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The Essential
Characteristics of the Successful Trader
by Joseph Stowell
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The Essential
Characteristics of the Successful Trader
While participating in several conferences and seminars on
trading, I have had the opportunity to learn from many of the
world's foremost experts on trading psychology. Much of what
I have heard and read seems to fit quite nicely with my own
31 years of trading experience.
Often examples cited by the speaker or author would call
to mind past trading practices and attitudes that I have had
to modify, to conquer, to solidify so as to enable me to
operate in a long term profitable mode.
The short term is but a small part of a much larger long
term picture. That is to say that one trade is just one
trade. Win or lose, you must move on to the next trading
situation. You cannot afford the luxury of omnipotence nor
the gloom of despondence.
Each trader in his own way must develop the ability to
keep on going. You may have many failing trades and still win
the long term pursuit of trading profits. But you have to
keep going.
Each trader must develop a personal risk management
program. Part of this risk management approach must include a
definitive method of removing trading profits from the
market. Deployment of these profits are best directed to a
lower risk category of investment.
Each trader must learn to deal with uncertainty. Most
trading situations are neither black nor white but a shade of
gray. Trading is an uncertain art form. If you wait for
certainty, it is to late. The profit opportunity is gone.
Each trader must develop the ability to focus. A one
market approach may be the answer for some traders while a
single trading approach to several markets may prove to be
successful for other traders.
The successful trader will:
- identify a signal or a market opportunity.
- react decisively.
- feel good - whether he wins or loses.
- demonstrate self confidence.
- exercise his independence.
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Barriers To
Successful Trading
Refusing to take a loss
is one of the more prominent reasons for failure in the
trading game. It usually starts with the lack of a defined
exit point when a trade is executed. Ask yourself: "Where
and when do I get out if I am wrong?".
Why are you trading?
Do you fully understand what your goals are as a trader?
Trading is somewhat like golf. There are a vast number of
golfers that enjoy the activity but they will never make a
living at it. They incur the cost of club memberships, cart
rentals, equipment, reading literature, private and group
instruction, and so on. I would venture to say that most of
these golfers have no intention of making money playing the
game and they know that. They know why they participate. And
for the few that go on to ma ke a living at the game, they
work their "tails" off day after day. They are
willing to pay the price of success.
What about traders?
It is common belief that 85% to 90% of traders lose money in
any given year. All traders incur cost such as equipment
purchase or rental, subscriptions to trade journals and
newspapers, private and group instruction and so on. Unlike
the golfer, most traders have the intention of making money
through their trading activities although they do not know
quite how this is going to come about. They do not work their
"tails" off day after day. They are looking for
something easy. Often they lack a clear understanding of
their motivation for trading.
CERTAIN TRADING STYLES
The suicidal trading type
is bent on committing financial extinction by jumping in
front of moving trains. They insist on selling into run away
markets only to see the market move higher. At this point,
(they reason) it has to be a better sell than the first
position. After all, they are selling at a higher price. And
of course they love to buy a market that is falling "out
of bed". And the next day when prices are even lower,
wow, another bargain. These guys always think that they see
the light at the end of the tunnel. The only problem is this
light is on the front end of a locomotive. Many of these
suicidal types love to point out that they have (had) a
$100,000 trading account. They know a bargain when they see
one. After all they made their money snapping up bargains in
their other life.
The euphoric trading type
has no plan of withdrawing profits from the trading account.
A hot streak comes along and each successive trade is larger
than the first as all profits are plowed right back into the
market until the loss comes while our euphoric trader is up
to his eyeballs in contracts. Not only does he give back all
of the profits, often the account is wiped out and possibly
more.
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Your Trading Profile
"Know Thyself"
Why are you trading? What are your objectives as a trader?
What is your strength? What is your weakness? Are you
persistent? Do you have courage? If you do not have a
satisfactory response for any of the previous questions, now
is the time to work on this. There is no one correct answer
to any of these questions. Only your answers. However, if you
are kidding yourself, you will not fool the market.
"Know Your Market"
All markets have a personality of their own. There are
important reports that can and will cause unusual volatility
and periods of illiquidity. The more you know about the
market you are trading, the greater your trading advantage.
IDENTIFY AND DEVELOP YOUR TRADING STYLE
Are You A Mechanical Style Trader?
Do you have study time, desire, persistence, and emotional
control? If you lack any of these characteristics, then
perhaps you should consider a mechanical approach to trading.
The successful mechanical trader will:
- accept the fact that a mechanical trading method
is a compromise between the goal of eliminating
the poorest trades and retaining the best trades.
This fact will insure that at times a good trade
will not be followed and at times a poor trade
will be followed.
- accept the fact that a mechanical trading method
can only succeed if the method is consistently
followed.
Are You An Intuitive Style Trader?
Do you have study time, desire, persistence, and emotional
control? If you have all of these characteristics, then
develop your trading style by emphasizing the "Art of
Trading".
The successful intuitive trader will:
- trade what she/he sees - not what she/he thinks.
- be patient, willingly to wait for the good
trading opportunity and then pull the trigger.
- forego the marginal trades.
- will not trade just for excitement.
- do the daily homework necessary to hone their
trading skills.
TRAITS OF A SUCCESSFUL TRADER
Courage...
"The credit belongs to the man who is
actually in the arena, who strives valiantly; who
knows the great enthusiasms, the great devotions, and
spends himself in a worthy cause; who at best, knows
the triumph of high achievement; and who, at the
worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring
greatly, so that his place shall never be with those
cold and timid souls who know neither victory nor
defeat."
Theodore Roosevelt
Persistence...
"Nothing in the world can take the place
of persistence. Talent will not; nothing is more
common than unsuccessful men with talent. Genius will
not; unrewarded genius is almost a proverb. Education
will not; the world is full of educated derelicts.
Persistence and determination alone are
omnipotent."
Calvin Coolidge
The above quotes strike me as being appropriate for all of
us engaged in the endless quest of trading profits. I make it
a point to review these statements on a regular basis as I am
well aware of the fact that I am only as good or bad as my
last trade.
I accept the fact that I will never have it
"made" as a trader. Each and every day is a new
trading situation and I must be prepared with my trading
plan. I must PLAN MY TRADE AND TRADE MY PLAN.
IN MY OPINION
Trading Is An Art
and mechanical trading methods and indicators are best used
as just another tool in the practice of THE
ART OF TRADING.
Diversification
achieved by trading a variety of markets is a mistake for
most individual traders. Every market has its own
characteristics and a singular trading plan will not work
equally as well in all markets. You may well improve your
trading success by learning one market with the goal of
becoming the best possible student of this selected market.
You may find that trading just one side of this market the
key to your success.
Learn To Survive
There are as many methods of trading as there are traders.
Every trader is different and no one trading approach is
right for all traders. Find the methods that work for you and
then concentrate on repeating these techniques.
Take Time Out
Every trade consumes emotional energy and a tired trader is a
handicapped trader. Take a break - go on a vacation. Get away
from the markets - spend some time with family and friends.
Trading from a position of emotional strength is as important
as trading from a position of financial strength.
The First Calculation Is Risk
The first question concerning any trade concerns risk or the
amount you are willing to lose. If the protective stop has to
be placed where the loss exceeds your comfort level - either
move the stop closer or DO NOT TAKE THE TRADE.
Remove Part Of Your Trading Profits
from your account. The first objective is to remove enough
profits from the trading account to cover the initial
starting amount. This can be achieved by removing 50% of
trading profits above a set amount. If you start with $8,000,
remove 50% of any profits when the account moves above the
$10,000 level. When you have removed $8,000 from the account,
you will then be trading on money gained from the market.
Once your account reaches the $30,000 level remove all
profits above the $30,000 level. Co ntinue to trade within
these guidelines until you feel very secure in the number of
contracts you are trading. Eventually you may feel secure
enough to slowly increase the account size.
Trading "Size" Is More Than Just Adding
Contracts
The pressure from adding more contracts increases
geometrically as the number of contracts increases
arithmetically. Whatever number of contracts you are trading
successfully, stay with that number. Otherwise, you will find
yourself taking a loss on 10 contracts and then you decide to
cut back and trade only 3 contracts on the next signal which
turns out to be a winner and the end result is a profit that
does not equal the loss on the previous trade of 10
contracts.
FIND YOUR TRADING COMFORT LEVEL AND STAY
WITH IT FOR A LONG, LONG, TIME. WHEN
YOU FEEL THAT YOU ARE A SUCCESSFUL TRADER, AN AGGRESSIVE USE
OF YOUR ACCOUNT FOR TRADING THE FULL SIZE BOND CONTRACT WOULD
BE AS FOLLOWS:
Account Size: $8,000 Trade 1 Contract
Account Size: $14,000 Trade 2 Contracts
Account Size: $20,000 Trade 3 Contracts
Account Size: $25,000 Trade 4 Contracts
Account Size: $30,000 Trade 5 Contracts
When your account reaches the $25,000 level, have your
broker purchase a $10,000 T-Bill which will then be used for
initial margin requirements.
A Solid Financial Foundation
Trading is a highly speculative business and one never knows
when a trading "accident" is about to happen. If
you trade, sooner or later you will "wipe out" your
account. If fact, you may wipe out your account a number of
times. You must plan for this and more importantly, you must
have a plan for recovery. All traders lose money. It is the
trader that has the ability to recover and to move on to a
profitable position that will succeed in the long run.
The average investor that uses trading as a part of his
portfolio should limit trading activities to no more than 10%
of his total investment funds. For each year of the traders
age, 1% of his investment funds should be placed in U.S.
Government Notes and Bonds. This is accomplished by using a TREASURY DIRECT ACCOUNT (see appendix A). The
remaining investment funds should be allocated to a
systematic program of investing in common stock growth funds.
This can be accomplished th rough the use of no-load mutual
funds spread over such areas as International Funds, Index
Funds, and small cap stock funds. A dollar cost average
approach is the best way to handle the fund investments.
Any portion of your portfolio that involves trading falls
within the 10% limit of your total investment funds. This
includes futures trading, stock trading, and mutual fund
timing.
Before Becoming A Full Time Trader
Get completely out of debt. Pay off the house mortgage and
the car loan. Carry no balances on your charge cards. Only
charge what you can pay off in full each and every month.
Accumulate a significant reserve of cash invested in three or
six month Treasury Bills. This can be done through your TREASURY DIRECT ACCOUNT (see appendix). As
soon as you are trading full time, set up Keogh and Money
Purchase retirement plans and contribute the maximum amount
each year.
THE INDIVIDUAL TRADING PLAN
Some traders operate best from one side of the market. If
this is your situation, then build your trading plan around
your strength. If you trade best from the long side, trade
only the buy signals. If the short side is your strong suit,
then trade only the sell signals.
Many traders will successfully operate from either side.
Their trading plan will follow both valid buy and sell
signals as they are as comfortable being short as being long.
Trading size is directly related to our ability to
withstand a loss. Once you exceed your comfort level by
increasing your trading size, it will be difficult for you to
carry out your trading plan. Find your trading toleration and
then stick to it. A range of contract size such as 1 to 5
contracts may prove to be an acceptable level of trading for
some individuals while being unacceptable to other traders.
It is a good practice to trade a different number of
contracts for different trading situations.
The number of contracts associated with any particular
entry signal is decided upon by a variety of considerations.
The first entry signal of a new direction in the market
usually will reach its profit objective with the least amount
of adverse price movement whereas a later entry signal in the
same direction may encounter difficulty in reaching its
profit objective. When a new direction begins, put your full
position on with the first signal. Later signals in the same
direction should be traded with a smaller number of
contracts.
YOUR TRADING PLAN
The implementation of your trading plan will be evaluated
by the market place and your grades will be posted trade by
trade, month by month, year by year. Consistent failing
grades should alert you to either a need to change your plan
or how you are carrying out your plan. Do you give up because
you have failing grades? Of course not. It takes years of
trading experience to become a good trader. While I cannot
guarantee successful for everyone, relatively few traders are
successful early on. If th ey are, it usually is a fluke and
it is but a short time and they give back most of their
profits and then some to the market place.
Patience, Courage, and Persistence
are all required ingredients in the recipe of successful
trading.
What Is Your Position
Are you long, having bought with the idea that prices are
headed higher, or are you short, having sold because you feel
prices are surely headed lower? How about flat? Is there
anyone on the sidelines awaiting the next entry signal? As a
position, being flat is as important as being long or being
short. Many traders, to the detriment of their trading
health, have the mistaken idea that a sideline position is
tantamount to not participating. They insist on being in the
market at all times worried t hat they may miss a trading
opportunity.
BEING FLAT IS A POSITION AND YOU MUST LEARN
TO ACCEPT THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING ON THE SIDELINES AWAITING A
PROPER ENTRY SIGNAL.
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How To Handle The
Numerous Chart Trading Signals
The daily, weekly, and monthly bar charts serve as a road
map and are used to gain insight as to the next probable move
for the market. You will be instructed in the activity of
observing and recording numerous entry signals from the daily
chart of the bond futures contract. You must learn to mesh
the various signals into a workable trading plan. This is an
individual process and will not necessarily be the same for
all traders.
Basic to all trading plans, you will assume one of the
three following positions:
- You are long because a valid buy signal has been
initiated and you will remain long until the
profit objective has been reached, or the
protective
- stop was elected, or a sell signal was initiated.
- You are short because a valid sell signal has
been initiated and you will remain short until
the profit objective has been reached, or the
protective stop was elected, or a buy signal was
initiated.
- You are flat because no new valid entry signal is
present. You will stay flat until a valid entry
signal appears.
Profit Taking Opportunities
There are certain market conditions that are so inviting
and consistent that I have built them into the computerized
mechanical trading systems that many of you are using. As a
chart trader, it is important to take advantage of these
situations. Actually, I have isolated these situations
trading bonds from the charts over these many years.
First, a description is necessary. The official open of
bond trading is recorded in the afternoon session. However,
most of the trading occurs during the day session which
resumes trading at 7:20 AM Chicago time. The evening session
open and the resumption of trading at 7:20 AM are important
time periods when profit taking opportunities may appear.
Here are the guidelines:
Assuming You Are LONG
- Take profits on an opening either opening of 4
tics or more above the previous day's high.
- Take profits on an opening either opening of 10
tics or more above the previous day's close.
Assuming You Are SHORT
- Take profits on an opening either opening of 4
tics or more below the previous day's low.
- Take profits on an opening either opening of 10
tics or more below the previous day's close.
Be careful of price data that you request from your
broker. The official open is from the afternoon session. If
you call in the morning with the idea of requesting the
morning opening, you probably will receive the opening from
the afternoon session. Request the prices for the resumption
of trading or better yet, ask for the opening of the Mid Am
Contract. The Mid Am Contract trades only during the day
session and it will have a posted opening price. The Mid Am
begins trading in the morning at the same time that the
regular contract resumes trading. One other problem that you
will encounter is that of the split opening. The broker will
usually quote an opening range such as 110-26 to 110-28. Use
the first number the broker gives you. In this case, use
110-26. If the opening range had been quoted as 110-28 to
110-26, use 110-28 as the open.
One last point before moving on, SUCCESSFUL
TRADING IS AN ART, it is not some scientific formula
that you learn and immediately become wealthy. Rules are
nothing more than guidelines to help us become successful
artists. Do not fuss over an exact number. If the market gaps
open and it is on the borderline of the rule for taking
profits, you are going to have to make a quick decision and
this is where the "feel" of the market, the art
form, is going to guide you. The spirit of th e rule is more
important than the exact number in the rule.
A Trade Is A Trade Is A Trade!
Every trade has an entry point, a profit objective, and a PROTECTIVE STOP. If it does not work, the
stop takes you out of the trade and you move on to the next
trading signal. Being wrong with a trading signal is all part
of the business. Being wrong and not using your protective
stop is part of GOING OUT OF THE TRADING
BUSINESS.
A trading plan provides for the number of contracts to
risk on each entry signal. It is part of a well thought out
process that takes into consideration the amount of risk
capital available, the type of trade signal to be entered,
and the amount of risk capital allotted to this particular
entry signal.
IT WILL ALMOST ALWAYS END UP WITH THE TRADE
SIGNALS THAT LOOK LIKE SURE WINNERS TURNING OUT TO BE LOSERS
WHILE THE HARD TO TAKE SIGNALS TURN OUT TO BE THE WINNERS!
Find your comfort zone for risk and stay within this zone.
If a signal looks like a sure winner, a lay-up, a money in
the bank type trade - STAY WITHIN THE COMFORT
ZONE. DO NOT BET THE HOUSE ON THE TRADE! Remember, the
easy looking trades have a tendency to turn out to be the
losers. In this business, anything can be wrong. There is no
such signal as a sure thing.
"Tips for Traders and Investors:
Trading U.S. Bonds and Stocks"
ISBN 1-886977-00-3
Money Management Institute
North Rose, New York
tel: 315-587-9651
Click on graphic for more information on "Tips
for Traders..." book.
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Posted on July 22, 1995
This page was revised on 1998 01 04 by A.Pompa &
Associates
Text Copyright © 1995-1998 Joseph Stowell.
All rights reserved.
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