Saturday, 28 November 2009

Trade Recap


Decent week. But as I've said before and how this chart makes painfully obvious, these many small positive days and no losing days are good for morale, but they lack real effect on bottom line.

I need some +1k days now. I will get those by increasing size to 3-4 lots or holding onto winners longer.

























This weeks trades:
**********************

Five trade ideas; 12 trades
99 pips profit (based on 1 lot, but 2x I traded with 2 lots...)
- 1.5 pips roll cost

If I increase to 3-4 lots I'll need 6-8 lots total on "stand-by" to continue with my averaging.



















Keep in mind
It takes years to become a trader and I can’t even say that for certain. I’m still not there but I’m still around and giving myself at least 5 years. If it doesn’t work out for me or you after 5 years, just think of the countless people who have gone to college and have never entered into the field of their degree.



Friday, 27 November 2009

EURCHF - 15067-94 | + 27 pips || More On Intuition & Gut-Feel in Trading

Duration:
15.5 hours (had trouble doing the math)
7 of which sleep.

Idea: If SNB intervened around 1.5030-60 less than 24 hours before - why not again today?
But no intervention seems to be going on really... so I thought I'd close the trade.

P&L: 27 pips


[Edit: After reading the above I really must question my logic - if SNB intervened below 1.5060, why would I buy above? Goes to show that mostly my impatience gets in the way!]

**************************************************************************
Follow up on intuition I found at forexbirds blog:

"Back in 2007, although I had allready 2 and half years of forex trading experience on my back, I was still hooked on indicators, "systems" and methodologies found on technical books and the internet. It took me another two years to emancipate myself from all this stuff and to evolve towards simplicity : all I need now is to feel the price movement. Nothing more, nothing less. No indicators, no systems, no trading teachers or gurus. I still have indicators on my charts but I don't pay much attention to them anymore. Trading, scalping especially, is pure geometry."

******************************************************************************

This is an extract from an article on marketwatch.com:

"Last Friday, furthermore, Richard Russell, editor of Dow Theory Letters, who just a few days previously had declared that the intermediate and primary trends were now bullish, changed his mind. "I had no specific reason to do so," Russell explained to his clients, "except for my gut-feeling." "

Interesting no?!

******************************************************************************


Wednesday, 25 November 2009

Spike No2 | +10pips


Chillin' in bed watchin a french news programme (antenne 2). My notebook close by. Watching 1.5094 level. Suddenly it broke out and went completely loco. Didn't know why. Still don't. But 1.5140 was my sell level. Then less than 20 seconds later it was 10 pips lower. Thank you market.

Squeeze To 1.5090 | +13.5 pips (x 2 lots)


That downward correction of US GDP figs changed market sentiment yesterday I reckon. So even though I had felt good being short 1.4980 yesterday and day before, today after reading reports from banks about it, I felt as though this weak dollar might just have some room to run short term. I had 1.5060 in mind. But when it got to 1.5053 I couldn't resist and sold some. Not best idea. Especially as I picked my entry just before a 30 pips squeeze. But I just couldn't believe we wouldn't linger around big figure 1.5000 bit longer?! I guess everyone did.

Doubling up saved the day.
+13.5 pips (x2) = 27 pips the reward for the risk

Once again the position was showing me -50pips (on 1 lot - 25pips on 2lots :P) though at worst point. So again I've been lucky. How much longer can this last....

In The Black - Reflection


In the black again for the first time since summer.
Maybe an early x-mas gift from the market gods...? Or maybe just teasing me so that I risk more...

As you can see here from my gainers and losers over the past 6 months I'm someone who is right 4/5 of time. Only problem: As I don't use stops and tend to get overconfident the losses in the 1/5 explode and eat up the 4/5. It's like a cancer taking over.

As long as I don't have winners that "explode" I'm not on the right path to success.

Tuesday, 24 November 2009

Luck And Stuff | +17.2pips


This trade went ideally. Had my level (1.4980) I'm comfortable being short EURUSD. Then went out, come home and find 17.2 pips smiling at me. ;)

18hour wait for wanted outcome | +7.5 pips on 2lots


1st lot EURUSD I sold @ 1.4933, 2nd @ 1.4987
average 1.4960

Then I waited and waited... and then waited some more. Until finally after
18 (eight-teen) hours they showed me 7.5 pips ....
Had been down close to 30 pips (on average price) - so once again I've been lucky to get away.





Sunday, 22 November 2009

Revisiting My Trading Past (graphs)


Just wanted to cheer myself up a little after looking at my shity 2009 performance :D so I looked at couple of good years I had with my PA. Luck had more to do with it than anything else in 2004 though. And I knew it then and know it now.

2006 turned out to be catastrophic year. But this posts about what gets us so far as to think we're market wizards.







































Each blue bar is either net result of a position or in some cases like 2004 -20k bar: all the trades in that stock consolidated (even though it was over 3months of agony!)

PS: Reason for 2004 PA being 60k and not 39k - mainly income revenue I put aside for trading.

Friday, 20 November 2009

My Daily P&L Since May (Graph)

65 days of trading 7 losing days (10.7%). 58 winning days (89.3%). And STILL NET LOSER. I should fire my risk controller?! :P

[Edit: Just noticed it's more like 12 (18%) losing days and only 50 (82%) winning days - missed those small losing days....)



For anyone interested in my adventure since the beginning:
Today I am down close to 200$ since the beginning.

Keep in mind these are only the actual days I had any gain or loss. Especially since Aug there have been pauses with many days of no trading...


























[top chart reflects correction of 2nd chart (without color) . On days where I traded several currencies I have several bars each reflecting the specific P&L - can't be bothered to net that just yet.... but that would give me "cleaner" graph I guess... didn't happen that often though....]

Too Much Deliberation | +3.7 pips


Argh. -18pips before it turned and showed me 3.7 net pips profit.
Kind of stupid. I really must change this daft habit of taking small profits and risking large losses... After I bought at 1.4822 I read Saxo Bank sees EURUSD 1.45 by christmas.... :S That made me happy to get out at all with a profit :)


























below is my initial post for today which led to the above trade
=========================================================
Too bad there's no prize for having good ideas in fx.
My post before going to bed yesterday would have been such a good thing to trade on....
No point living in the past though....!
SO....... Where from here.... consolidation and maybe re-test of 1.4850 something I should play?



Thursday, 19 November 2009

Must Say Am Tempted To Sell EURUSD...

1.4920-35 resistance.....?

Edit: 20.Nov 13:16CET - The price is now 1.482 - I didn't sell. I didn't trade. I AM pissed.
Maybe I should just advise and not trade :D Actually pulling the trigger seems not to be thing for me at moment, but strategy more so?! Damit :D

Walking On Ice | +4.1 pips


Liked the level. Bought. Watched it go 14-15 pips against me.
Took profit at net +4.1 pips.
Duration held: 15min
Maximum underwater = nearly 4x my actual profit.
Considered averaging at 1.4850, but thought I'd let it fall 20 pips before I do anything.
But this once again showed me I probably need 80% winners to survive with my trading style (for when I do get stuck with a loser it sure as hell won't be 5 pips!).

Wednesday, 18 November 2009

Three Small Trades | +11.4 pips


Trade recap for the day. (see this post aswell)
Three trades
Pips & Duration held
3.7 6.5 min
3.8 7.0 min
3.9 pips 26.0 min

net +11.4 pips
average duration held 13 min


Sell, Nap, Buy


Put on the trade (sell EURUSD @1.49585) and went for a nap. Woke up dreaming/imagining it's at 1.4950. It was around 1.4954. Sold anyway. Now it can fall back to 1.4900 for sure :)

P&L: 3.9 pips net
Duration held: 26min

Didn't do the 2-3 lots thing yet. Can't yet. Mental barrier.

Edit: 14.32 CET - Already dropped another 10pips - Should have just turned an napped further till I dream it's 1.49 :D

Edit: 15:05 CET - Now it's dropped 30 pips since I went flat :S But I can't be mad at myself. I just am too stupid to hold onto positions. My nature :)

Edit: 15:32 CET - Well - quite surprised with that move back into 1.4970 area. Sold some for another 3.7 net proift. Duration held: 6min.








Tuesday, 17 November 2009

Recap Of Trades Till Now (November)


Well, if you've been following my October FX trading and performance you might be starting to wonder why I'm bothering for these small amounts. I've been asking myself that anyway. But yesterday I watched a film called "The Age of Stupid" which puts in perspective even such amounts. And in turn makes me question the value for humanity of such a past-time or hobby.

So Novemeber 3 trades worth a profit of 130$. I believe my broker made 18$ on each of those round trips. Maybe I should just start with 6 lots instead of 1. Might give me a heart attack but bottom line would improve dramatically. Then again maybe it's cos I only bet such small amounts that I can trade in the way I do at the moment (i.e. not lost on a trade in 2 months and rarely even having strong enough conviction to trade in the first place).

I'm still close to 400$ underwater since the start of this FX experiment.






Monday, 16 November 2009

Bernanke Talk Triggering Stops - Small Trade


Bernanke was just commenting some BS about wanting strong dollar. I didn't have my trade software open and was looking at the quotes on another webbased screen. It was suddenly 1.4904 after being 1.4970- I thought for a minute my brains gone soggy or eyes bad. So by the time I found reason why it had taken hit and started software it was 1.4930! Then I watched it twiching backward and forward - up 5-6 pips in 1 second , next few seconds down 12 pips. That got me bit nervous, but got out with 7.3 pips net. Which is fine by me. Beggars mustn't be choosers :D

I'd better not go into how I felt like shorting 1.4984 this morning and didn't. Should trust my bloody intuition more often!

Trading Psychology: Intuition & Gut reactions

[Edit 27.NOV.2009: Just collected some more evidence in THIS post regarding gut-feel and intuition]


To quickly get straight what intuition means: I for one use the word as shorthand representing a complex set of interrelated observations and arguments that are mostly non-cognitive or somehow running in the background of our mind. Prof. Gigerenzer defines an intuition as a judgment that (i) appears quickly in consciousness, (ii) whose underlying process we are not aware of, yet (iii) is strong enough to act upon.


Of course few traders rely solely on intuition as the basis for their trading strategy. However many use it I believe. The explanation for putting on certain trades would be very time-consuming to express rationally especially with traders in a stressed environment.

I read in a book that "...it is effectively mathematically impossible for even an expert chess player to calculate rationally all the possible moves and countermoves available to the player and his or her opponent." Yet they do so in a way. Therefore one could argue that they put to use their intuition in a very effective way.

Gut reactions are often the result of simple rules of thumb. We're not really aware of these rules of thumb most of the time and they'll be based on a simple reason often. Intuitive descisions aren't only more economical and faster but also often simply better Gigerenzer concludes.

Gut reactions are not necessarily incompatible and in some cases may even be complimentary to a good trader I believe. Simple & informal heuristics can often turn out successful in decision making studies* in unrelated fields have found.

Would be interested on other peoples point of view whether some form of instinct or intuition guides their trades aswell.


*Gigerenzer (2007) & (Hutchinson & Gigerenzer, 2005, p. 98)
Gerd Gigerenzer is a german psychologist working at the Center for Adaptive Behavior and Cognition (ABC) in Berlin & former Professor of Psychology at the University of Chicago, and John M. Olin Distinguished Visiting Professor at the University of Virginia Law School. He has been a Fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences in Stanford, and visiting scholar at Princeton University and Harvard University.





Friday, 13 November 2009

Step Away From The Monitor, Take Your Hands From The Mouse


It's interesting, amusing even. I knew (?!) the moment I was analysing my trade and writing my post last night that this would happen: Morning would be nicely higher. And instead of taking reward bounty from the table for what I "felt" would happen (i.e. a sprint of covering into Eur GDP no's) I literally made pocket change :(

Now the lesson has to be for me: Watch the price levels, set a exit level (maybe in terms of hours) and step away from screens, go to sleep, whatever. But be sure to just NOT WATCH IT MINUTE BY MINUTE. My inner radar is reacting to swing trading, not scalping it seems.

Even the 1.4920 level I casually mentioned saw a full two hours of struggle. Must have been important for some reason.

But no reason to be angry at myself. After all I'm taking away an important lesson for free. Things can get so much better now!


Notes:

Little squares indicate where I bought (green) and sold (red).
1st green highlighted area shows morning level
2nd shows the mentioned 1.4920 level [even though 1.4880-90 level was by far the most important of day by time spent - and I'd also written in y'day blogpost that I expect 1.4950-80 level to see a touch - didn't get that - so I must be careful not to succumb fallacious reasoning!]



Trading Psychology: Fallacious Reasoning

I've been reading a book on criminal investigation and came across a chapter that deals with what investigators should keep in mind so as not to fall into the trap of fallacious reasoning. The following is deducted therefrom and applied to trading. It mirrors what I believe to have lived though myself and also found spelled out in part over at TraderFeed over several posts.

It appears we human animals succumb to fallacious reasoning for several reasons:

a. abstract nature of premises (abstract = theoretical ; premise = proposition from which conclusion is drawn )
b. emotive quality of trading (emotive = characterized by exciting emotion)
c. mental mindset or condition (i.e. the strategies of the present and future are based upon successful strategies used by the trader in the past)
d. fixation (i.e. preconceived notions are adhered to even in the face of contradictory evidence)
e. verification bias (i.e. failure to seek disconfirmatory evidence even though trading requires the active seeking of evidence that contradicts the hypothesis for putting on a trade)
f. wanting to see taking over reasons for holding a trade versus expecting to see based on probabilities
e. intellectual and cognitive abilities of individual at hand (basically: I might be to thick to see what the deal is even if it's laid out in front of me - reminds me of math class at college)


Thursday, 12 November 2009

Boredom Trade EURUSD 1.4836


Just been watching EURUSD out the corner of my eye and suddenly had the urge to buy EURUSD 1.4836 - based mainly on the fact that 1.50 is the resistance it's bouncing back of **. Didn't even have trading software app open, just watching it in a browser from time to time....

** Well that argument has just once again proved to myself the mistakes I make. I clearly am buying intuitively cos I think 1.4950-80 is on the cards Friday session and yet I just got out with only 5 pips and will probably wake up tomorrow to find it's 1.4920 or something like that.

Can't bring myself to go long now again... Darnation! At least I only held it for 8 minutes. Always look on the bright side right. (5.3 pips net gain)



























My software is a bit crazy it seems. That gap (before my entry) isn't actually one, but where I started my trading app - somehow the last minutes candle gets lost....?!

Some Thoughts After Browsing Company Results


Today I've been looking at some 9m (YTD) results of companies reporting. It's interesting: certain ones like Food & Construction are actually seing revenue/sales higher yoy. Bottom line also looking good after tax and interest for them. These two I looked at tend to grow organically with little debt appetite. Companies with debt are going to be frightening ride when/if inflation kicks in H210?!

Then on the other side you have companies that are dependent on business spending like Travel Agents. This one in particular I was looking at had 800m gross profit last year and 600m this ytd. Net profit last year was 125m (EBIT was 125m also) and this year -5m (EBIT +3m). So this companies overhead/payroll is really hurting it, aka dividends will suffer big time.

I spoke to a friend in a services company earlier in the week - she's been told they need to lay off 30-50% in her team, and that she'll have to choose who. It's not a booming economy by any standards in the western world that anecdote tells me (along with the 2nd paragraph).

However china and india are growing like crazy and if you own shares in a company in that market or in a niche with low competition, this year is going to be fine (better than last year).

*yoy=year-on-year
** ytd=year-to-date (well Jan1-Sep30 in context)

Tuesday, 10 November 2009

Miss My Old VWAP Trading Days


Today I didn't trade. I was watching instead. Like the cheetah stalking pray. But there was no pray in my neck of the woods. Just lots of ants running around instead of anything juicy to dig into ;)

So I was surfin and readin other peoples stuff and stumbled across this site called Hard Right Edge. There were some good tips there. Reminded me of my cash equities trading days. On a good day I'd be given an order to trade "VWAP" from the point in time order was received until close (sometimes ex-close). Meaning I had to beat the average price of transactions. Those kind of trades are what I adored. You (trader, bank) guarantee to give the client VWAP and basically gamble on direction of market and that you can outguess market.

Sometimes during the session news would break and loads of volume would be created changing VWAP very fast. Say you were trading 200k shares of something worth 44.5, VWAP 44.5 and then news breaks 2.5 hours before closing and all the volume goes though at 44.1. If you're a seller you hit the jackpot cos you tend to have sold the biggest chunk by that time, if you're buyer you feel like hanging yourself when you tell the desk head. :)

Of course news is scheduled mostly so you can factor in that there will be volume coming in. Also closing had 20% of daily volume so you needed to keep chips (shs) in "reserve". I really miss that. Most banks don't even have the balls or risk appetite to offer such services anymore. Maybe afraid hedgies screw them or god knows what. [Edit: On second thoughts the guys using those trading algorithms at the large banks probably got an edge over manual VWAP traders like myself at the time? I was at a smallish risk averse bank so not sure...]

But if you get a decent size order to trade VWAP I always found it nearly impossible to screw it up - especially if you traded both sides of market actively and literally "felt" the resistance and support. Made money for the bank more times than not. Sadly one colleague in particular didn't (he was always leaning on the idea of time slicing orders, which is a big gamble) and of course cost a hefty sum compared to commission earned on that trade. Desk head got cold feet and that was the end of that fun. :(


Monday, 9 November 2009

USDCHF - 10 hours & only B/E :S


What an annoying trade.
Duration held: 10 (!) hours
Pips: 0.4 (!)
Max. red*: -240.00
Max. green*: +45.00
Realized Gain/Loss: +4.00

[* Thought about writing max. drawdown - but I'm not really sure it's right for the context - or then what I should call the point at which I was in the black....]

Well that will teach me to start a monday overmotivated to put on any old trade and only see how I feel once it's on. My only vague hope when I put on the trade was that USDCHF would move back to big figure. It never did. Just south from the word go :)

Doubling up around 1.0062 would have been wise move in hindsight. But I thought if the floor falls out and EURUSD crosses to 1.5030 I'd be in trouble.

I was actually trying something new today in some respect. I read over at TraderFeed that we often change our frame of mind as soon as we put on a trade. And I do that very often. My instinct or gut is reacting mostly to 12-48 hour resistance and breakout points. But as soon as I'm in the trade for say 30-60 min. I change my perception of what is happening or what happened. So anyway - today I was trying to sit out my hunch. It didn't work. Oh well.



Sunday, 8 November 2009

Performance (Warrants) - Week of 8th Nov















250.00 I got back in bro refund from Bank A (which charges 1% - and can get lost).
I've also added how much bro I've generated trading warrants since the start of the experiment.

Next steps:

- Adding by how much I was underwater at the worst point. For example on the 30.10.2009 trade I was down over 6'000 intraday. On paper it looks so tame with just the end return.

- Adding the weighted return to each trade. At the bottom I already have the total return weighted.

Positive points:

1. Got bro back
2. When I saw no opportunity I didn't try and force the market to give me any profits and walked away.
3. No doubling up on positions going south

Negative points:

1. Thinking that I've paid my banks/brokers 1461.- is a bit sickening (since beginning)
2. Only used 20% of account balance this week.
3. Can't use leverage to trade warrants currently

* Also just noticed that in the amount "investment" I've included is the entry price PLUS commission - which isn't really "clean" performance measurement!

Friday, 6 November 2009

Felt Extremely Aggressive!

I've contacted a fairly large bank and said I want certain conditions. These conditions would let the bank earn a fixed ticket fee when I trade their warrants and a 10bp fee when I trade shares in that banks local market.

I clearly stated these requirments of mine at the outset of the account opening process. I was given the impression that those would be doable. During that process since Tuesday (or earlier?) the account manager has sent me forms to fill in regarding where the money came from etc (which I completed and returned overnight). Then he decided that my photocopies of ID weren't enough and that they needed me to either come by personally or drop into a branch. I went to a branch and had that done.

So today he calls me, tells me he's received everything. It's all in order he says. Then: However regarding conditions I won't be able to offer you those rates at the outset. We need to see how your turnover is and what kind of transactions. So I ask him: What's the counter offer?! He said none really, he's been told to suggest the account run for 6 months with me trading at usual 0.8% (0.4% electronically) and that even for there own fcking warrants where they have a 4-10% spread!

I felt like telling him what a pisshead he is and hanging up. But I tried to stay calm and tell him in that case I'd be unable to trade with them. He didn't seem in the least bothered. Useless halfwit! Those kind of things really get on my wick. Spend loads of time sorting out paperwork and some moron in the bank thinks they need six months of transactions before they decide IF they can offer better rates.

Well, life's all about plan B isn't it!? So I already have another bank lined up doing final checks to open an account at even cheaper rates than I asked the one mentioned above. I'll be damned if I don't get this ball rolling! As Samantha Fox eloquently put: NOTHINGS GOING TO STOP ME NOW!!!!!

No trades since beginning of week. Enjoy your weekend!

Thursday, 5 November 2009

Ethics & Trading: Desk Head Gambles Away Millions Via FX-Trades


"The investigation established that Desk Head ‘A’ and certain other employees on Desk X had engaged in and/or facilitated unauthorised foreign exchange (“FX”) and precious metals transactions by using certain international wealth management customers’ money without their authorisation and allocating any resulting profit or loss to the affected customers’ accounts. There was a high volume of FX transactions during the Relevant Period; UBS’ investigation identified approximately 50 such trades per day during 2006, which continued (at a reduced rate) throughout 2007." (source: FSA, UK)

- FX transactions could be executed by providing UBS’ FX traders with only an identifier for the trade and the details of the amount and the currency to be traded. Full details of the transaction, including the account number, could be provided to UBS’ FX traders up to 24 hours later. This allowed the performance of the trade to be assessed before Desk Head ‘A’ decided how any losses (or profits) should be allocated;

- FX trades that had already been executed and booked could be cancelled and then subsequently re-booked onto another customer’s account; and

- FX trades made nominally on behalf of a number of customers could be consolidated into a single trade with an ‘averaged’ price, thereby hiding the number of deals and the patterns of price."

The damage the bank had to compensate clients for was over 40million....

The oldest tricks in the book...
Money does bring out the worst in people eh....


Wednesday, 4 November 2009

Pixar-Disney Film: (Thumbs) Up


I love stumbling across films that I'm not really expecting much from - apart from a bit of entertainment - and then finding them to be funny and yet deep in a way and really enjoyable. It's like finding an exotic secluded beach in some wild yet beautiful part of the world and having the impression you're a discoverer or adventurer treasure-hunting. I'm a big cartoon fan, so this type of action loaded long "cartoon" was just my ticket. The dog is such good fun. (IMDB)

Which brings me to my trading. Not long ago an advisor asked me why I wanted to trade: fun or income. I want both. I want trading adventures that are fun, exciting - an adrenaline kick. And yet I'd like to pay for whatever luxuries in life I want with the income from this adventure - if possible. I guess I want to have the cake and also eat it.

At the moment I'm not sensing much opportunity intraday for my favorite trading style. But as I read today - here - knowing when to stay sidelined is one of the most important abilities of any trader.

I'm making some progress opening an account as a "pseudo hedge fund" with one bank at the moment. Aim: get a track record going and lot better fees than I currently have in place. Should know by friday if administrative part of it is looking good.

Tuesday, 3 November 2009

Spreads Making Life Hard














The Stock
This bluechip saw a decent runup. Yesterday 15-20min before the close I decided to buy some puts on it. For a start I didn't trust the Dow being up 120 points. Also this stock seems to have lost steam (unable to smash prior days high). Not going up as fast and mood in general seems less euphoric.

The Warrant
The put had been trading .20/.21 in the morning and then .19/.20 for most the day till the Dow came in so strong, then it went .18/.19. I bought.

My emotions
I had been contemplating going long the put at .20 for a while y'day (14-16CET). So when the Dow was up like it was, I just had feeling that .19 was a good price to be long in case we saw a Dow reversal intraday. The reversal did happen, but to my dismay the Dow sprinted toward the close of US session giving me a very bad feeling about how my Puts would do this european a.m.

Shortly before the options/warrants european opening underlying was 47.95-48. There market maker was pricing warrant .19/.20. So I was annoyed at myself that I've bought this put when stock was 48.30-48.35 and I can't even get out without losing bro.*


Performance
Anyway. Stock went to 47.85 and my warrant .20/.21 - I knocked them out. Net + 800.-, or 4% (rounded). Should factor in that I've got money sidelined that makes the real return more like .8% - and therefor a lot less impressive.


Thoughts
I'm just risking too much for too little though. If price doesn't change I'm out of 5% spread plus .4% commission each way. If underlying moves down .2%-.8% I'm only able to get out taking a hit on commission, so loss of -0.80%.

*Told myself I must find some deal where I can short shares directly with 3-5x leverage. I'd be a lot less inclined getting screwed by the spread then.

Not surprising the market makers are cash generators for banks?!