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February 8, 2006 � Issue #256 | |
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Workshop Special Van Tharp's Signature Workshop, Peak Performance 101
Feature Article The Characteristics of Experts By Michael Covel
Trading Education Special Reports on Money Management and Expectancy
Trading Tip Passive vs. Active Investing, by D. R. Barton, Jr.
Listening In Inside and Outside Special Reports Reports by Van Tharp: Self Sabotage, Changing Markets
Van Tharp's Signature Workshop for Traders and Investors Save $700 by Enrolling Now. Offer Expires Soon. March 11-13, 2006 "Tharp�s disciples swear by the results." -- Forbes Magazine
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The Characteristics
of Experts By Michael
Covel
Michael J. Mauboussin, Legg Mason Capital Management, outlines in a recent whitepaper the "Characteristics of Experts": "Given that experts exist in diverse domains, psychologists wondered whether they have much in common. The answer: a resounding yes. Research on expert performance reveals seven robust and universal characteristics:
I have been fond of Mauboussin's logic for years. He nails it head on most all of the time. How many people really ponder his views on "expertise" in terms of their trading? I say not many. For example, I came across a "risk capacity" survey online from a financial planning firm. Here is one of the questions with the answer choices:
The right answer is not the point here. If the great traders, the experts, are living Mauboussin's seven points, how does it help to pose the question above? Isn't the question above just an over-simplification to make people feel good? Doesn't it let them avoid the heavy lifting needed for real trading excellence? The firm that poses the above question also makes these assertions on their website:
Whoever wrote the above 5 points has not read Market Wizards, Fortune's Formula or Trend Following. Whoever wrote those 5 points doesn't believe "expertise" is possible. But it is possible. There are many trading experts or Market Wizards who have been whipping the market for decades. Consider one of the great trend followers, David Harding of Winton Capital, who was recently asked: 'Because recent performance has been good, does that necessarily mean that future performance will be bad?' His answer: "Au contraire. There is a danger of people over extrapolating recent good performance into the future and being too optimistic about what we're going to achieve. But, equally, there is no evidence of mean reversion, in the sense that whenever we have a good period that's inevitably followed by a bad period or that when we have a bad period that's followed by a good period. It's a biased coin tossing exercise. It's like tossing coins. Luckily we strongly believe our coin will land profit side up, rather than loss side up, 60 percent of the time. But there is no forecasting the future of our returns from our recent performance. However much your feelings tell you something, your gut tells you something, the gut is very misleading in this context." David has that "expertise" Mauboussin speaks to. In my conversation with David he stressed that he can always tell a client how much risk he is taking, but he can never tell you how much he will make. He is clearly focused on his own fallibility. Are you focused on your own fallibility?
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Trading Education
Special Reports on Money Management and Expectancy $79.95 each. Click below to learn more |
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Special Report on Money Management |
Special Report on Expectancy
Downloadable format! Learn More... |
Passive vs. Active Investing by D. R. Barton, Jr. Some interesting new research is hitting the publication circuit and challenging the notion of how Americans are investing. The new report gives some compelling evidence that U.S. based investments are really much more skewed to the passive investing style than previously thought. Passive investing, in this context, is the same as index investing. The most popular and well known passive investing tools are mutual funds that mimic the performance of the S&P 500 Index. These are vehicles that track many different indexes (the NASDAQ and Dow, to name two) and would still be considered passive investing vehicles. The reason these are considered passive is because investors tend to buy the index-based funds and hold them for long periods of time, hoping to earn the same return as the broader market over time. There are clear advantages to the passive investing strategy: � Someone else manages the �basket of stocks� that track the market�s performance, meaning that minimal time is required. � You have no single stock risk (the risk of bad news that could move a stock�s price substantially in a single day). � You are tracking an asset class with a history of long-term appreciation. And, of course, there are disadvantages: � The performance of the fund will almost always be less than the true index because management fees are subtracted. � The broad markets are actually quite volatile when compared to the returns generated. As one measure of the amount of money being invested, research by the Financial Research Corporation (as reported in The Economist) showed that 13.8% of mutual fund dollars invested go into passive funds, and that this number is at its all time high. Next week we�ll dig into some new research that suggests passive investing actually accounts for a much larger percentage of the overall volume on Wall Street. Until then � Great Trading!
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From Van Tharp's
Mastermind Forum Inside and Outside
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Quote of the Week Abraham Lincoln's Birthday is February 12th "Am I not destroying my enemies when I make friends of them?"
Abraham Lincoln |
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Did You Know...
Van Tharp is featured among Jack Schwager's original Market Wizards. The Market Wizards books are cited by top traders as essential reading. Here's a direct link to Amazon if you want
to learn more about it. Market
Wizards |
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