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February 15, 2006 � Issue #258 | |
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Feature Article How I Finished 2nd in a World Wide Trading Contest in 2005 By Kevin Davey
Trading Education Special Reports on Money Management and Expectancy
Trading Tip Passive vs. Active Investing, Part Two by D. R. Barton, Jr.
Listening In Comments From the Recent 17 Steps Workshop Special Reports Reports by Van Tharp: Self Sabotage, Changing Markets
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How I Finished 2nd in a World Wide Trading Contest in 2005 Part One By Kevin J. Davey
�Overnight success.� I�ve heard that term quite a few times in the last month, as people learn that I achieved a 148% return and a second place finish in a world renowned futures trading contest in 2005. Since you�ve never heard my name mentioned in this newsletter before, you might be inclined to think the same thing. But the fact is the futures markets are littered with overnight failures, and overnight successes are scattered few and far between. I�ve been speculating in futures for 15 years, and it took me most of that time to become an �overnight success.� Even though turning $15,000 into over $37,000 in one year entailed some luck, I know I could not have gotten there without following certain steps. In this series of articles, I�ll detail these steps that worked so well for me. My guess is that they�ll work for you, too. Step 1: Have a Plan I�ve never seen someone build a house from scratch without drawings, sketches or architect�s renderings, and I bet you haven�t either. To build a house, you need a set of plans. The same holds true for speculating in the futures market � without a plan you are destined to fail. Trust me, I tried to succeed without a plan in 1997. However, the market did have a plan, which was to take all my money. And it succeeded. So what makes for a good plan? I think there are three major pieces to it. First, you must know what you want. Second, you must determine what you are willing to invest to get it. Finally, you have to know what you are willing to risk to get what you want, as nothing worth having is free. The first step in a good plan is to know what you want, since your objective will help determine your strategy. For example, if your goal is 4%, you can find many CDs that yield 4%, but CDs won�t do the trick if your objective is 150%. In my case, I knew what I wanted: to win the trading contest. So, after looking at previous winners, I determined that if I achieved their median return, I�d have roughly a 50/50 shot at winning. This told me I wanted a 200% return in one year. The second portion of a solid plan is knowing what you are willing to invest to reach your goal. In the investment arena, this takes the form of time and money. How much time and money will you spend researching, studying, going to seminars, talking to advisors, etc., to achieve your goal? For me, my investment was software, Van Tharp�s Trade Your Way To Financial Freedom and Van�s Developing a Winning Trading System that Fits You Home Study Program. I also dedicated 15 hours a week to study, which didn�t exactly please my wife! The point is to realize that investment on your part is necessary for success. The last piece of the plan is to determine your risk threshold. How much money are you willing to put at risk to achieve your goal? If it is less than 10%, you can�t realistically expect returns of 100%, although I�m sure some people have done that well. Know your �walk away point,� the point at which your losses cause you to quit. Back in 1997, I never determined a walk away point, so my money walked away for me. Knowing this risk threshold will help you as you develop your strategy. As tough as developing a plan was, it was even tougher to find a system that could help me reach all pieces of my plan. I did that in step two. Step 2: Find a Strategy that Fits YouYou might not think it�s true, based on trading ads and infomercials you see, but finding a strategy is very difficult. If it were only as easy as going to a free seminar in a hotel! In reality, finding a good strategy involves three areas: skill assessment, research and detailed development. The first part of finding a strategy is to do an accurate, honest skill assessment. What are your strengths and weaknesses, trading wise? Can you program your own system, or do you need an advisor? This assessment, if done right, will point you towards a strategy. Without this assessment, you are doomed. BEFORE I started trading in 2005, I took a long hard look at my abilities, and determined I had the skills to create my own system. The key is to match your skills to your strategy. Next comes research. Before you settle in on a strategy, you need to see what is out there that is working today. Books, magazines, and websites are a great way to see what is �state of the art.� Without current information, you may be researching old, tired ideas that don�t even work anymore. Numerous websites and newsletters (such as this one) give excellent free advice. It is best to hear what opposing viewpoints are out there before you leap into trading. Once you know your skills, and you�ve done the research, it�s time to get your hands dirty by doing detailed development. Of course, the level of detail depends on the trading route you�ve chosen. Since I decided to do my own strategy development, I�ll share the highlights of what I did. 1. Determine the basic type of system � trend following, swing trading, etc. I chose trend following. 2. Determine basic indicators � oscillators, moving averages, etc. For my system, I chose an x day breakout with oscillator confirmation. 3. Optimize results � find what parameter values work, without over optimizing. 4. Walk forward testing � verify system with untested data. 5. Monte Carlo testing � perform Van�s marble game test, except with walk forward trades. Of course, I have greatly summarized the work and depth of the five steps above, but all should be done to develop a robust strategy. Once this is completed, I recommend you check and double check your work. We�ll cover that step next week, as well as steps four and five, in the conclusion of this article. Kevin J. Davey finished in 2nd place in 2005 in a world famous trading contest, with a 148% return. He is continuing that success in 2006, and is currently in 1st place through January 31, with a 48% return. He can be reached at kdavey@kjtradingsystems.com.
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Passive vs. Active Investing Part Two by D. R. Barton, Jr. In last week�s article, we looked at some of the advantages and disadvantages of passive investing. We also touched on data that has been compiled to show the percentage of cash invested in passive mutual funds compared to the whole mutual fund universe. Last week I said the following, �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.� Several people have asked about how this number was compiled. Remember that for this discussion, passive investing is defined as index investing. Any fund that does not mimic an index would be considered active investing. This would include growth funds, balanced funds, income, sector, regional funds, etc. With the wide variety of specialty funds out there, it�s not surprising that only 14% of the money invested in mutual funds goes directly to a index-based funds. But a new study that�s coming out strongly suggests that this percentage of invested funds doesn�t tell the whole �passive vs. active� story. A working paper, that has not yet been published, takes a different approach to quantifying the amount of stock market cash invested passively. Messrs Bhattacharya and Galpin of the Indiana University have written a paper with the title Is Stock Picking Declining Around the World? Cutting to the essence of their research, the IU professors make the hypothesis that the amount of volume traded in any particular stock should be directly correlated to its market capitalization. If the volume traded matches up with the stocks market cap, then passive investing is the reason. If, on the other hand the volume is out of balance with what the market cap would predict, active investing has prevailed in that issue. Armed with these assumptions, the paper does some digging into trading records to come to some startling conclusions. Stock picking (a.k.a. ACTIVE investing) is dying in developed countries. In the period from 2000 to 2004, the paper concludes that passive investing accounts for a whopping 76% of volume traded in the U.S. markets, the highest percentage of any of the 42 countries studied. This seems to fly in the face of the 13.8% that is directly invested in passive funds. A likely explanation for the discrepancy is that active funds are managed less actively than we might assume. This data might confirm suspicions that active mutual funds are actually quite passive at the core and only active in a small part of their portfolio. Next week we�ll take a look the implications of all of this for traders and investors. Until then � Great Trading!
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