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Money Management Bullshit: Understand Position Sizing

I recently saw the following comment regarding money management:

“Every system in our report uses very simple money management: Trade one contract per trading signal in the markets specified by the vendor with no pyramiding.”
Trading Guru

This is NOT money management. If you ever see anyone declare the above as money management walk away fast as you are about to be conned. Money management is not some set amount of shares or contracts picked out of thin air. Money management answers the question of “how much?” At all times, given the risk you are taking, the money you have, and the volatility of the market — you must know the optimal number of shares or contracts to be long or short.

Enjoy this post? Check out Lou Holtz’s View on the Bullshit talked about the divide in America.

Ed Seykota on Testing Trading Systems

Ed Seykota was recently asked:

“I’ve got Excel on my computer…is it possible to make a good trading system on Excel or do I need to purchase…[a] sophisticated software program?”

Seykota Answered:

“A trading system is an agreement you make between yourself and the markets. You can use a number of ways to test the agreement before you make it. Excel has the advantage that you can see everything the system does. Other software has an advantage of speed and ease of use. You might consider starting off with Excel until you get a feel for system trading, and then move on to more specific software for comprehensive testing. You might also consider auditing a few runs of your testing software with Excel, to make sure you have accurate coding.”

More.


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Trend Following is for beginners, students and pros in all countries. This is not day trading 5-minute bars, prediction or analyzing fundamentals–it’s Trend Following.

Good Trend Following Article

An excerpt from recent SFO magazine article on trend following:

“The objective for any investor who wants to be active in the markets is quite simple. How does one make effective decisions in an uncertain and dynamic world? The problem is finding a generalized approach that will work effectively across a broad set of fast-paced asset markets. A realistic approach to decision-making should involve a methodology that reflects a functional world view or philosophy of how markets operate. This approach also should be replicable and tied closely to a system of management which can be structured in a variety of ways to fit a wide set of opportunities. Trend following is an efficient means of decision-making under conditions of uncertainty that reflects the peculiarities of asset markets that can be tailored to different time frames and risk profiles.”

Read full article.

Investment Insights of Trend Follower Michael J. Clarke

Michael J. Clarke is the president and founder of Clarke Capital Management, Inc. (“CCM”). He has offered the following public comments about his trend following firm:

“In 1989, I decided that I would investigate whether I could apply my computer software development knowledge and previous trading experience in generating computerized systems with which I could make a living trading futures. The development of my current trading philosophy has derived from the research into methods and strategies as well as my actual trading experiences since that investigation began.”

Continue reading “Investment Insights of Trend Follower Michael J. Clarke”

Feedback to a James Altucher Article on Trend Following

James Altucher recently posted an article on trend following. The article has brought forward an abundance of feedback. One trend follower wrote me to say:

JWH and the like advertise the riskiness of their investments on their sleeve, while some of the mean reversion hedge fund boys spend sleepless nights hoping no one ever figures out how much risk they are really taking. Who am I kidding? Most of those guys won’t even admit to themselves how much risk they are taking!…there are many different frameworks that one may view the markets through in order to make trading decisions. All such frameworks are what they are, simply illusions that we create in order to help us take some action (yes, even trend following). The test of whether such a framework is useful in the long run is whether it supports us in doing profitable behaviors. If our framework helps us ride winners, cut losses, and manage risk then it is likely to lead us to profits. If the framework is not consistent with these things, then it is likely just part of a bigger game we play to meet some emotional needs and learn some important lessons with some help from the markets…Strategies like the ones Mr. Altucher mentions are not inherently bad. However, by nature they attract investors that have emotional needs that the strategies appeal to (low apparent volatility, feelings of offering value), and the investors are often eager to overlook many of the very real, but hidden, risks involved. It might take a superhuman manager to consistently manage such hard to see risks in the face of constant temptation to go for bigger returns. I don’t like to set up situations where my financial well-being rides on someone consistently exhibiting superhuman skill and willpower. I would rather put my money in something that any idiot can manage as long as they don’t try to get too cute and go around trying to avoid drawdowns.”

My friend added more for those who think they can avoid volatility:

“If one focuses on the volatility of a trend trading strategy while understating its returns, and at the same time one ignores the “one time few-and-far-between huge drawdown events” typical of strategies that are built to avoid short term volatility of returns and one emphasizes the smoothness of the returns that exist outside that one time event, then one has an easily defeatable straw man trend follower to argue against. Reality shows us that strategies that have higher returns have higher risks. If you think you can get high returns without the commensurate level of risk, you might be prone to investing in strategies that do an excellent job of avoiding risk on 99.9% of days, but blow up on the other .1% of trading days.”

But what about “lower risk” strategies such as PIPEs? Feedback:

“What a novel way to avoid being in a drawdown: trade an instrument that is so illiquid that there is no market for it except under special circumstances. That makes it a lot more convenient to pretend that there is very little risk. If I get to make up my own price quote for an instrument on every day between my buy and sell points, then I can create an infinite Sharpe ratio as long as I sell it for more than I buy it. The only case where I ever have to face up to the big risks I really take is if the asset goes to a level that forces me to liquidate at a big loss. In that case my strategy does not appear quite so risk free. I do not mean to lambaste such investing strategies, as I am certain that they have their place. However, such styles are wonderfully efficient means to work out dramas about wanting to feel very safe all the time and not take any big risks and then have things suddenly blow up allowing one to be a victim. Generally, with these types of investments there is pretty high leverage involved if the fund is going to gear the returns to a level higher than a bit above the risk free rate. Under such circumstances the funds models for how much risk premium is warranted in a given situation only have to be a little bit off in a few cases to create a very ugly surprise for investors when the day comes that the fund can no longer maintain the illusion that their made up asset price is real. At that point they are forced to liquidate for heavy losses.”

What about trend followers providing value to the marketplace? Feedback:

“When the people trading the other strategies want to get out of the market when it has moved “too far”, who takes the other side of those trades? Might whoever that is perform the service of adding liquidity? After all, someone might demand to be paid very well for taking positions that are obviously ill advised by folks that have very complex decision making processes to tell them when a market is due to revert to the mean. If one doubts the value of the liquidity provider, consider the prospect of getting out of a trade without anyone to take the other side. This being the case, I fully support and encourage countertrend traders, fundamentalists, and other people that like to fade big moves to keep it up. I need a liquidity provider too.”


How can you move forward immediately to Trend Following profits? My books and my Flagship Course and Systems are trusted options by clients in 70+ countries.

Also jump in:

Trend Following Podcast Guests
Frequently Asked Questions
Performance
Research
Markets to Trade
Crisis Times
Trading Technology
About Us

Trend Following is for beginners, students and pros in all countries. This is not day trading 5-minute bars, prediction or analyzing fundamentals–it’s Trend Following.