Archive for 'Trading Tactics' Category
Diary Of An Investment Fund (Part One: The Market Movers)
12 January 2008It is ten past ten, and Mark, the order taker, watches the market with anxious rapture. He has a pending order to push, sell a million shares of some mining stock. As he was trained he examines the bids and offers every five seconds, and in between he watches the stock ticker, which has been sluggish all morning. He can sell anytime, but he waits patiently as he was trained. If he could find a good opening he could sell at a higher price and beat the average: two, maybe three cents better to make the client happy. He waits anxiously.
And then it happens.
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9 January 2008On Friday, January 11, Mr. Toto Cruz of IGC Securities (Broker Code: 140) made a presentation to institutional brokers, analysts and fund managers on their outlook for Philippine Equities in 2008. What follows are some excerpts from that talk which might indicated the flavor of institutional fund strategy in 2008.
Summary
The salient points of the presentation are:
- The world economy continues to be healthy and the US can avoid a recession in 2008.
- The bull market may be aging, but in its early stages.
- Growth premium in emerging markets over developed world will continue.
- Equities in 2008 will remain to be an attractive investment amidst low bond yields and reasonable corporate earnings outlook.
TREND ALIGNMENT .. THE SIMPLE LOGIC BEHIND IT ..
17 December 2007

I think it was at the p6chat xmas party last Friday when a couple of guys asked me when i intend to resume participating in the stock market. Of course my boring reply was "when i see the market resume a clear and strong uptrend".
Now why do I, as well as many other traders who trade with the trend, find this important? The answer is because if I align my long trades with an uptrend, I am stacking the odds in my favor that most of my trades will be profitable.
On The Turtle Myth: Michael Covel vs. Curtis Faith
9 December 2007If you’re a fan of trading literature, the chances are good that you have encountered the term “Turtle” before. What's the big deal about the "Turtles?" I won't attempt to duplicate the already voluminous information found on the web and books about them (I listed tons of links below). But in a nutshell, the “Turtles” are a group of commodity traders who were taught by Chicago speculators Richard Dennis and William Eckhart back in the 1980s. These traders were just people from all walks of life who were recruited and trained by Dennis and Eckhart as part of an experiment to answer the question:
Can trading skill be learned, or is the ability innate to a person?
What Trillanes Can Teach Me About Trading
6 December 2007I was originally going to title this: “Trillanes Could Almost Be A Trader.” However, that was too passive-voice, even for my taste, and that article a potential bandwidth waster if I wasn’t careful. Better to err on side of concise, especially on a blog.
Meanwhile, with events culminating in the aborted uprising at the Manila Peninsula last November 29, the recent life of Senator Antonio Trillanes IV has some traits that could make a great speculator—had he decided to take up capitalism instead of fascism.
The Seasonality Problem ([Not] A Conclusion)
2 December 2007Reflections On An Unfinished Experiment
I brought up The Seasonality Problem as a call for more objectivity. Being objective does not mean becoming obsessed with statistics (although numbers often help). Being objective means being obsessed with the truth.
Truth is an important thing, but it’s a tricky thing. Possible evidence of this “trickiness” is the reality that in over the centuries human civilization has lived on this planet, we’ve only figured out just about four ways to arrive at truth:
1. Authority – If someone we highly regard says something, we presume it to be true. Media and the Church enjoys a lot of this privilege.
2. Rationalization – We can use logical arguments to arrive at truth—or the process of deduction—like Sherlock Holmes.
The Seasonality Problem (Part Eight)
30 November 2007Not All Days Are Equal
One thing that significance will not tell you is whether the information you have just found is worth anything in the practical sense. To find that out, you have to examine and analyze your data.
Let’s revisit the table again:
Apart from the win:loss ratio, which gives you the batting average of each month, it’s also important to know the average magnitude of the returns (average wins/loss) for us to judge the worth of the results. In both cases, October outperforms the other months. Also note something: all of the months have a win:loss ratio higher than 1—meaning the number of winning trades is larger than losing trades. But what makes the winner is the reward:risk ratio—or the size of the wins vs. the size of the losses. In the case of the worst performing months (January and February), even if the number of winning trades exceeded the losing trades, the average size of the wins were smaller than the losses.
The Seasonality Problem (Part Seven)
30 November 2007Time and Tide
Thus, armed with our Nuts and Bolts, we can easily arrange and rearrange our data to form observations about our experiment. The first thing we can do is figure our exactly how many of our traders made money as a whole:













