Thursday, September 30, 2010

Gurus , mentors

"100 successful traders may have 100 different strategies for making money.
But they all excel at finding low risk ideas and most importantly knowing when it's time to move on to the next idea." - Derek Hernquist
Kirk Ref ...
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Generating investment ideas

How do you generate investment ideas?
FS: I’m always trying to find mis-priced opportunities. Ideally, I’d like to find great, easily understood, businesses that are undergoing some form of indiscriminate selling. That sounds simple but it’s actually quite difficult. As boring as it sounds, I read a lot. I try to look where people are selling indiscriminately—redemptions, spin-offs, removal from an index, post bankruptcies, one-time events like a recall, etc.

I think a lot of investors, professional or otherwise, compromise. If they can’t find a compelling bargain they go for the next best thing. I’m not comfortable with that approach. There are a lot of smart people out there. Investing is basically saying the market it wrong and you’re right. You need to be sure you know more about the situation then the market and those opportunities don’t come around very often and they are usually research intensive. Given that you could be wrong, you need to afford yourself a margin of safety so if things change you can still recover your capital.

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OLD Trader
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http://pointsandfigures.com/?page_id=2553 - good Bio CME board member and Kirk ref.



1) Tell us about your career and your current firm
2) What has changed most in the past 10 years in the industry?
3) What has changed most since the financial crisis hit?
3. Volatility, and the fact that you have to keep one eye glued to a government hearing to make sure you don’t get caught backward in a trade. Markets don’t seem to trend. Money management. Used to be able to really load up and hit home runs. Not anymore. Risk/reward is really tight. It’s a much more risky business than it was.

8) What did you learn at Illinois that proved valuable in your career?

At Illinois I grew up a little. I learned to think better. Can’t point to one thing. I did have an argument with Gregg Oldham, a professor I had. We argued about motivational theory. I said people were motivated by money, he said they were more motivated by intrinsic aspects of the job that they could control. When I protested further he said, “I wrote the theory.” He was right. If you are successful, the money in trading is great. But what really makes is special is the total control you have over your life. Work when you want, how you want. Autonomy and freedom. You also have an idea of an expected outcome.
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Jesse Livermore’s 5 Money Management Rules

by: Bill Zimmer Friday, September 24th, 2010 at 9:37 am

If you haven’t read this book “Reminiscences of a Stock Operator” written in 1923, read it! It is purpordetly the unofficial biography of one of the greates traders ever; Jesse Livermore. The rules Jesse followed back at the turn of the last century are still very much applicable today.

1) Don’t lose money. Don’t lose your stake. A speculator without cash is like a store-owner with no inventory. Cash is your inventory, your lifeline, and your best friend. Without cash, you are out of business. Don’t lose your line. There is no place in speculating for hoping, for guessing, for fear, for greed, for emotions. The tape tells the truth.

2) Always establish a stop. A successful speculator must set a firm stop before making a trade and must never sustain a loss of more than 10 percent of invested capital. I have also learned that when your broker calls you and tells you he needs more money for a margin requirement on a stock that is declining; tell him to sell out the position. When you buy a stock at 50 and it goes to 45, do not buy more in order to average out your price. The stock has not done what you predicted; that is enough of an indication that your judgment was wrong. Take sour losses quickly and get out. Remember, never meet a margin call, and never average losses. Many times I would close out a position before suffering a 10 percent loss. I did this simply because the stock was not acting right from the start. Often my instincts would whisper to me: “J.L., this stock has a malaise, it is a lagging dullard. It just does not feel right,” and I would sell out of my position in the blink of an eye. I absolutely believe that price movement patterns are repeated and appear over and over with slight variations. This is because humans drive the stocks, and human nature never changes. Take your losses quickly. Easy to say, but hard to do.
(asr: yes CL patterns repeat , like 95 cent reversal always lead to $1 down side , 9/27/10 CL range ( 74-77) break out lead to $2 + every day , 2 week morning CL high and consolidate for the rest of the day , CL on Wesneday after EIA report drop on good EIA report to eventually break out in next 1 hour .. all these 3 patterns repeated .. last EIA repated couple of weeks ago ( as part of rage break out )

3) Keep cash in reserve. The successful speculator must always have cash in reserve.. .for exactly the right moment. There is a never-ending stream of opportunities in the stock market and, if you miss a good opportunity, wait a little while, be patient, and another one will come along. J.P. reach for a trade, all the conditions for a good trade must be on your side. Remember, you do not have to be in the market all the time. The desire to always be in the game is one of the speculator’s greatest hazards. When playing the stock market, there are times when your money should be waiting on the sidelines in cash.. .waiting to come into play. Time is not money — time is time, and money is money. Often money that is just sitting can later be moved into the right situation at the right time and make a fast fortune. Patience is the key to success, not speed. Time is a cunning speculator’s best friend if it is used wisely.

4) Let the position ride. As long as the stock is behaving normally, do not be in a hurry to take a profit. You must know you are right in your basic judgment, or you would have no profit at all. If there is nothing basically negative, then let it ride. It may grow into a very large profit. As long as the action of the overall market and the stock do not give you cause to worry, have the courage of your convictions, and stay with it. When I was in a profit on a trade, I was never nervous. Of course the opposite is true as well. If I bought a stock and it went against me I would sell it immediately. You can’t stop and try to figure out why a stock is going in the wrong direction. The fact is that it is going in the wrong direction, and that is enough evidence for an experienced speculator to close the trade. I do not and never have blindly bought and held a stock. To buy and hold blindly on the basis that a stock is in great company or a strong industry, or that the economy is generally healthy, is, to me the equivalent of stock market suicide. Stick with the winners. Let them ride until you have a clear reason to sell.

5) Take the profits in cash. I recommend parking 50 percent of the profits from a successful trade, especially when the trade doubled the original capital. Set the money aside, put it in the bank, hold it in reserve, or lock it up in a safe-deposit box. Like winning in the casino, it’s a good idea, now and then to take your winnings off the table and turn them into cash… .the single largest regret I have ever had in my financial life was not paying enough attention to this rule.

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http://stockbee.blogspot.com/2010/10/develop-process-loop.html

(asr: this works for my CL )

DEVELOP A PROCESS LOOP....

What do all successful traders do, they follow a process again and again and again. They have a process to analyze market, they have a process to identify long or short opportunities and a process to manage their position. They just keep looping that process.
For example everyday I have a process loop that I follow. Run Top 25 breakout, IPO, Episodic Pivots, and 4% bearish scans from 10 till 4 pm in evening during market hours. Every few minutes the process is repeated and then I identify opportunities out of them. Then again run the scans and again and again do the same thing.
What does the process do, it throws up opportunities like these regularly...

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