"A man is not finished when he is defeated. He is finished when he quits."

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

July 22nd


When pro football players get back to the NFL after time away and are asked what the biggest challenge was when coming back, they often remark that it is adapting to the speed of the game. That is how I felt today as I got a full day to trade for the first time in a while. I made some early gains in my old buddy, SKF, going 9 for 9 winners and up $144 from the open until about 11:20 am. At that point, I noticed from my watch list that FAS was giving a much better day-range over the same time frames as SKF. So, I switched to FAS. That's where the "Speed of the Game" hit me. Back in March, when I was early into paper-trading, I would inevitably try to play reversals without any feel for how SKF moved, especially in that ultra-volatile trade environment (You all remember March, right?). I would get punished averaging in much too soon, given the amount of day-range SKF had at that time. Today, without really thinking about it, I got long FAS and found myself in the same environment as SKF in March. Why? As I and everyone knows, it is a 3x trading vehicle and therefore, moves 33% faster than the 2x that is SKF. I was not prepared for the extra speed, however. I found myself down, nearly bumping up against my margin limit. All the while, I knew this thing was really going to crack eventually. So I held, and held some more. Most of the afternoon I held, then I decided that I would lighten up some. I took four losses and held the remainder of my position. A bit after 3:00 pm, FAS did come down and I scaled out of the rest of my position but not enough to offset the four losses from earlier. I was in the hole by roughly -$70. The bummer is that I exited too early on those remaining shares... I could have taken a very nice gain even after those four scale-out losses, had I held a bit longer.
I continued to experiment and try to get a feel for FAS by getting long on four more trades in it; collecting winners in each and adding $113 to my account, putting me back in the "black" for the day. I then went back to SKF to close out the day, adding $25 with two more winners.
It was an exciting and nerve-wracking day, that's for sure. And, as is often the case, lack of patience hurt my results.
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24 for 28, an 86% success rate. Gain of $67 in 6.5 hours of live trading.