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Sabtu, 28 September 2013

Boris's Weekly Email - Quitters Always Win

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 I used to have a football coach who would always drawl in his Southern accent, 'Son, winnahs nevah quit and quitahs nevah win." He would drum this into our head constantly to motivate us and while the value of that advice may have been dubious at best, I've been thinking about coach Fish (yes that really was his name) a lot lately.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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The subject of quitting is near and dear to anyone who has ever traded for more than a month. Markets are unbelievably fickle, execution can me maddenly poor, resulting in massive losses and puny wins and the depressing nature of watching your account balance dwindle by the day has led many a wannabe trader to pack his toys and leave the playground.

 

That is exactly as it should be. Speculative markets are unbelievably competitive and they spend most of their time redistributing money from the suckers to the pros. Yet within that ruthless dynamic lies a possible exploitation of these same markets since it is at the point of "maximum quitting" that one often finds the best trading opportunities.

 

Think Warren Buffet in 2009 and you get the idea of what I am talking about. But as retail traders we cannot hope to emulate the sage of Omaha because we have neither the resources nor the intellect to pull the trigger at the right time. However, as day traders we are presented with myriad opportunities throughout the year to take advantage of these points of failure. And for that I have thank another great thinker -- George Costanza.

 

I often joke that if I ever meet Jason Alexander on the street (alas I believe he lives on the west coast now, so little of chance of that) I will kiss him on both cheeks as a sign of my gratitude. In one of the iconic Seinfeld episodes George Costanza, as played by Jason Alexander, decides that he will do the exact opposite of his natural impulse with the predictable outcome that everything in his life suddenly improves markedly.

 

While the Seinfeld premise is utterly hilarious, it has nevertheless provided me with an incredible insight into market behavior. I realized that some of the best opportunities to trade arise from failed setups. Think about it for a minute. If logic and reason worked in the markets then most of us would be rich beyond our imagination. But markets are never that obvious. In fact they often operate on a warped sense of logic that seeks to inflict maximum damage to maximum participants. And they only operate "reasonably" after most players "quit".

  

This realization has allowed to design a very interesting short term set up that we trade in BK almost every day and now is yielding a possible longer term strategy that shows some very real promise for swing trading. So thanks coach Fish -- even though you were kinda wrong in your premise -- in the Alice in Woderland world of trading quitters often win.  

 

 

 

   

  

 

  

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Sincerely,
 

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Boris Schlossberg and Kathy Lien
BKForex.com

Past performance is not indicative of future results. Trading forex carries a high level of risk, and may not be suitable for all investors. The high degree of leverage can work against you as well as for you. Before deciding to trade any such leveraged products you should carefully consider your investment objectives, level of experience, and risk appetite. The possibility exists that you could sustain a loss of some or all of your initial investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with trading on margin, and seek advice from an independent financial advisor if you have any doubts.

 

This email was sent to forexhudi.euro@blogger.com by contact@bkforex.com |  
BKForex Advisor | The Desks of Boris Schlossberg and Kathy Lien | NY | NY | 10280

Sabtu, 21 September 2013

Boris's Weekly Email - How Traders Can Gain From Pain

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How Traders Can Gain From Pain 

  

 

 As human beings we all hate pain even when its actually beneficial for us. Those of you who lift weights know that the only way to improve your muscle tone is to actually tear the fibers so that they can repair themselves and become bigger. Knowing that however, doesn't make it any more pleasant to drag my butt to the gym every Sunday and endure the supervised torture of my German born trainer. Yet I do it because it keeps me healthy..

 

 

 

 

 

 

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However, few of us have such a positive attitude when it comes to dealing with pain in other areas of our lives. Be it physical, emotional or psychological -- our general attitude towards pain is to ignore it and hope it goes away. As the very welcoming sign on the front door of the infirmary of my summer camp used to say -- "Time heals all wounds."

 

That may be a good strategy for an 13 year old with a stubbed toe -- but its no way to go through life. I see this "ostrich head in the sand" behavior all the time in the currency markets. We are holding a position with no stop and it continues to bleed against us. So we turn the screen dark, or go for a walk, or go watch a movie and hope that when we come back the position is back to even.

 

Worse yet, if we are trading a strategy and it suddenly goes into a massive drawdown our instinctual response is to either turn it off or to ignore it. Both are terrible decisions and are the reason most traders can never successfully trade any strategy.

 

Pain is actually a signal and to ignore it is to suffer the consequences at your risk. Sometimes pain is necessary (like in the case in weight lifting). Just as in trading sometimes the drawdowns are a natural part of the market flow. But most of the time pain requires a response to mitigate and fix it. Ignoring it generally leads to only more pain down the road.

 

In trading this means that you must constantly examine and reexamine the underlying assumptions of the model and if possible make adjustments to current market conditions. This means that most strategies require constant tweaks in the form of filters. Just like a response to a twisted ankle is not to mindlessly soldier on, but to stop and bandage the area, so too a response to a drawdown is to try find an adjustment that can improve the performance.

 

 

 

   

  

 

  

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Sincerely,
 

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Boris Schlossberg and Kathy Lien
BKForex.com

Past performance is not indicative of future results. Trading forex carries a high level of risk, and may not be suitable for all investors. The high degree of leverage can work against you as well as for you. Before deciding to trade any such leveraged products you should carefully consider your investment objectives, level of experience, and risk appetite. The possibility exists that you could sustain a loss of some or all of your initial investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with trading on margin, and seek advice from an independent financial advisor if you have any doubts.

 

This email was sent to forexhudi.euro@blogger.com by contact@bkforex.com |  
BKForex Advisor | The Desks of Boris Schlossberg and Kathy Lien | NY | NY | 10280

Jumat, 13 September 2013

Boris's Weekly Email - Trading Right By (NOT) Being Wrong

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Trading Right By (NOT) Being Wrong 

  

 

 

The longer I trade in the forex markets the more I am convinced that long term success has almost nothing to do with choosing winners and everything to do with avoiding losers. In short, trading is basically the art of saying NO.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Before I proceed -- let me qualify my comments by emphasizing that I am only talking about day trading where in the course of a year I am presented with as many as 1000 trading opportunities. So even if I eliminate the vast majority of those ideas I am still making many trades. If I were a long term trader my decision making process might well be different.

 

Alas as I have noted many times in the past, I am just not smart enough to know where currencies will trade 72 hours from now much less 50 week forward. So I operate on the shorter time frames -- much like a meteorologist that only tries to forecast the weather two hours ahead.

 

When you are in the forecasting business the key to making good decisions is not to focus on whether you are right, but to relentlessly question yourself as to whether you are wrong. After all as traders we operate in a probabilistic universe where the kind of revenue certainty that say a McDonald's franchise owner enjoys is laughably out of reach. No decision we ever make can be unqualifiedly termed as "right". On any given day, at any given moment a piece of news could instantly wreak havoc with our position. That's why focusing on being right is a futile proposition.

 

On the other hand, looking at all the ways that you can be wrong can be very productive. My best strategy refuses to make directional, takes only a few select trades during the week and holds hard time expiration rules that often result in no trade at all. Like some algorithmic Grinch it surveys the market and constantly say -- NO, NO, NO -- which so far (and of course past performance is no guarantee of future results) has translated in YES YES YES on my bottom line.

 

The key I think is that professionals in any field try to remove as much waste and profligacy from the actions as possible. Ted Williams never swung at a pitch that wasn't a strike. Warren Buffett's number one rule is DON'T LOSE MONEY ( Note it's NOT -- make as much money as you can). ZARA runs a very tight inventory system in its stores and only makes more of what's working. The examples are endless and I think they all center on one key point -- To Trade Right, Focus on Not Being Wrong.

 

 

 

   

  

 

  

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Fed Looms Large Weekly Forex Technicals 9.15-9.22.13
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Sincerely,
 

BSignature

Boris Schlossberg and Kathy Lien
BKForex.com

Past performance is not indicative of future results. Trading forex carries a high level of risk, and may not be suitable for all investors. The high degree of leverage can work against you as well as for you. Before deciding to trade any such leveraged products you should carefully consider your investment objectives, level of experience, and risk appetite. The possibility exists that you could sustain a loss of some or all of your initial investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with trading on margin, and seek advice from an independent financial advisor if you have any doubts.

 

This email was sent to forexhudi.euro@blogger.com by contact@bkforex.com |  
BKForex Advisor | The Desks of Boris Schlossberg and Kathy Lien | NY | NY | 10280

Jumat, 06 September 2013

Boris's Weekly Email - Great Lessons On Trading From a Poker Pro

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Great Lessons On Trading From a Poker Pro  

  

 

 

This week Business Insider had a great profile of a professional poker player called Andrew Seidman. He has been playing the game since 2006 and has had massive success as well as some setback since then -- but perhaps what makes his story so compelling is that he is basically a regular self-taught guy rather than some Mensa math genius. I am taking the liberty of snipping parts of the interview (.. so apologies if some of the quotes appear as though you've entered the room mid-sentence) and affixing my own comments to his observations.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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On capital and law of large numbers


"However, it doesn't usually work that way. Usually people play with 20-40 times the buyin, well within a risk-of-ruin scenario in which a person could just get crushed by luck and bust out. Also, sample size matters. Can I go to Vegas and be assured of a winning weekend? No. Can I move to Vegas and be assured of a winning year? Probably."

 

Divide the "20-40 times buyin" line and you quickly come up with 5% of 2.5% bet size. This very close to what professional traders use to size their own trades. In fact I would argue that in FX you would want to be even more conservative and use 1%-2% risk limit per trade. Why? Well as Seideman explains by chopping up your bet size to small chunks you stand a better chance of avoiding risk of ruin -- a situation where the market, or the cards simply produce a very long string of negative outcomes.

 

Next. Size matters. In FX and in poker the more trades/bets you take the less likely you are to fall victim to a bad string of outcomes. Mind you if you strategy in trading or in poker is flawed from the outset, you will still lose. But if your probabilities are accurate the longer you trade/play the more likely the outcome will line up with expectation.


Good trading/playing means knowing the probabilities as well as the behavior patterns of your opponent.

 

"First, you have to psychologically profile your opponent (everyone fits into one of three general profiles); second, you have to understand basic probabilities (e.g. if I have two pair and my opponent has a flush draw, I win 65% vs his 35% and these are relatively easy to memorize); third, you have to predict your opponents likely holdings."

 

What's absolutely key about understanding this passage is that Seidman not only focuses on the basic probabilities, but on the likely reaction of the opponent. That's why just knowing the news in FX is never enough. You have to understand if the market is ready to accept the news ( its in a momentum mode ) or reject the news (it in a mean reversion mode). Profiling the state of the market is just as important as acting on the immediate newsflow.


Adjustment is key

 

"Good poker players go through all of that process and are really mentally engaged trying to determine those things. Weaker players really don't do any of that and make purely emotional decisions (conservative players never really bluff, crazy gamblers basically always bluff, etc.)".

This is SUCH an important point. Good traders/players always continue to learn and observe adjust their strategy within a properly designed framework. Bad traders simply repeat their emotional behavior over and over until they are bust.

 

Last but not least -- successful players compete with those who are weaker than them. This is a very common mistake that retail FX traders do all the time. By trying to trade right after the news retail traders are playing against much stronger opponents and institutional algorithms shred them to bits as a result.



 

 

 

 

   

  

 

  

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Forex Technicals Video for the Upcoming Week
Back To Range? Weekly Forex Technicals 9.9-9.14.13
Back To Range? Weekly Forex Technicals 9.9-9.14.13


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BKTMedia
2-5 BK Trades Per Week
Each With a Game Plan and
Specific Stop and Exit Directions

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Sincerely,
 

BSignature

Boris Schlossberg and Kathy Lien
BKForex.com

Past performance is not indicative of future results. Trading forex carries a high level of risk, and may not be suitable for all investors. The high degree of leverage can work against you as well as for you. Before deciding to trade any such leveraged products you should carefully consider your investment objectives, level of experience, and risk appetite. The possibility exists that you could sustain a loss of some or all of your initial investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with trading on margin, and seek advice from an independent financial advisor if you have any doubts.

 

This email was sent to forexhudi.euro@blogger.com by contact@bkforex.com |  
BKForex Advisor | The Desks of Boris Schlossberg and Kathy Lien | NY | NY | 10280