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

Monday, August 10, 2009

August 10th


It didn't go too badly today but the gains were small. I still find that I am not buying the breakouts and breakdowns but rather, am buying reversals and trying to hold them as long as I feel is right. This is a mode of thinking that often excludes me from the biggest moves. I have to learn to identify more entry opportunites and not wait for the one or two familiar entries I have. Also some patience wouldn't hurt. I missed the breakout in GENZ late in the day because it was just trading in a small channel causing me to abandon it. I felt it was going to do something but I was looking for greener pastures... Speaking of patience, I am still in scalper mode. this is really not the type of trading I am trying to achieve. My largest gain today was only 9 cents (on a full 1000 share position). The next best was also 9 cents but with a half-position of 500 shares. I will study my entries and exits later and see if more was available. As mentioned earlier, my preference for playing reversals of direction may be a limiting factor in this.
Had one scratch trade and three others that were essentially scratches. I wanted to play conservatively and not take losses on stops when I recognized that I was in questionable trades. ONe trade did go to stop-loss and I exited minus $35. A bad decision at end of day on GENZ... I let it run past my stop while talking with my wife who had just come in from work. It moved pretty quickly... the stop loss was about 50% larger than I had planned.
The next two days are busy with Day-Job so likely no trading until later in the week.
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7 for 9 winners, a 78% success rate. Gain of $82 in 6.5 hrs of paper-trading. One scratch trade not counted.

Tape Reading - Another description

I found this about Tape Reading and thought I'd reprint it here.

It comes from Vad Graifer of Reality Trader dot com.
Please beware that the original is a Sales Pitch designed to sell a book in addition to providing education. I am NOT recommending the book and have no intention of buying it at this time. I am offering author and source so no legal problems will arise from my partial reprint of it here; parts of the original have been removed by me. If you are interested in the sales pitch (the completetext), you can find it at the above-noted source by the above-noted author. In no way am I attempting to make this my own. I have inserted an editorial below and it is highlighted.

The Dual Reality
Traders come to the marketplace with pre-conceived ideas about how and why the markets move. While some of these ideas are valid, most are based on untrue assumptions . Many of these assumptions are found within the un-moderated areas of bulletin boards and trading threads. Most of these assumptions, while seem logical and true, are simply dead wrong. This leads traders down a road of failure without offering a trader an explanation to why he was unable to make the trading plan work effectively. This early failure leads to disgust and negativity towards trading for living. Many turn this emotional state to blame of the market and its participants in a manner that the trader is not able to apply what happened in their trading plan to lead to a positive result. This lack of accountability moves traders away from profitability over the long term and does not give the trader a solid foundation to build his or her portfolio. All this stems from initial misinformation that was presented to a trader and accepted blindly.

There is a true reality and a reality that traders create for themselves from such misinformation that is accepted blindly. Unfortunately, these two realities are never the same. However, the more a trader is a detached and objective observer rather than an opinionated and emotional follower, the closer his reality to real market reality becomes.

The RealityTrader Tape Reading Philosophy
This provides a solid foundation for a better possible outcome in his trading plan. Our philosophy is that the only reality of the market has to do with the price/volume action of a specific stock. All other factors are either hints or distortions. A seasoned trader distinguishes himself from a naive follower by his ability to see the true reality through all the curtains provided by those with less than adequate knowledge or misguided intentions. The stock market moves in its own manner. Stocks themselves move not because financial circumstances of the company dictate its direction. Otherwise, it would be too easy. Traders would simply buy what has strong fundamentals and sell what has weak fundamentals. Obviously this is not the case. Instead, interests of players in the stock and their emotions move the price. This philosophy can be confirmed by strong moves in stocks with questionable fundamentals. It can also be confirmed by a stock with great news that declines in price following the release.

RT stands for Read and Trade.

READ means two things:

1. Forget the Aristotle logic, which in essence is trying to establish a firm link between a reason and an outcome. Obviously this does not work in the market. Learn to see what is hidden under the surface. Ignore what is being offered to you by those that want you to see things at face value. Look at what is shown to you as bait for you to go in a certain direction. Then ask who wants you there and for what reason.

Furthermore, we can not possibly know all the circumstances surrounding stock movements, all the shares accumulated or distributed, and what owners plan to do with them. They might want to sell for reasons that have nothing to do with current company situation. For instance, a fund needs free money for another operation and we see selling when nobody expected it by trading from straight fundamentals. That's why a seasoned trader will only look at what is going on in a stock, from a price/volume action view, in a form he chooses, that lets him be closer to reality. Our preferred way to read stock market is tape reading. This is also why only a detached and unemotional state of mind allows us to make our decisions objectively, with no emotions distorting the picture. The link from your mechanical approach to the enhancement of your mental approach will develop your winning and confident attitude each trading day. Reality defines what is happening before you as you read it. There are no predictions or false expectations for what a market or stock will do. There is just what you see that demands the response to enter and exit a trade with as much profit or as little loss as the trade allows. There is no ego to block that response nor is there a lack of accountability when the trade moves against you. Trading resides within you and develops from a reality learned.

Tape Reading 101
Tape Reading is one of the oldest methods of market movement interpretation. Like any other methods applied by market players, it's intended to show "what's behind the ticker". There is no tape itself anymore. It has been replaced by a scrolling Times Of Sales Window and Electronic Tickers. But the term, and more importantly, the principles are alive and are as useful as ever. They are based on aspects that never change. These are human psychology and major accumulation/distribution rules.

We prefer Tape Reading as our major method. There are plenty of technical indicators used by traders in different combinations. Many of them are very sophisticated and computers make it easy to watch them in real time. However, Tape Reading is a truly universal method that can be combined with any technical study, and we suggest it as a base for any other method traders like. Sophisticated indicators based on complicated calculations tend to somewhat mask the reality of a scenario happening. Tape Reading goes right to the roots of the stock’s action. This is necessary for newer traders.

Like no other method, Tape Reading deals with reality itself allowing traders to see market moving forces in action and to judge which one prevails at that moment. It provides us with a look into what other players try to hide and then allows us to separate reality from our perception.

{editorial: I would insert here as an excellent real-life example, last week's AIG trading discussion between Scott Farnham and commenter CN on Scott's FNG blog, which I posted here on August 7th. It covers how Scott felt the "big boys" were acquiring shares of AIG and his method of reading it as a sign of a bullish move.
https://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=29610017&postID=1744627143642038504 }

The best example of this is as old as the Wall Street situation of “selling on news”. There are numerous examples of “XYZ is selling on such a great news.” Tape Reading shows why and how it happens. This tells you when you should expect non-conventional action on the stock and how to exploit it.

Tape Reading deals with two major categories of market players. They are the Smart Money and the Public. You can replace these old terms with any pair you like (big guys and small time traders, insiders and online traders, institutions and retail traders, etc). However, the core of market events is the same. Tape Reading is a method of analyzing which side is doing what at that moment. Analysis is done by observing the only, and ultimately, truthful indicators of Price and Volume Action.

Tape Reading does not always answer all our questions. In the stock market, nothing does. The stock market has no single ultimate answer. Otherwise this answer would already have been discovered and the market would have ceased to exist. There is no way price would ever change if traders knew the exact situation. Furthermore, any absolute method, once discovered by someone, could not be kept a secret for others. What Tape Reading does is:

1. It puts probability on your side as it allows you to read the truth to the extent it can be read, putting as few "interpreters" between you and reality as possible.

2. It allows you to develop a detached state of mind that a side observer possesses. The state of mind that traders want to experience is when they look at market action with no emotions, seeing clearly what happens. This is in direct conflict with cloudy judgement of emotionally involved traders with formed opinions that could be right or wrong, but in any case has nothing to do with reality.

Mental State
A positive mental state is an extremely important factor for successful trading. A trader's inner state of mind directly impacts his performance. In short-term trading, the right mindset plays an even bigger role. It ultimately defines whether a trader's technical knowledge and mechanical skills will lead to success. Almost all the top traders in this industry acknowledge the fact that the understanding of how the market functions is just a foundation for success. Self-control is what eventually makes a winner out of a trader.

One of the most difficult shifts in thinking that a trader has to develop is the switch from “Prediction" to “Response". Instead of a trader always trying to predict or expect an event to happen, they simply respond to the event that is before them. The wrong assumption that is made by a trader is that he knows what the market will do at a certain moment. No one ever knows with 100% accuracy what will happen. The trader needs to shift his thinking in a manner that he will not try to predict, but rather respond, to whatever the market decides to do. This type of thinking requires that a trader develop a sense of absolute self-reliance. To achieve this state, a trader must take full responsibility for any outcome of his actions (or lack of actions). Any loss has to become a learning point. This is only possible if the trader is willing to take undivided responsibility.

In order to read undistorted reality, the trader needs to read the market with no emotions, as a detached observer. It's not easy to get rid of emotions but it's doable. Accepting the fact that nobody can be always right, willingness to admit mistake fast and thinking of trading capital as of tool rather than money are some of steps in right direction. The trader can't progress unemotionally if every uptick puts him in a euphoric state and every downtick scares him. A trader that experiences strong emotions loses the ability to see the reality of the trade. From this, the trader goes from hope to fear. These emotions dictate his actions and leads to almost certain failure over time. A seasoned trader lets only one entity dictate his actions, the market. Self-confidence, self-reliance, cold blooded reading of reality and keeping emotions in check are the traits of successful trader. Our room provides a powerful educational program devoted to development of a correct state of mind that members can build their confidence upon everyday.