System Summary A short to midterm trading strategy that seeks to buy large caps stocks that are making new highs and exhibiting price action that is outside.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
SEPTEMBER 10, 2008 ROBERT RUBIN Credit Spreads Earn Income from Options with Limited Risk.
Advertisements

An Example of Quant’s Task in Croatian Banking Industry
FX Scalping Trading Pitt 4/7/2010.
OPTIONS TRAINING PROGRAM
“INTRADAY TRADING SECRETS”
TRADE SCHOOL: Discipline For Day Trading The 25-Point Mantra Nick Fosco Dec 10, 2010.
Saeed Ebrahimijam Spring 2013 Faculty of Business and Economics Department of Banking and Finance Doğu Akdeniz Üniversitesi FINA417.
© 2004 South-Western Publishing 1 Chapter 4 Option Combinations and Spreads.
FINANCIAL SECURITIES: OPTIONS CIE 3M1. AGENDA  OPTIONS: What are they?  Why buy CALLS AND PUTS?  OPTIONS: Terminology  How options work.
My Secret Weapon: The Best Technical Indicator in the World
Money Management Systems. Introduction Technical signals are useful for entry, but technical understanding of risk is even more important. Remember the.
Trading Course Table of Contents Course Book 251 Pages
MAgicTrx Math plus Markets equals Magic. Preface/Intro This method can be summed up in: Buy Low, Sell High. The trend is your friend until the end. You.
Strategies For Reducing Risk with Alessio Rastani leadingtrader.com The Science of Using A Stop-Loss.
PIN BARS INTRODUCTION. Pin Bars A pin bar must: have open/close within the first eye, protrude from surrounding prices (‘stick out’ from surrounding.
Essentials of the Crutch Trade Structure & Procedure Bright Retreat Primm Valley Presentation By Rob Friesen.
The Ten Lows of Technical Trading The Ten Lows of Technical Trading J.J. Murphy StockCharts.com - ChartSchool.
Technical Price Analysis H The analysis of historical prices patterns using charts, diagrams, mathematical equations, etc. H This approach emphasizes how.
Common Cents Investment Group Welcome! Monday September 30 th.
Copyright ©2004 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 18 Asset Allocation.
An EOD strategy to gain from futures trading using only 3EMA & 5EMA
Saeed Ebrahimijam SPRING Faculty of Business and Economics Department of Banking and Finance Doğu Akdeniz Üniversitesi FINA417.
FI3300 Corporation Finance Spring Semester 2010 Dr. Isabel Tkatch Assistant Professor of Finance 1.
Interest Rates and Returns: Some Definitions and Formulas
CONDORS  Iron condors are strangles with longs to control risk and margin farther out of the money.  They are credit spreads in that they are a combination.
Joel Wissing S&P 500 emini futures April 26-28Calgary
Using Gap Zones to Create a Profitable Strategy for the Opening Gap
 Stock: A share of ownership in a corp.  Shareholder: Partial business owner  Limited Liability- Can only lose up to what you invested!!  2 types of.
Phil’s Lessons Learned….. Options are the wild west vs stocks - always, always, always use a limit order!!!! Options should be monitored closer than stocks.
Trading Rules o Watch the market for the initial 1 and a half hours, i.e. till a.m. No trade should be made in that time frame unless a low or a.
Investment and portfolio management MGT 531.  Lecture #31.
HOUSTON April, WALL STREET AND MY STREET The following is just my perspective. I was a lookout at Pearl Harbor. May not be dependable. Am certainly.
Special FREE Webinar Strategies For Trading A Small Account With Alessio Rastani and Kevin Burton leadingtrader.com.
Revisiting the Reversal of Large Stock-Price Declines Harlan D. Platt.
Saeed Ebrahimijam Fall Faculty of Business and Economics Department of Banking and Finance Doğu Akdeniz Üniversitesi FINA417.
A Beginner’s Efforts Iron Condors ITM Diagonals. A Beginner’s Efforts Disclaimer! I am a beginner and only offer my current understandings. I make no.
Pivot Point Trading System Introduction Presented by Doug Allen Presented by Doug Allen.
Planning Trades for Entry and Exit. Options involve risk and are not suitable for all investors. For more information, please read the Characteristics.
Options made very easy. To make money as an option trader you must be: A bargain hunter. Able to identify undervalued and overvalued options. Know when.
HOW TO EXIT A POSITION ? SELL !. Exiting Positions: 2. Percent swing approximation - calculated 3. Channel assumption 4. How much can you afford to lose.
“Money and Risk Management” A Critical Component For A Successful Trader.
1 Agribusiness Library Lesson : Hedging. 2 Objectives 1.Describe the hedging process, and examine the advantages and disadvantages of hedging. 2.Distinguish.
Phil’s Lessons Learned….. Options are the wild west vs stocks - always, always, always use a limit order!!!! Options.
The Consistent Trader. Ways your mind can blow out your account Need to be right, take profits early That’s 4 losers in a row, I am stepping aside That’s.
Welcome to MnR Capital MANAGEMENT Family. Wealth Management Equity Derivatives Debentures Currencies Bonds Commodities Mutual Funds Insurance Fixed Deposits.
1 Agribusiness Library Lesson : Options. 2 Objectives 1.Describe the process of using options on futures contracts, and define terms associated.
Australian Technical Analysts Association Times are Changing Part 5: Summary. Have markets changed? How do we manage money and risk? What do we look for.
How to Read a Portfolio SMG Info. Account Summary The Account Summary displays portfolio information as of today. If a number is red and parenthesis,
How to Use Technical Analysis to Maximize Your Gains Presented by Peter Krauth.
 Portfolio rebalancing is the process of bringing the different asset classes back into proper relationship following a significant change in one or.
TRADING PYSCHOLOGY Rules followed by master traders.
© 2002 South-Western Publishing 1 Chapter 4 Option Combinations and Spreads.
Session 5: Review of the Scientific Method and The ATS Development Process 1.
TECHNICAL ANALYSIS.  Technical analysis attempts to exploit recurring and predictable patterns in stock prices to generate high investment returns.
There are two rules for ultimate success in life: (1) Never tell everything you know.
Comments from Instructor: A detailed yet analytical paper, which puts class materials into good application, and takes one step further, if simple, to.
Understanding Stock Orders. Market vs. Limit Orders A market order is an order to buy or sell immediately at the best available price. It does not guarantee.
To be or not to be an investor? Kairat Mynbaev ISE-KBTU.
Chapter 32 Saving and Investing Introduction to Business Spring 2005.
Stock Terminology (continued) Investors make money in stocks in two ways: –Dividends Companies may make payment to shareholders as part of the profits.
Counting Bases Mike Scott. Base Counting and Price Target Setting.
System Summary A short to midterm trading strategy that seeks to buy large caps stocks that are making new highs and exhibiting price action that is outside.
 Technical Analysis Implementation. Things to think about…  Technical Analysts do not invest they trade  Focus on price and volume  Flaw in fundamentals.
“Bounce” Trading System
Calendar Spreads One Method
Part I: System Generation in TSL
Mechanical trading of channelling swing system
Fixed Fractional Method
Start Small and Retire Early With Weekly Options
Trading Live Online Annual Mastery Program Probabilities and Trade Execution High probability of pot knocked over.
Presentation transcript:

System Summary A short to midterm trading strategy that seeks to buy large caps stocks that are making new highs and exhibiting price action that is outside what can be considered a “Normal Range” based on a weekly chart.. 

Description The elegance of RLCO is that it applies to any time frame, and the same lens in one time frame may be used to identify the opportunity while a shorter term lens can be used to manage the trade. I view all of the trades in my shorter term accounts through a RLCO/SQC Lens. An in depth discussion of RLCO may be found in Mastermind Basecap Projects. RLCO uses the Regression Line Cross Over to identify trends, and SQC identifies breakouts. The system identifies breakouts of stocks using Bollinger Bands set at 1standard deviation of the previous 30 periods so as to be statistically significant. During this period, stocks were selected from target indicies which included the NASDAQ 100, THE S&P 500, and the Russell 1000.

General Comments This system was developed as an extension of the original work done by Dr. Ken Long and the Regression Line Cross Over System. The original thesis was that the RLCO Concepts could be adapted across multiple time frames, and could be used for swing trading as well as longer term trend following systems. The rules developed here are rules that are; Simple – Yet provide a degree of flexibility Can be executed entirely when the market is closed using condition orders Facilitates non emotional responses because the decisions are made when the market is closed. Can be modified to fit the personality of the trader Stresses Money Management techniques that: Encourage the trader to exit losing trades quickly 1R is an expression of maximum risk – Not a design goal Encourage the trader to exit non-productive trades quickly Non Productive trades tie up capital that can be used somewhere else Encourage the trader to be bold when the system is working well, and to be cautious when it is not.

Why RLCO Unambiguous in any timeframe – This trade looks pretty good from across the room…..

Inspiration/Background As part of the RLCO ®EVOLUTION – How well would RLCO work as a Longer Term Trading System – Swing and Beyond Background: Initial back testing used a Worden product called Stockfinder to conduct rudimentary backtests on how well a RLCO weekly system might work. (I view this as a “same way same day” backtest to see if it warrants further interest). Tested the S&P 500, NAS 100, the DJ30, the Mid Caps and the Small Caps over the period 1/1/2002 through 1/13/2013. Entry criteria was go long when the weekly bar crossed above the BB top, exit when the weekly bar closed below the BB top. Additional Stop Loss of 4%. (1Weekly ATR) Win rates ranged from a low of 72% for the DJ-30 up to 76% for the small caps. Avg Win is 3X the Avg Loss, with an overall system expectancy ranging from .86R on the Dow to 1.63 on the Small Caps. Average winning trade lasts about 3.5weeks while the average loser is about a week and a half. Calendar Days The total number of trades was 52523, although some are duplicates based on index membership. No allowances made for pyramid positions or conversions of stops from hard to trail. There were no heat restrictions and every trade is taken.

Logic, concepts, definitions A short to midterm trading strategy that seeks to buy large cap stocks that are making new highs and exhibiting price action that is outside what can be considered a “Normal Range” based on a weekly chart. Normal Range is defined as one standard deviation of the price action over the past 30 weeks In this system, a target becomes eligible when the current close is outside the previously defined normal range on a weekly chart. We want to buy strength. We prefer targets that are gathering momentum and that will fuel collective greed as the price action moves higher out of its normal range. The system uses the weekly chart as the “eligibility” chart and the daily chart as the “decision” chart. Trades are entered when the price action of the daily chart is taking out the highs of the weekly chart. The most important belief in this strategy is that the price can continue to rise outside of the statistically defined normal range. It behaves this way out of greed, herd behavior, and the desire to not be left behind. This belief is tempered with the knowledge that the trade will be exited at the first sign the price action may be returning to its’ normal range. The entry is not critical. Normally there will be multiple opportunities to enter once the trade is eligible. While it is certainly desirable to enter as early in the trend as possible, exits and trade management are key to trading this system successfully. Initial Stop – 1 Weekly Average True Range

Logic, concepts, definitions Efficient Stock : An equity that is trending in an efficient manner. We define efficient as a stock whose ADX is above 20, whose price action is rising steadily and is generally touching or near touching the 20 period linear regression line on each successive day. Portfolio heat: The total amount or capital at risk based upon current positions and stops.  Available Portfolio Heat: The total heat minus the total heat associated with any negative position The risk reward ratio  based on current resistance levels is greater than 3:1. When this trade works it typically works quickly. When it does not work, the same is true. Exiting quickly makes subsequent re-entry much easier If the trade hasn’t worked after five trading days, it probably won’t. Many times, an equity will continue in a consolidation phase for sometime before breaking out either high or low. Staying in the trade during consolidation hoping for the breakout is a misuse of equity. Exit with a small profit or loss, re-enter when it’s appropriate. Consider plus or minus .2R as an exit target. If it is still at that level after five days, exit.  

Trading Targets Primarily Large Cap Stocks S&P 500 Russell 1000 NASDAQ 100

Historical Performance Live trades were conducted 4 January 2013 – 31 Dec 2013 Number of Trades 329 Winners 175 - Average Winner .91R Losers 148 – Average Loser - .55R Scratch – 6 Expectancy per trade .24R Standard Deviation of Completed Trades 1.02 System SQN 100 = 2.35 SQN = 5.57 Max Drawdown 10% Total R = 79 Commissions expressed as R = 7.8R Margin Interest expressed as R = 9.2R Net = 62R Normalized as 1% of the average account balance for the trading period

Entry rules Trades are identified using the weekly RLCO charts and are managed using the daily RLCO charts: Rules: Price closes above BB (30,1)on a weekly chart. Stock is eligible to trade Enter on a positive day when the previous close is above the BB top and the open is above the previous close. Doesn’t have to be the first day – it can be any day conditions exist Risk Reward Ratio is 3:1 based on Overhead Resistance Set a hard stop of one weekly ATR. Exit the trade when the stock closes below the upper BB boundary on a weekly chart, when the stop is hit, or discretionary exit for poor performance. Stops are adjusted according to trade management rules

Exit rules Always let the market take you out of the trade (Exception is 3%/3R/50%) or discretionary exit based on non performance Never expose more than 1R of risk based on initial risk First Stop is a hard stop based on 1 Weekly ATR, then change to trail it at ½ R Profit Add to a position only after 1R is achieved, and only in ½ R increments. General Rules for stop adjustments – Rules are based on the aggregate position (initial plus add): Hard Rule 1R exposure based on most recent trade entry ½ R – Hard stop to Trailing Stop – Original R Amount 1R Continue – Add if appropriate (1/2 Initial R amount)- Good Momentum – efficient stock - trader judgment 2R Change stop from Weekly ATR to 1.5 Daily ATR (2R based on initial R amount) 3R – Scale position back to 1R open profit with a weekly ATR trailing stop (start cycle over) (3R based on Current R Amount) This allows a winning position to run but ensures that no single position becomes overbalanced in the account. When a position open profit reaches 3% of account value, reduce the position to 1R open profit. If a single position accounts for 50% of the entire open profits, reduce that position to 1R open profit

Position sizing rules Position size uses .05% to 1.25% of the account equity plus an adjustment for market money based on core equity . Core equity is defined at the beginning of the month and is based upon trader discretion. Once it is defined it is the equity reference point for the rest of the month. Core equity may be adjusted up during the month if the account size increases 15% or more. It may not be adjusted down Market Money is defined as the difference between core equity and current account value. Market Money can be positive or negative and is defined as any amount greater than core equity, or less than core equity. During periods of gains, market money increases position size and during periods of losses, the negative market money figure reduces the position size. Max Position size for swing trades is 1% of acct value plus 10% of market money value. (Example: Core equity =$50K, current account value =$52K, market money = +$2K. Position size will then be 1% of account equity ie $520+ 10% of market money $200 for a total position size of $720.) (Example 2 Core equity = $50K, current account value = $48K, Position size = 1% account equity $480 + 10% market money ie $50K – 48K = -2K x10% = -$200) = Total position size of $280. If losses persist, the system will reduce the position size to zero forcing a trading ban at a loss figure of about 8-10% core equity Minimum position size is .5R. Stop trading if market money drives position size below 0.

Margin/Money Management Rules Core Equity: The equity you define as the “floor” of the portfolio. This is the amount that will cause you to reduce your position size if it is violated. It can be adjusted on a regular basis – weekly, monthly, semi annually at trader discretion. It is an  personal number established by the trader based upon individual beliefs and risk tolerance. The system performs well at a maximum portfolio heat of 12%. Portfolio heat is the total amount or capital at risk based upon current positions and stops.  Available Portfolio Heat: Available Portfolio Heat is the total heat minus the total heat associated with any negative position. Example: Using a 1% position size, Let’ you have 7 open positions and 3 of them are currently negative, your total available portfolio heat would be 9% minus the existing heat of the 4 remaining positions. Market Money: This is normally a portion of money/profit beyond core equity that the trader is willing to risk. It is meant to increase position size during times when the system is working well. There are many formulas for increased position size, but normally a trader will risk an additional percentage of market money in addition to the core position size. Example: A trader has determined that her core equity is $50000. She determines that in addition to a 1% normal position size, she will risk 10% of the market money per trade. Her account has grown to $53000. She would risk 1% x $53000=$530, plus 10% of market money which is 10% x (53000-50000)=$300, for a total position size of $830 ($530+$300). Negative Market Money: This is defined as the amount of money below core equity which will cause the trader to reduce position size. This method will force the trader to reduce risk and the use of margin. Using the same example as above; Our trader has $50000 Core equity and 10% market money. She finds that her account has fallen to $48000. Her position size would be 1% x $48000=$480 plus 10% market money which is 10% x ($50000-$48000)= -$200. Position size =$480-$200=$280. If equity continues to fall, market negative market money will exceed 1% core equity and this is a signal to stop trading. I have a rule that says position size will not be less than .05%. When negative market money has driven the position size below .05% but>0, I use .05%. If the market money mandated position size falls below zero, stop trading and examine your system, rules, market type and psychology. Adjust core equity and resume trading only when you are confident you understand you system’s drawdown.

How to start the system from cash Paper trade this for 3 months or until you are comfortable with the number and type of signals you receive, and that you are comfortable that you can respond to the signals and set the buy/sell orders and trailing stops. Consider trading at a reduced equity size with real money at a deep discount broker in order to build confidence and professionalism with real money before increasing size.  

Set-up samples - COP

MO

ACC

RNR

KR

ESS

ESS

SNDK

POM

VLO

DPS

Closed trades– The Biggest Loser Two Mistakes 4R Loss

SPLS

EA

CSE

GME

ALSN 2nd biggest losing trade

AWAY 3rd biggest loser Required discretionary exit

IBKR

Psychology Test Did you laugh or cry??

Final Thoughts/Lessons Learned   The entries in this system don’t need to be precise to be effective. Exits Do! Earnings dates can be toxic. Make sure you are out five days prior – Post earnings are not so bad, but consider a choice not to trade the gaps that are a result of an earnings beat as they tend to “RTM” or flat line. Keep the money real. Consider paying yourself – As an example, any day the account makes more than 1%, you could pay yourself 50% of the difference between 1% and total profit. Ex 1% = $500 Profit= $800, ½ the difference ($300) transfers out of the account. Looking at charts every day is important – It trains your inner voice 1R is not a design goal. Get out as soon as you see the trade is not working. Consider choosing a discretionary exit such as -.5R. 1R exits are typically gaps The faster you get out the easier it is to get back in – it minimizes the psychological baggage Don’t hedge within a market type A hedge technique was tested that put on a hedge when the daily and weekly charts fell back into the river - and got whacked each time. Wait for the signal that the market has changed The system will tell you when its time to stop trading (no eligible set ups) – Listen to it. Scale in quickly when the trade is moving, but consider keeping your open exposure less than 1R. (A technique would be to scale in 1/2R increments, and do not scale in more than twice). Have a profit taking target, but stay in the game. When the trade profit exceeds ____% of account value, or 50% of total profit, scale it back to initial position size and start over.(I used 3% and 50%, but will go to 5% and 50% in 2014). If you are trading on margin, make sure you have a money management system that manages the margin exposure.

Learning Journal The A HA Moment What I think about/how does it connect What will do about it Results RLCOW needs a mechanism to followup on closed trades for additional opportunities. Why not use existing swing systems that capitalize on temporary weakness. What would I be comfortable with and what can I believe in. Review closed trades from 2013 and 2014 and see how many times Core Turbo Principles apply to this system A sensible, professional way to utilize day trading buying power Develop a ruleset and trade a reduced position size as proof of concept