May 2000Trading Tip:
Draw Line Channel
by Michael Ferguson
I have been using the draw line feature to help set up trade
opportunities visually. For trading the e-mini a percent value
of 0.135 creates a channel that equals two points. I set the
upper blue line at the stop level I would use in a trade. I
set the price in my online order ticket to the value of the red
line. Then I have a picture of my stop and reward to risk
ratio on screen when I make a reject/not-reject decision. A
one to one ratio is not good, so I am looking for an entry that has
a reasonable chance of not being stopped out, and that has better
downside potential than the lower blue line.
This is a tactical tool that I am experimenting with as I am
learning to trade. It is not a trade recommendation. It
is an idea that someone may be able to use or improve.
I move this line up and down continually as I follow the market
action, and keep the price in the ticket equal to the level of the
line on the chart to help prevent entering on the wrong side of the
trade.
Reproduced with written permission from Michael
Ferguson. Example selected by Howard Arrington.
Order Entry:
PreferredTrade by Howard
Arrington
Order execution is a key part of successful trading. I
value these things in the order execution system I have chosen to
use:
- Execution Speed and Fills
- Convenience
- Low Commissions
At the beginning of January, I moved
my trading account from E*Trade to PreferredTrade, Inc. and have
been very pleased with my experience with
PreferredTrade. Let me share my experience for your
benefit.
Speed & Fills: I place trades with PreferredTrade using
their order entry form, and within seconds a market order will be
filled. Quite often with limit orders I receive a fill that is
better than my limit order price. For example, I placed a
limit order to buy 1000 shares of QCOM at 106. QCOM was
trading at 106 1/4 at the time, and within a few minutes dipped
briefly below 106. When I checked my trade I was filled with
700 shares at 106, and 300 shares at 105 13/16. The fill at
105 13/16 was better than my limit price of 106 and put an
unexpected additional $56 in my pocket.
Convenience: PreferredTrade's order entry form is
integrated with Ensign Windows. I watch my charts and quote
page layout in Ensign Windows, and when I want to buy a stock I
double click on the Ask price on the Ensign Windows quote
page. This action fills in the order entry form with the
Buy instruction, default quantity, symbol, and Ask
price. I double click on the Bid price on the Ensign Windows
quote page to fill in the form to sell a stock. Or, the form
can be filled in manually.
I adjust the quantity and price, as desired, and then click the
Send button. The trade is submitted across the Internet
connection which I keep open when trading. My open orders show
as confirmed orders on the order entry form. It is extremely
easy and fast to modify the price, cancel the order, or check if the
order has been filled.
Low Commissions: See the bullet on the order entry form
labeled $7.75. That is the commission you pay to execute a
Nasdaq stock trade. My statements show I pay a commission of
$7.75 to buy, and $7.75 + $1.10 SEC fees to sell a Nasdaq stock for
a typical round trip commission of $16.60. Savings from lower
commissions really add up because I may trade several times a
week. By comparison, the last Nasdaq stock I traded in my
E*Trade account had a commission of $38.90 or a whopping $22.30
more.
The speed, fills, convenience and low commissions are all as good
as they get. I heartily recommend stock traders give
PreferredTrade, Inc. consideration. You can find the web page
for PreferredTrade by clicking this button
or call 888-889-9178. In either case, be sure to mention
that you are an Ensign user or Ensign referral.
Article:
Drought
by Bruce Gould
I was sitting in a restaurant back in the early 1970's and in the
booth next to me there was a salesman. He was talking to his
friend and it was clear that he was troubled. He was looking
for new sales job. He knew what he did best and what he did
best was to sell a dream. All he had to do was to believe in
the dream himself and he could sell anything. "I don't care
what it is. I can sell anything, just as long as I believe in
what I am selling", he told his friend. He was looking for
something to believe in so he could earn a living, for himself and
perhaps for his family, if he was married. I hope he found
what it was that he was searching for.
Believing in a dream is an admirable quality for a
salesman. It is a quality that the pianist has when she spends
hours and hours at the piano while her peers are at the swimming
pool, or at the school dance, or just hanging around the local
drive-in. It is the same quality that keeps a student
studying, a machinist working in order to own his own machine shop,
a waitress saving money to pay for her daughter's dance
lessons. It is a wonderful thing to believe in a dream and
most people who have succeeded in life have had a dream they
believed in. In life, if you have a dream and if you believe
in it, you can do almost anything. But having a dream won't
work for you in futures or options trading or even in stock
investing. Futures and options trading and stock investing are about
making money. If you are trying to make money on a dream in
futures or in options, most likely you will not succeed.
Let's talk about drought. It may be that a drought will
occur in the Midwest this year and that the crops will not be as
bountiful as they have been in previous years. There may be a
shortage of corn or soybeans or wheat or numerous other commodities
for which there are no futures markets. This may well
happen. And then again, it may not. The rain may come,
the drought may end, the crops will grow and the harvest will be
sufficient to meet the demand; the harvest may even exceed the
demand. When you buy or sell based on that happening which has
not yet happened (which is, after all what a dream really is) you
have to be very careful.
If you are long soybeans based on your belief that the drought
will come, and the market moves 20 cents against your position
before it runs in your favor, you are risking $1,000 per contract
that the event which has not yet happened will happen and that when
it does happen it will make you a profit. If the market moves
40 cents against you before it moves in your favor, you are risking
$2,000 per contract on an event that has not yet moved the market in
your favor. If the market moves 80 cents against you before it
moves in your favor, I won't even tell you how much you are risking
by betting on a dream. Whenever you buy a dream or a story in
commodities or options or even stocks, be very careful that the
story does not overtake your common sense. Be from
Missouri. Believe it when you see it.
There were two investors in an office, one said; "I am long ten
contracts of soybeans because I am sure there will be a drought and
prices will rise." The other said, "I am from Missouri, I look at
what might not happen as well as what might happen and while it
looks like the drought may come, I hate to invest a lot of money
buying dreams. I am long one contract, if the market closes
$200 against me today, I am gone. " Which trader would you bet
has the best chance of becoming rich in the short run? If
anyone is going to become rich in the short term, it will be the
trader with the ten contracts. Which trader would you bet has
the best chance of becoming not rich in the short term? Once
again, it is the trader with the ten contracts.
It is said that when one wades across a river, he or she never
steps in the same water twice. When a foot is lifted and moved
forward, the old water flows downstream and the water that you now
step in is brand new. It is the same with futures and options
and stock investing. The fact that you were successful on a
previous occasion when riding a market through a $2,000 per contract
decline against your position does not mean that the market will
bail you out again. In fact, your very survival the first time
may actually work against you the second time. You may adopt
the philosophy; "Oh, I rode the market out last time and I came out
okay, so this time I am going to ride it out again and everything
will be fine." This philosophy may be the short story of your
short career as a futures, options or stock market investor.
When you buy a dream, or a story, or an event that has not yet
happened, the very fact that the dream came true the last time you
believed in it does not mean that it will come true for you this
time. You are not a salesman who can sell anything he or she
believes in. You are an investor. There are two
important things in every investor's life. The first is not to
lose your money. The second is to make a profit. Looking
at these two events, the former is far more important to you than
the latter. You may be able to invest tomorrow if you do not
make a profit today. You may not be able to invest tomorrow if
you lose most of your money today.
I was having breakfast on New Year's Day in Seattle when a
waitress asked her favorite customer, "Well, Jack, and was last year
a good year for you?" And Jack replied, "When you reach my
age, any year you make it through is a good year." The
important thing for Jack was making it through the year. The
important thing for you, as an investor, is not to lose your
money. To keep from losing your money, you must remember that
if you buy a dream and the dream works out, that is wonderful.
But you will not be able to build a long-term investment program
based on buying dreams. You have to build an investment
program based on cold, hard reality. You have to have a
plan. You have to be able to use your plan in years when there
is a drought and in years when there is rain. You have to be able to
use your plan in markets where a drought is not a factor, such as
trading silver. You have to be able to use your plan in
wintertime or in spring or in summer or in the fall. You have
to have a plan that you can understand. Your plan has to make
sense, at least to you if no one else.
Suppose you were lucky enough to have a spare $10,000 and decided
to turn it over to person (A) or to person (B) to invest on your
behalf. Since it was your money, you would most likely
interview both (A) and (B). Person (A) told you she was sure
that the drought would come and that she planned to buy ten
contracts of soybeans for you Monday morning on the open.
Person (B) told you she had no idea if the drought would come, but
what she was going to do for you was this: She would buy one
contract of soybeans for you Monday morning on the open and enter a
stop/loss order $200 below your entry price. If you were not
stopped out and if the market closed in your favor, she would buy a
second contract for you on the close. After the close, she
would enter a stop/loss order for you $200 below each
position. If the market opened higher on Tuesday, she would
raise your stop/loss orders for both positions to the break-even
point while at the same time entering a profit/exit order for you 40
cents above your average purchase price. These would be OCO
orders (one cancels the other), whichever filled first, the
break-even stop/loss order or the profit/exit order, the order which
would no longer be needed would be canceled by her for you. If
the market did not close in your favor on Monday, she would
liquidate your one contract at the market on the close and
re-examine the market when it opened on Tuesday.
Now this proposal of person (B) might not be something that
anyone would actually do. It might be too complicated or it
might be too simple or it might not involve enough contracts for
you. It might be a lot of things; there is one thing it
certainly is. It is a plan and it is a low-risk plan.
The proposal of person (A) to buy ten contracts for you Monday
morning on the open is not a plan, it is an event and it is a
high-risk event. If soybeans open sharply higher on Monday,
say up 20 cents on the fear of a drought, and you buy ten contracts
"on the open" 20 cents higher than Friday's close, and the market
then subsequently declines to the same price it closed at on Friday,
you have a paper loss of 20 cents per contract, or $1,000.
Since you only had only $10,000 to invest and since you bought ten
contracts, you have a paper loss of 10 times $1,000 or $10,000 or
100% of the money that you turned over to person (A) to invest for
you. It is quite possible that this could actually happen
within a few minutes or a few hours of a single trading day.
It is possible to lose 100% of your capital before one day is
over. It is possible when you buy a dream, a story, a tale, a
drought, or a flood, or one catastrophe or another to suffer a
substantial loss of your capital within a single day. Buying
ten contracts of soybeans "at the market on the open" because you
believe a drought may occur is not a plan; it is an event. It
is also a high-risk event. This high-risk event may make you
rich if you are lucky. If you are not lucky, it may make you
the opposite of rich.
Believing in what one sells works very well for salesmen and this
belief helps salesmen earn a living. Even if a salesman
believes in something that is, in fact, no good the salesman's
belief alone may be enough to make him money. Believing that
there will be a drought in the Midwest, however, will not make you
money. Belief in a drought requires more than a belief, it
requires an actual drought. And the drought may never
come. Remember Jack's rule. "Make it through the
year." It is more important for your success that you have a
plan than it is that you have a belief. Your plan doesn't even
have to be a good one, initially. For your long-term success,
even a bad plan that you can test one contract at a time is better
than the best belief. Plans you can work on, you can improve
them, they can be modified, thrown away, adapted, adjusted,
readjusted, brought back to life until one day you may actually have
a plan that will work. Beliefs are very good for
salesmen. Plans are very good for investors.
Reproduced with written permission from BRUCE
GOULD'S FREE FUTURES AND OPTIONS NEWSLETTER http://www.brucegould.com/
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