgoP a Austrian Alchemy 923 168 sledoM noitacollA tessA gnisU Alchemy versus Economics 174 rof neercS radaR :htgnertS evitaleR labolG 081 mgidaraP htworG nuR-gnoL ehT Flexible Asset Allocation 336 Negative Tax Policies 190 Summary 343 x CONTENTS sredarT mreT-trohS rof seigetartS :A xidneppA 345 sevoM yawanuR gnidarT 347 Appendix B: Recommended Books, Services, 355 Data Sources, and Letters Letters and Services 355 erawtfoS dna secivreS ataD 358 359 Books Introduction 360 tropeR eerF fo teehsdaerpS retsaM :C xidneppA Systems Performance 362 365 Index r tora rdoetrs—evlanrr isgo mye raelvl—e rof nettirw si koob sihT who wants a methodology to consistently profit from the markets .sksir eguh gnirrucni tuohtiw In this era of exploding U.S. and global stock markets, many investors are focusing most of their attention on returns, not on siht ni detacovda seigolodohtem eht taht yas ylefas nac I .ksir ot rettelswen ruO .snruter laitnetop gnisaelp ylhgih reffo koob rep tnecrep 23 revo fo snruter launna egareva nwohs sah stneilc year since 1992, without a losing year and, more significantly, -uod naht erom sah siht( tnecrep 01 revo fo nwodward a tuohtiw revo ]P&S[ 005 s'rooP & dradnatS eht fo nruter latot eht delb this period). During this same period, the funds I have con- sulted for have done even better in terms of both risk and re- turn, with real money, investing millions of dollars globally. seigolodohtem eseht hcihw no stpecnoc eht gnihcraeser ni dnA are based, my colleagues and I have gone back to the early 1900s to verify their rigor. Thus while I am confident that the method- ologies described here can enable you to pull consistently large sneprahs koob eht taht epoh osla I ,stekram eht morf stiforp your focus on two equally important factors of investment—risk and market understanding. 2 INTRODUCTION THE IMPORTANCE OF RISK 3 during the 1979 runup in gold prices. I had read several books THE IMPORTANCE OF RISK convincing me that gold could do nothing but explode in price, ehT .skcots dlog no snoitpo otni sgnivas eritne ym degnulp I dna Recounting a personal experience may be the most effective way tnecrep 005 ylraen yb degrus tnuocca ym dna ,ffo koot snoitpo to explain why risk should be of paramount importance to in- from March 1979 to January 1980. Pure luck helped, as I was -af ym ,dlo sraey enin tsuj saw y I1 lnr9ae7eh0 wesh, t nI .srotsev -ram dlog eht erofeb tsuj snoitpo 9791 rebmeceD ym tixe ot decrof ther died of cancer. He had struggled to try and leave me a trust .0891 yraunaJ ni gninnigeb dehsarc dna dekaep tek fund with enough money to finance my future college education. -uger saw I ,0891 ylrae yB .gub evitaluceps eht thguac dah I nehw ega egelloc gnihcaer litnu og ot edaced a tsael ta dah I ecniS larly speculating in a host of highly leveraged commodity posi- my father set up the trust, he put it into stock funds managed by a tions. Not knowing what I was doing, I lost small amounts of bank. From the end of World War II to the late 1960s, stocks had h '8cr1aM trohs thguac tog I nehw ,1891 litnu yltnetsisnoc yenom been in a wonderfully profitable bull market. The public was par- egnarO trohs saw I .1891 ylrae ni ezeerf a gnirud eciuJ egnarO ticipating in stocks to the highest degree since 1929, and the pre- Juice, which shot up from around 80 to 130 in a series of limit-up gnol eht revo skcots otno gnuh tsuj eno fi taht saw modsiw gniliav enoyna detneverp dna keew a naht erom rof detsal taht sevom fo epyt rehto yna ylraen naht nruter retteb a dewohs yeht ,nur short from being able to get out of positions. By the time I could asset. (This type of environment should sound quite familiar to erom dna tnuocca ym fo flah ylraen tsol dah I ,strohs ym revoc investors of the late 1990s.) laer yM .punur s'dlog morf deniag dah I stiforp eht fo flah naht Things did not go according to plan beginning in 1972. From education had begun, and I realized that I needed to study the -rep 07 revo yb denilced dnuf tsurt taht fo eulav eht ,5791 ot 2791 eht morf yltnetsisnoc tiforp ot ylhguoroht erom hcum tcejbus a fo secirp kcots labolg dna .S.U ni enilced eht htiw gnola tnec markets. The easy money I had first thought was for the taking commensurate amount (the S&P and Dow dropped by around had really been luck. Having seen two accounts lose more than 50% during this period, but the broader market dropped by much .ksir gnitimil fo ecnatropmi eht dezilaer won I ,eulav rieht flah more than that). By the time I started college in the early 1980s, The mathematics of losses and risk is sometimes lost on in- even the blue chip indexes had lost more than 70 percent of their vestors until they actually experience it up close and personally. value from 1972 in after-inflation terms. While my trust had re- uoy snaem taht ,eulav ni tnecrep 07 spord tnuocca ruoy nehW covered somewhat from 1975 to the early 1980s, it was nowhere won't get back to breakeven until you have made over 230 percent ylrae eht nI .deid rehtaf ym erofeb neeb dah ti level eht raen kniht dluow enO !riaf smees yldrah tI .yenom gniniamer ruoy no 1970s/ he believed he had provided enough funds for me to go to that if you dropped 70 percent, you ought to be able to get back to an Ivy League school—but a decade later the diminished trust led .skrow ti yaw 0ep7he tre tcdoeannm st— iu toabyhu tnt ehw neve tsurt eht dluoc y raoUwf .t Copno.- noBIt e.edrmkaeetlseniy As I started to voraciously study the works of investors who had have covered the cost of an elite private school. -ni taerg tsom taht deciton I ,sniag nur-gnol tnacifingis edam n eedb evaih dfluofw iti tacht suai tkccailfp l aotct irotsih ehT ssol tsegral rieht( snwodward peek ot thguos sredart dna srotsev worse investment class than stocks from 1972 to 1982. Even ex- from an equity high) around 20 to 30 percent or less—and most -xe sihT .ylroon pBe urdfrfiaedWt t dna notelpmeT nhoJ ekil strep -sus ot dah yeht snwodward eht fo smret ni sniag rieht derusaem ot del tahw dnatsrednu ot erised neek a htiw em tfel ecneirep tain to generate those gains. An investor who loses more than 20 gnol a hcus revo seitiuqe fo snruter eht ni ytirapsid eguh a hcus percent must show gains of 30 percent or higher just to get back to period. It also provided an extremely valuable lesson regarding o pt rareoy dar onufa hncte eveer,oe mv eekant —dluoac tnahdt risk, which I sadly had to learn again with my own money before .rotsevni tnellecxe na .ni knas yllaer ti -ni ,emoh tih drawer tsniaga ksir gnihgiew fo tpecnoc eht sA hcus dna sboj remmus morf sgnivas ym gnitsevni nageb I vestment performance suddenly meant more to me than making when I was a sophomore in high school. My first real killing came HOW IT ALL STARTED 5 4 INTRODUCTION HOW IT ALL STARTED big gains: it meant measuring those gains against the risk I was taking to achieve them. ni yelekreB-ainrofilaC fo ytisrevinU eht morf gnitaudarg retfA hguorht gniog morf ereht tuo nosrep eno tsuj tneverp nac I fI the mid-1980s, I first traded on my own for a bit. While at a con- gnitirw neht ,2891 ot 2791 morf dah I ecneirepxe lufniap emas eht -udividni yek owt tem I ,rekaeps a saw I erehw gnidart no ecneref this book has been a worthwhile effort. I hope I will convince more als: Tom Johnson, a Stanford Ph.D., and Paul Sutin, his student at than one of you. Similarly, if I can get one or more investors and the time. They liked some ideas I had expressed on seasonal com- traders to think of performance not just in terms of total returns modity straddles, and we decided to begin doing historical re- -ward htiw derapmoc drawer fo smret ni tub ,nur trohs eht revo search together, initially on ways to dispel the myth of the g nol eht revo ycnetsisnoc dna nword un,oot raF .desaelp eb lliw I efficient market hypothesis, which had broad academic accep- many fund-rating services only list performance in terms of re- tance and basically held that achieving higher than average profit yltnetsisnoc ot gnitnaw srotsevnI .ksir gnirongi yllatot etluihrwn, with lower than average risk was impossible. .taht naht retrams hcum eb ot evah stekram eht ni llew mrofrep Dr. Johnson and I began a research effort that lasted more The goal of this book is to present a methodology for achieving market- than three years and involved testing and developing nearly beating long-run returns with substantially lower risk than the long-run every theory we could get our hands on that had to do with risk of U.S. and global equities. However, just as important as giving tpecnoc yreve detset eW .ecnamrofrep gnitaeb-tekram gniveihca the reader such a methodology is to do it with honesty and in- we could find going back to the early 1900s (or earlier, where data tegrity, based on the philosophy I have identified as essential for sa morf sexedni kcots emos dna sdnob rof sdrocer dnuof ew ;tsixe -xe tsum I ,siht od oT .sniag tekram tnetsisnoc ksir-wol gniveihca long ago as the 1870s). We were striving to find something histor- plode some myths and misconceptions. And perhaps the most im- ically rigorous. portant lesson I have for market participants is that the answer to -tset eht )1( :yduts fo saera owt no detartnecnoc hcraeser ruO their quest for superior performance doesn't lie in a Holy Grail ing of market-beating concepts and methods, and (2) the de- system, but in their own development of the skills necessary to tailed study of all those who had achieved market-beating understand major market movements. -erp eht ni dna yllacirotsih sisab drawer/ksir a no ecnamrofrep While I provide dozens of specific systems and rules along sent. Tom put significant resources into developing software with their historical records of market-beating risk/reward perfor- that could test and show intricate statistics for any simple or dnatsrednu ot tnatropmi erom raf si ti taht ssertsm oasnlac eI, complex trading system or data-set/concept for trading stocks, what lies behind their success and to keep abreast of anything that siht gnidliub fo tluser a sA .seicnerruc dna ,seitidommoc ,sdnob could change those underlying principles than it is to follow those huge database and accompanying software, Tom and I also exact rules and systems. This distinction is, in fact, the difference -tset rof erawtfos siht fo esu eht gnilles ssenisub llams a detrats .mret gnol eht revo sretsam tekram dna secivon tekram neewteb ,sredart ,srotsevni llams dna egral ynaM .saedi s'elpoep rehto gni The market novice constantly searches for "magic" systems that and institutions hired us to test their ideas or systems on our yrassecen eht poleved ot seirt retsam ehT .enutrof a reviled lliw saedi eht rof sisab eht si troffe hcraeser sihT .esabatad mret-gnol skills and insight into markets and economics to consistently see luaP ,nosnhoJ moT ot lufetarg ma I dna ,koob siht ni detneserp .tnemnorivne gnimochtrof eht ni krow lliw seigolodohtem tahw Sutin, and the many others who helped put that research effort As I discuss in Chapter 6, the novice tries to find fish holes tekram taerg eht ot edutitarg fo tbed eguh a ewo osla I .rehtegot o fitn wd oh snrael retsam eht elihw ,yadot gnitib e efrhiasth erehw masters whose ideas we retested and found to be rigorous. I the fish holes where the fish are biting every day. The book is de- have no false pride about acknowledging ideas from others— e cinivvoenst otrre/vnoc nac taht slliks eht edivorp ot dengis my primary concern is with what actually works. Appendix B traders into potential market masters. 6 INTRODUCTION TO RECOGNIZE A MARKET MASTER krow esohw srehcraeser dna srotsevni taerg eht fo t-sil a seedivorpr ni tub ,yreviled serutuf dna yrtne neewteb doirep eht rof etar I have found to be exceptional; I urge you to read as many of rehtehw stcelfer serutuf ybraen fo tnuocsid/muimerp eht ytila their works as you can. tcudorp fo yrotnevni egral ylrevo ro egatrohs mret-trohs a si ereht (or a reason for investors to panic-buy or panic-sell the underly- ing instrument immediately). Since other financial instruments RETSAM TEKRAM A EZINGOCER OT WOH such as currencies had shown a tendency to trade at a premium I ,stekram raeb ereves gnirud tnuocsid a ta tub ,emit eht fo tsom A real-life example will illustrate the difference between a m-sys eaht tarhtk tnaeem tsihT .ralimis eb dluow P&S eht taht denosaer master who strives for understanding and a market novice who tem would likely fail in a severe bear period. I tried to convince moT ,ecnedicnioc egnarts emos yB .smetsys lacigam rof sehcraes the client to add stop-losses and some sort of filter to protect him -ed taht os ro raey a fo naps eht nihtiw stcejorp owt deldnah I dna against a bear market period if he wanted to continue to trade the -ta dah srotsevni eseht fo htoB .tpecnoc cisab emas eht no dednep system on its own. a desoporp yrraL yhWrcriiahlLlwia ymnbis ,ranimes a dednet I described two types of stop-loss and trend filters the client eht neewteb ytirapsid muimerp/tnuocsid eht no desab metsys e lsaetfhoptt ;teiuscu rl etvhagtohim deluofwr ,iresvtewmsoo,hrf saw tpecnoc eht ,tib a gniyfilpmiS .serutuf ybraen dna hsac P&S dias eH .esnopser s'tneilc eht yb desirprus saw I .6891 ot 2891 serutuf eht taht emit yna serutuf P&S eht yub dluohs eno taht morf ffo koos wte oeorkHd!? " yllaer ti ,na, e"eYmkoiu l gnihtemos -wollof eht ot dloh dna ,P&S hsac eht ot tnuocsid a ta gnisolc erew eht dah I dna ,metsys lanigiro eht tuoba deticxe yrev gniteem ruo noisrev eht ni ssol-pots yna esu t'ndid yrraL .esolc elbatiforp gni strange feeling that he hadn't heard a thing I said about stop-losses of the system we were given by our first customer. and trend filters. The first customer—a market novice—had attended Larry's This client called back every few months to gloat that he was seminar and began to trade this particular system (Larry usually still making money with the original system and had been able to m'I os ,enoyna tuoba tsuj naht ranimes a otni smetsys erom skcap dah ti ,metsys a elpmis os rof ,tcaf ni dnA .ti ot erusopxe sih ot dda ehT .)ranimes eht ta smetsys hcus ynam fo eno tsuj saw siht erus worked remarkably well, generating thousands of dollars a year -dart siht hgut ponrreohtfsittis snoc gniwohs saw ohw ,remotsuc per contract since 1982. It was very rare that one needed an extra driht a detnaw dna metsys eht fo sseccus eht ta dekcohs saw ,gni tcartnoc rep hcae niatniam ot nigram laitini lamron dnoyeb 000,5$ party to evaluate it before committing more capital to it. The year position, since it was usually only held until the first profitable was late 1986. eh emit yreve ezis gnidart sih desaercni dah tneilc eht os dna ,esolc -rofrep lacitnedi tsomla dnuof dna metsys eht detsetkcab I had extra margin plus $5,000. He had made around $10,000 per mance to that illustrated by Larry Williams in his seminar. The ,72 rebotcO nO .7891 rebotcO litnu pu ,gninokcer sih yb ,tcartnoc ereht os ,2891 ni edart ot nageb ylno serutuf P&S taht saw melborp serutuf rebmeceD P&S eht ,hsarc tekram taerg eht fo yad eht ,7891 wasn't a timeframe long enough to evaluate the system properly. I closed at a discount to the cash S&P, and this novice trader had du- I taht snoitavreser suoires owt denialpxe dna tneilc eht htiw tem ta esolc eht no dluoc eh sa stcartnoc ynam sa thguob yllufit -cetorp ssol-pots fo kcal eht saw tsrif ehT .metsys eht tuoba dah around the 874.00 level. The next morning, the December S&P gnitiaw tnedicca na si sessol timil totni soeond t—aht maentsyys opened at 859.00 and proceeded to plummet to the 844.00 level od ot dah melborp dnoces ehT .hcraeser ym ot gnidrocca neppah ot tniop 00.1 rep 005$ saw tcartnoc P&S eht( retfaereht ylkciuq yrev gniyfilpmis niagA .lareneg ni stekram serutuf gnidnatsrednu htiw at that time). This meant that on the open, the novice trader faced muimerp a ta edart stekram serutuf tcartnoc ybraen tsom ,yltaerg a potential margin call, because he had a $7,500 per contract loss ot tnuocsid a ta edart tub ,tekram llub a gnirud hsac gniylrednu ot sa ylkciuq sa detixe redart ehT .moor 000,5$ dewolla ylno dah dna ,yllaciteroehT .tekram raeb a gnirud tekram hsac gniylrednu eht he could to avoid potential ruin. He sold out very near the lows at the futures should trade at a premium to cash equal to the T-bill around 846.00 average fill for a one-day loss of just over $14,000 8 INTRODUCTION OVERVIEW OF THE APPROACH IN THIS BOOK 9 per contract, which basically wiped him out completely. Had he potential situations where he would find low-risk opportunities used the trend filter and stop-loss I had recommended, he would for profit. One wanted to be camped out by a fishing hole someone have made far less profit until October 27,1987, but he would have tsaf sa kooh sih tiab dna gnitib ee rfehiwst he rehw dnuof dah esle still made money through the crash. It is also worth noting that if as possible. The other was simply looking for another way to find he had had hugely deep pockets and courage of steel, he could have a fishing hole where fish might be biting for a while. survived the day—the system actually did work, it just required a ton of margin, but this trader was going for maximum profits. A few months later, we were reviewing the trading of an excel- SSECCUS OT YEK SI GNIDNATSREDNU lent investor for input on how he could improve his already stellar performance. Among the concepts he listed as exploiting was the There are many books, courses, and software that purport to sell same Larry Williams concept of looking for buy signals near the Holy Grail systems. They are mostly hype that is based on a per- close of a day or on the day following one in which the nearby ception of the world that does not jibe with reality. One of the rea- S&P futures closed at a discount to cash. I inquired about the con- sons there are so many such books and services is that there are so cept and found that he had gone to the same seminar. However, I many traders and investors hunting for such systems. The pot of no gniyub on enod dah eh taht sedart lautca s'redart siht ni deton gold they are hunting for, however, isn't at the end of the rainbow. October 27, nor during future signals during the October-No- That pot is built, coin by coin, based on your skills as a trader/ .doirep 7891 rebmev investor, and on your ability to consistently find reliable ways to I asked this second trader why he had avoided these trades. limit your risk while participating in opportunities that have much -inutroppo esoht rof kool ot yrt I eruS" .deilper eh "?stun uoy erA" more reward than the risk you are taking. The pot of gold doesn't ties, but only when I can do so with limited risk and use a stop- lie in some system outside yourself; it lies in the set of skills and loss. Besides, the risk of the market falling further was just too degree of understanding and insight that you build within. That is large—no one understanding what was going on at the time would why I want to give investors more than a methodology; I want to derongi I ,tcaf ni dnA .esolc eht no gnol gniog deredisnoc neve evah help them understand what builds profitable methodologies and all of those signals until I was pretty sure we weren't in a consis- what underlies investing and trading success. tent downtrend, because in a consistent downtrend, closing at a So this book has chapters that are purely methods and systems discount to cash might be normal." based on a concept, but it also has chapters that give the reader in- Now while the novice trader made several mistakes besides ig- sight and understanding into basic principles of success required noring the basic rules of limiting risk and understanding what un- to profit from the markets long term as well as to understand the derlies a system being used, what really differentiated him from -ucitrap ni ,6 retpahC hguohtlA .stiforp tekram dniheb scimonoce redart ecivon ehT .rof gnikool saw eh tahw saw redart retsam eht lar, may seem long and complex to the reader who just wants tech- was looking for a magical system that, when applied, would print niques, investors who do not understand the concepts in that cash for him. He didn't want to be bothered with potential short- ,srotsevni sa toof eht ni sevlesmeht toohs yletamitlu lliw retpahc o t yldab fos detnaiw eh ensau ancie dbl osggn dfiom otocp sih and may even contribute to destroying the mechanism that makes system. Conversely, the master trader was simply looking for ideas investing profit opportunities possible in a free economy. or systems that he could understand and utilize to help find low- risk, high-reward potential trading/investing opportunities. He wouldn't have dreamed of trading a system he didn't understand, OVERVIEW OF THE APPROACH IN THIS BOOK or investing without proper stop-loss protection. He wasn't look- ing for magic; he was searching for ideas, concepts, systems, and dna sloot xelpmoc eht lla edulcni ot elbissopmi si ti ,lla fo tsriF methods that would help him add another arrow to his quiver of models that I use in my investment approach in a book of this
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