The Cheetah & The Trader

Today we've asked Michael Bellafiore from SMB Training, to give us some advice for frustrated traders. Enjoy.

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I had an interesting conversation with a young trader from another firm today. This young trader pops into my office from time to time and talks trading. He is a very bright and competitive young man. And he is struggling. He killed it in October, but over the past two months he has dug himself a huge P&L hole. I have been hearing a lot of stories like this lately.

A trading friend of SMB Capital told us that one of the best ten traders we know gave back his whole year last month. While I was getting breakfast today a few nervous young traders from another firm stopped me to ask how our guys were doing lately. They relayed that many in their firm were "decidedly negative". I have heard that a few Tier I day trading firms recently restricted trader losses going forward. I was at an awesome holiday party recently, with incredible views of the NYC skyline, and one of the best traders on the Street was practically crying to me about how badly he has been trading.  I felt bad for the guy.  I spoke with two energy traders this week at the Reebok Club who offered that they were probably going to be fired.  The reason for their likely termination: failure to cease losing great amounts of money. I know that for SMB, last month presented a challenge to some of our traders.

Personally, I don’t have a bad month. I have traded through enough markets that I have developed a trading system for myself that allows me to profit no matter what the market. Last month I was positive. And, I will share what I said to that young trader who was worried about his future. You need more experience. You need to see some more markets. You need to make some adjustments. You need to go back to the basics.

One of our bright new traders, a graduate of the best undergraduate business school in the country, who has been struggling, made a list of plays that he will focus on this month. Great work here… But there were a few plays on his list that I didn’t even understand. They were technical plays that I did not use. And I will share what I told him. Trading is about finding weak stocks and getting short at levels that offer an excellent risk/reward. Trading is about finding strong stocks and getting long at levels that offer an excellent risk/reward. Do not make things so complicated.

Continue reading "The Cheetah and the Trader" HERE

Testing your Trading System

I just got permission from Norman Hallett, from Thedisciplinedtrader.com, to show you an excerpt from his newebook, "How To Design and Construct an Effective Trading Plan".  This ebook is not for sale to the public and is only offered to the students of his buzz-worthy "The Disciplined Trader Intensive Program" where he trains traders to be mentally and emotionally disciplined.

I've personally known Norman for years and his programs are the best in the industry, and his knowledge is used by top traders including many within INO.com. He's giving away 4 special reports which I highly recommend grabbing while they are still free, HERE.

This excerpt is about Testing Your Trading Plan... and it's worth the read... because without a tight trading plan... you're nowhere as a trader ...

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Developing a successful trading system based upon your specific goals and a set of trading rules form the heart of your trading plan. These two documents wrap around the “fuzzy” part of your personal goals, aspirations, strengths and weaknesses and your preferred style of trading. But how do you know when you have a system that will meet your needs?

Today’s trading environment makes becoming a successful trader much easier that in the past. The electronic age has not only greatly reduced transaction costs but has also mad available a wealth of information available from any place on the globe. One of the most positively impacted industries was that of the world of finance. One of the most profound effects was that of the evolution of electronic trading. Not only did it offer 24 hour trading capabilities but it changed the trading paradigm. As a result of computer to computer bid-ask matching, many of the most knowledgeable people in the industry-the market makers and floor traders-suddenly found themselves no longer needed. Indeed, the new technology forced them out of the pits and into the field of education. In the logical pursuit of putting food on the table, many former “insiders” needed to leverage their knowledge. As a result, new online trading institutions have sprung up on the net Now, the independent trader community has access to formerly closely held information on not only the mechanics of trading like a pro but also the more subtle psychological considerations of being a trader.

Part time traders and aspiring full time traders can now have access to knowledge not formerly available to the public. From online courses to full time mentoring, the internet has opened up a whole new opportunity for a person to carve out a new and potentially very rewarding career without needing to take time out from an ongoing profession or to convert free time into productive time (many “house wives and stay at home dads are exploring the possibilities of trading). Indeed, businesses of all types are entertaining the idea of using a portion of company free cash for trading purposes. In view of the low levels of returns offered by most financial institutions, if a trader can develop a fairly low risk way of generating an ROI above 10%, many capable business owners are looking at trading as part of a new way of generating additional revenues to help optimize assets.  But is it possible to develop a trading system that is relatively low risk?
The answer is yes.

Given that you have put in the time to learn about investing and the types of investment vehicles that you feel are best for you to trade in, the trading plan is the first step in the process. As mentioned in Chapters 5 and 6, step by step procedures need to be developed and formalized into a document or checklist. Once you have established your procedures, the next step is to try the out.  Before the advent of paper trading via an actual trading platform, aspiring traders were more or less forced to sink or swim with their money on the table.  However, today, aspiring traders can build a professional trading plan and test it out before getting rolled by the pros.

When undergoing the testing of your trading system, you not only get to test your system but you also become experienced in using the trading platform and all its nuances. Moreover, you become comfortable with the trading process and how best to set up entry, exit and stops. In addition, most brokerages have seemingly come to the realization that many investors want to become educated and take a more active part in managing their investments. As a result, brokerages now make a much more serious effort to educate their clients by offering regular seminars and online webinars on trading education.

As mentioned before, the paper trading account is one of the most important tools a trader can have. Not only does it allow testing to help come up with a system that produces at least a 65% win-loss ratio over at least 100 trades, but it also provides a “safe harbor” when a system needs to be taken out of action for adjustment if production is not what it should be. Most traders will set up a trading rule whereby if the win-loss drops below its expected win-loss ratio over a certain time number of trades, the trader becomes obligated to stop trading and go back to paper trading to troubleshoot the system. Indeed, paper trading is the test bed.

Most statisticians will say that a significant sample size is about 100 test trades but this is just a rough estimate. A better way would be to test in different market conditions. For example, how does your system function during an up market with moderate volatility, in a down market with low volatility, etc, etc? However, this could take some time so as a general rule, it is probably a good idea to do at least 100 trades to develop the win-loss ratio but take into consideration that the macro economic environment of the market can have a distinct impact on how your system performs.

To read the rest of this post please CLICK HERE.

94% Winners & Triple Digit Returns (Q4 Results-New Video)

A year and a half ago we decided to track the results of our "Trade Triangle" technology in six different markets. The markets we decided to trade were corn (CBOT_C), wheat (CBOT_W), soybeans (CBOT_ZS), crude oil (NYMEX_CL), gold (XAUUSDO) and finally the dollar index (NYBOT_DX). We picked these markets at random, not because we could see into the future, but because these markets historically have had prolonged and therefore profitable moves in the past. Most big markets have one or two moves every year. Our "Trade Triangle" technology allows you to catch these moves and stay on top of the market.

I have truly been surprised and amazed that we have had such big profits, especially in the last two quarters. When I helped co-create MarketClub, I knew we had something great... but even these results would astound anyone.

In Q3 of '08 we had a phenomenal return and one that I did not think we would see again. However, in Q4 of '08, not only did we exceed the Q3 results but we did it in different markets which is quite remarkable. This underscores our fundamental belief that investors/traders should be diversified into several different markets.

In Q4 of '08, the results we had in corn were significantly less them in Q3. Non-the less, they were positive. Our Q4 results in the wheat market were almost double that of our previous quarter's profits. Soybeans on the other hand proved to be very positive, but not as positive as Q3 which was our best quarter ever for that commodity. The star of the show, or I should say the quarter, was crude oil. Crude oil produced an astounding gain of $40,040 per contract in the quarter. This return was practically double our Q3 results and by far our best returns of any market in this quarter. You may want to watch our Q3 movie and see what we were saying about crude oil at that time.

Gold proved to be just that, golden, as the yellow metal produced another stellar return in the quarter. Lastly, the dollar index showed it's best returns in 6 quarters.

Q4 of '08 turned out to be a record quarter producing $78,142 in gains before commissions. This was our best quarter ever and quite frankly it was more than we had expected.

The return on capital for the last six quarters was 624%. The number of winning quarters (for all six markets) was 34 out of 36, that's a 94.44% winning streak. Losing quarters for the six commodities totaled to just 5.5%. (Special note: We are trading six markets and six quarters gives us a universe of 36 individual quarterly results to judge our results by.)

Watch new video here:

In the 6 quarters we have traded the six commodities listed above, we have never seen a losing quarter dollar wise or quarter wise (no pun intended).

Certainly there is no guarantee what Q1 of '09 will bring. Certainly the markets we are in have a tendency to move, therefore they should present opportunities to make good profits in the future.

Take a look at this short video that I have prepared to show you the results. I will go through some of the actual signals that we dynamically generated with  our "Trade Triangle" technology. The "Trade Triangles" are just one tool of our MarketClub service.

You may also want to look at our earlier Q3 video and check out our past signals. We use the same formula and same approach each quarter for the markets we are tracking.

Enjoy the videos. If you have any questions about our results, please give us a call at 1-800-538-7424. As many of you know, brokers love us because we are not brokers, we simply provide educational material to help traders improve their trading.

Every success in trading in 2009,

Adam Hewison
President, INO.com
Co-creator, MarketClub

Can You Trust a Teaser?

I've asked Travis Johnson of www.StockGumshoe.com to be today's guest blogger. Travis has built up quite a following as being a detective of sorts, of email and newsletter teaser ads. Today Travis is going to share with us an interesting story that shows just how much stocks can be effected by hype. Enjoy!

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Most of us are quite familiar with investment newsletters and trading services. I focus on the newsletters that advertise heavily to retail investors, and the most successful type of ad is apparently the “teaser” letter, a well-argued case for a particular stock or investment ... that withholds the actual name and ticker until you throw your subscription dollars into the hat.

Thankfully, with a little research and some critical thinking we find that many of these “teasers” can be solved, letting us reveal the names of the stocks, get people started on their research, and make patient decisions about newsletter subscriptions (and investments) without relying on impulsive “tell me the name of that stock” urges.

The implicit promise is that these “teaser” stocks represent the best ideas of these often well-known newsletter editors, whether it’s the Gardner brothers at the Motley Fool, Louis Navellier, Paul Tracy, or any of dozens of others whose names you would probably recognize.

One stock in particular represents the promise, and peril, of these kinds of teasers -- and the ad is still circulating today, so let’s use it as a quick case study.

Have you heard of the “forever battery?”

The company that “makes” this battery was first teased by the folks at the Untapped Wealth newsletter in a heavy ad campaign early in 2008 -- it turned out to be, once we followed the clues, a small firm named mPhase Technologies that used to develop DSL technologies, but was now throwing itself into the nano-battery development business. I like to talk about this one because it has been actively promoted at several distinct times in the past year, and because it’s a microcap stock that is easily influenced by what could be even a small number of new investors. And because, of course, the company has few fundamental drivers like earnings, or sales, that would help to explain movements in the stock.

The first newsletter ads teasing this “forever battery” went out in early March of 2008, and they must have struck a chord with investors because the volume of email picked up dramatically by the beginning of April, with Untapped Wealth promising that the company was on the verge of a public demonstration of their technology (they actually did demonstrate the technology, as promised -- at a steakhouse in Manhattan, of all places).

Then the promotion was sent out sporadically for the following few weeks, including a number of times in early May that caught my readers’ attention. I continued to see occasional copies of similar ads for much of the summer, but nothing that was in such heavy rotation that my email box filled up as it had in the Spring.

XDSL

Can you guess where on the chart those emails hit? Hint: Just look at every point where volume increased and the shares rose, those were almost all timed exactly following periods when many of my readers received this email ad.

More ads came out in September that claimed a “catalyst” for the shares was around the corner, which helped to slow the stock’s decline for a few weeks. Then in early December a couple of industry awards and an announcement that the company had entered a “critical partnership” with Porsche Design to develop their “Always Ready” emergency flashlight provided a big boost in volume that helped drive the shares up significantly (though they remained well under the price they traded a year ago, before the newsletter hype began in earnest). This was the first time all year, in my opinion, that the shares had moved without heavy advertising by Untapped Wealth, but just as with those ad-fueled spikes, the move was quickly reversed.

This week? Yet more campaigns rolled out, using much the same ad copy and argument as they had made a year ago, with the shares about 90% off their highs of the year.

Back in March of last year, the promise was that these shares were expected to go up by 3,600% in the next twelve months, with the shares then trading at six or seven cents a share and spiking briefly to nearly 15 cents ... now the shares are trading for about one and a half cents each, and in the current ads these same folks are expecting, you guessed it, 3,600% gains in the next twelve months.

The point here is not to single out Untapped Wealth or mPhase, but to point to the impact that even an apparently legitimate newsletter teaser campaign can have on a stock, and to provide one example from among hundreds of an ad that is sent out repeatedly (sometimes over the course of many years), with very little change to the copy, not because a stock idea is working but because the ad is working to bring in new investors.

Similar patterns have held true for many stocks that have been actively teased by investment newsletters, especially when a newsletter with a big advertising budget or large email list hits on a stock with a relatively small market cap -- a good ad drives new subscribers, and those subscribers are primarily motivated by this one stock idea, so they’re likely to buy the stock immediately.

Some of my readers have tried on occasion to trade off of these touts, but of course it’s never quite that easy -- as you can see from the XDSL chart, you would have had to be very nimble for this one, and even for stocks with market capitalization's of $500 million or more the resultant action can be wildly unpredictable.

Louis Navellier, for example, ran two very aggressive ad campaigns for his newsletters last Summer that promised dramatic near-term moves in a chosen stock -- in one case, the ad apparently worked well and it was repeated several times, which helped drive the shares of Gran Tierra Energy (GTE) higher for a few weeks. In the second case, with an extremely similar ad for Fuel Systems Solutions (FSYS), the ad went out only once, on a Sunday, and the bounce from that ad was very brief -- not because the fundamental prospects for the company were necessarily different, but, one assumes, because the ad didn’t work well enough at bringing in subscribers, so they didn’t mail it a second, third or 15th time.

As for that “Forever Battery” from mPhase?  It may well be that the company’s technology ends up working someday, or becomes a real product.  Perhaps even a profitable one, in the distant future.  The stock?  A great story, well told by a master copywriter, that sold a lot of newsletter subscriptions ... so far, that’s about it.

Cheers,

Travis

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For more on Travis and to take a look at more of his handy-work be sure to check out www.stockgumshoe.com/about.