"What is the difference between a winning trader and a losing trader?"

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  • "What is the difference between a winning trader and a losing trader?"

    Aiming for the Right Target in Trading
    By
    Walter T. Downs


    When trading goes right, it can be a great feeling. When trading goes wrong it can be a nightmare. Fortunes are made in a matter of weeks and lost in a matter of minutes. This pattern repeats itself as each new generation of traders hit the market. They hurl themselves out of the night like insane insects against some sort of karmic bug-light; all thought and all existence extinguished in one final cosmic "zzzzzzt". Obviously, for a trader to be successful he must acknowledge this pattern and then break it. This can be accomplished by asking the right questions and finding the correct answers by rational observation and logical conclusion.

    This article will attempt to address one question:

    "What is the difference between a winning trader and a losing trader?"

    What follows are eleven observations and conclusions that I use in my own trading to help keep me on the right track. You can put these ideas into table form, and use them as a template to determine the probability of a trader being successful.

    OBSERVATION # 1

    The greatest number of losing traders is found in the short-term and intraday ranks. This has less to do with the time frame and more to do with the fact that many of these traders lack proper preparation and a well thought-out game plan. By trading in the time frame most unforgiving of even minute error and most vulnerable to floor manipulation and general costs of trading, losses due to lack of knowledge and lack of preparedness are exponential. These traders are often undercapitalized as well. Winning traders often trade in mid-term to long-term time frames. Often they carry greater initial levels of equity as well.

    CONCLUSION:

    Trading in mid-term and long-term time frames offers greater probability of success from a statistical point of view. The same can be said for level of capitalization. The greater the initial equity, the greater the probability of survival.

    OBSERVATION # 2

    Losing traders often use complex systems or methodologies or rely entirely on outside recommendations from gurus or black boxes. Winning traders often use very simple techniques. Invariably they use either a highly modified version of an existing technique or else they have invented their own.

    CONCLUSION:

    This seems to fit in with the mistaken belief that "complex" is synonymous with "better". Such is not necessarily the case. Logically one could argue that simplistic market approaches tend to be more practical and less prone to false interpretation. In truth, even the terms "simple" or "complex" have no relevance. All that really matters is what makes money and what doesn't. From the observations, we might also conclude that maintaining a major stake in the trading process via our own thoughts and analyses is important to being successful as a trader. This may also explain why a trader who possesses no other qualities than patience and persistence often outperforms those with advanced education, superior intellect or even true genius.

    OBSERVATION # 3

    Losing traders often rely heavily on computer-generated systems and indicators. They do not take the time to study the mathematical construction of such tools nor do they consider variable usage other than the most popular interpretation. Winning traders often take advantage of the use of computers because of their speed in analyzing large amounts of data and many markets. However, they also tend to be accomplished chartists who are quite happy to sit down with a paper chart, a pencil, protractor and calculator. Very often you will find that they have taken the time to learn the actual mathematical construction of averages and oscillators and can construct them manually if need be. They have taken the time to understand the mechanics of market machinery right down to the last nut and bolt.

    CONCLUSION:

    If you want to be successful at anything, you need to have a strong understanding of the tools involved. Using a hammer to drive a nut in to a threaded hole might work, but it isn't pretty or practical.

    OBSERVATION # 4

    Losing traders spend a great deal of time forecasting where the market will be tomorrow. Winning traders spend most of their time thinking about how traders will react to what the market is doing now, and they plan their strategy accordingly.

    CONCLUSION:

    Success of a trade is much more likely to occur if a trader can predict what type of crowd reaction a particular market event will incur. Being able to respond to irrational buying or selling with a rational and well thought out plan of attack will always increase your probability of success. It can also be concluded that being a successful trader is easier than being a successful analyst since analysts must in effect forecast ultimate outcome and project ultimate profit. If one were to ask a successful trader where he thought a particular market was going to be tomorrow, the most likely response would be a shrug of the shoulders and a simple comment that he would follow the market wherever it wanted to go. By the time we have reached the end of our observations and conclusions, what may have seemed like a rather inane response may be reconsidered as a very prescient view of the market.

    OBSERVATION # 5

    Losing traders focus on winning trades and high percentages of winners. Winning traders focus on losing trades, solid returns and good risk to reward ratios.

    CONCLUSION:

    The observation implies that it is much more important to focus on overall risk versus overall profit, rather than "wins" or "losses". The successful trader focuses on possible money gained versus possible money lost, and cares little about the mental highs and lows associated with being "right" or "wrong".

    OBSERVATION # 6

    Losing traders often fail to acknowledge and control their emotive processes during a trade. Winning traders acknowledge their emotions and then examine the market. If the state of the market has not changed, the emotion is ignored. If the state of the market has changed, the emotion has relevance and the trade is exited.

    CONCLUSION:

    If a trader enters or exits a trade based purely on emotion then his market approach is neither practical nor rational. Strangely, much damage can also be done if the trader ignores his emotions. In extreme cases this can cause physical illness due to psychological stress. In addition, valuable subconscious trading skills that the trader possesses but has no conscious awareness of may be lost. It is best to acknowledge each emotion as it is experienced and to view the market at these points to see if the original reasons we took the trade are still present. Further proof that this conclusion may have validity can be seen in even highly systematic traders exiting a trade for no apparent reason, and pegging a profitable move almost to the tick. Commonly, this is referred to as being "lucky" or being "in the zone".

    OBSERVATION # 7

    Losing traders care a great deal about being right. They love the adrenaline and endorphin rushes that trading can produce. They must be in touch with the markets almost twenty-four hours a day. A friend of mine once joked that a new trader won't enter a room unless there is a quote machine in it. Winning traders recognize the emotions but do not let it become a governing factor in the trading process. They may go days without looking at a quote screen. To them, trading is a business. They don't care about being right. They focus on what makes money and what doesn't. They enjoy the intellectual challenge of finding the best odds in the game. If those odds aren't present they don't play.

    CONCLUSION:

    It is important to stay in synch with the markets, but it is also important to have a life outside of trading. It is a rare individual who can do anything to excess without suffering some form of psychological or physical degradation. Successful traders keep active enough to stay sharp but also realize that it is a business not an addiction.

    OBSERVATION # 8

    When a losing trader has a bad trade he goes out and buys a new book or system, and then he starts over again from scratch. When winning traders have a bad trade they spend time figuring out what happened and then they adjust their current methodology to account for this possibility next time. They do not switch to new systems or methodologies lightly, and only do so when the market has made it very clear that the old approach is no longer valid. In fact, the best traders often use methodologies that are endemic to basic market structure and will therefore always be a part of the markets they trade. Thus the possibility of the market changing form to the extent that the approach becomes useless, is very small.

    CONCLUSION:

    The most successful traders have a methodology or system that they use in a very consistent manner. Often, this revolves around one or two techniques and market approaches that have proven profitable for them in the past. Even a bad plan that is used consistently will fair better than jumping from system to system. This observation implies that stylistic foundations of a trader's market approach must be in place before consistent profitability can occur.

    OBSERVATION # 9

    Losing traders focus on "big-name" traders who made a killing, and they try to emulate the trader's technique. Winning traders monitor new techniques that come on the trading scene, but remain unaffected unless some part of that technique is valuable to them within the framework of their current market approach. They often spend much more time looking at how the market seeks and destroys other traders or how traders destroy themselves. They then trade with the market or against other traders as these situations arise.

    CONCLUSION:

    Once again, we can note that the individuality of a trader and his comfort level and knowledge regarding his system are far more important than the latest doodad or Market guru.


    OBSERVATION #10

    Losing traders often fail to include many factors in the overall trading process that affects the probabilities of overall profit. Winning traders understand that winning in the markets means "cash flow". More cash must come in than goes out, and anything that effects this should be considered. Thus a winning trader is just as thrilled with a new way to reduce his data-feed costs or commissions as he is with a new trading system.

    CONCLUSION:

    ANYTHING that affects bottom line profitability should be considered as a viable area of study to improve performance.

    OBSERVATION #11

    Losing traders often take themselves quite seriously and seldom find humor in market analysis or the trading environment. Successful traders are often the funniest and most imaginative people you will ever meet. They take joy in trading and are the first to laugh or relate a funny story. They take trading seriously, but they are always the first to laugh at themselves.

    CONCLUSION:

    Its no wonder that one of the first things psychiatrists test for when treating a patient is whether or not the patient has any sense of humor about his affliction. The more serious the tone of the individual, the more likely that insanity has set in.

    SUMMARY OF CONCLUSIONS AND OBSERVATIONS

    Both winning and losing traders consider trading a game. However, winning traders take the game not as a diversion but as a vocation which they practice with an intensity and dedication that rivals the work ethic of a professional athlete. Since the athletic metaphor seems appropriate, I will sum up on that note.

    If trading were a game like basketball perhaps novice traders would realize more readily that what appears as effortless ease of the professional trader in sinking three-point shots is in fact the product of endless hours spent shooting hoops in deserted back yards and empty playgrounds.

    As in sports, the governing factors are internal and external. We deal with the market and ourselves. Both are like weapons and they can be used proactively or destructively. Each and every trade should be taken with professional care and planning

    In order to bring these observations home in an even more compelling form, lets add an element of ultimate risk to life and limb and say that our "sport" is more like target practice with a handgun. While it is certainly important to hit the target, it is more important to make sure the gun isn't pointed directly at ourselves when we pull the trigger.

    Minute differences in how we take aim in the markets can have amazing impact on the final outcome. The difference is clear: One method is accurate target practice. The other is Russian Roulette.

    Copyright@1999 Walter T. Downs All Rights Reserved. Distribution is
    allowed with due credit to the author.
  • Websman
    Senior Member
    • Apr 2004
    • 5545

    #2
    I like #11... this is a huge part of the Vulcan trading plan. Why be serious?

    OBSERVATION #11

    Losing traders often take themselves quite seriously and seldom find humor in market analysis or the trading environment. Successful traders are often the funniest and most imaginative people you will ever meet. They take joy in trading and are the first to laugh or relate a funny story. They take trading seriously, but they are always the first to laugh at themselves.

    CONCLUSION:

    Its no wonder that one of the first things psychiatrists test for when treating a patient is whether or not the patient has any sense of humor about his affliction. The more serious the tone of the individual, the more likely that insanity has set in.

    Comment

    • lemonjello
      Senior Member
      • Mar 2005
      • 447

      #3
      Nice post

      I like 5-

      'The observation implies that it is much more important to focus on overall risk versus overall profit...'
      Donate: Salvation Army
      Help: Any Soldier
      Read: Fred on Everything

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by lemonjello View Post
        I like 5-

        'The observation implies that it is much more important to focus on overall risk versus overall profit...'
        true...but easier said than done. I tend to agree with much of what the guy wrote about time frames. David Swenson, who has been the endowment fund manager at Yale for many years (and has consistantly achieved high % returns) wrote a book for individual investors and he stressed diversification and weighting abouve all other things. Bonds, stocks, reits..all in proper weightings and periodically adjusted so you're not overwieghted at the wrong time. Going by memory here (its on the npr website if youj want the correct numbers):

        30% us equities
        15% foreign developed market equities
        5% emerging market equities
        15% us treasury bonds
        20% reits
        15% tips (fI usaully tip around 15%~20%, depending on service)

        He also despises the mutual fund industry which is admirable and instead recommends the non-profit company Vangaurd with its low fees.

        Comment

        • Lyehopper
          Senior Member
          • Jan 2004
          • 3678

          #5
          Margin kills! ...&... Buy and Hold pays off....

          Good article, but I think it's strange that he didn't talk about losing traders loading up on a single stock and margining the trade to the gills (gamblers mentality). I think that wipes out more traders than anything else.

          Seems to me that winning traders are confident but don't have a gamblers mentality.

          I think that an experienced trader must hold his well researched plays longer term for them to pay off....

          Here's an area of failure for me as a trader. I often pick good plays (long and short) and I have (in my mind) solid reasoning from a TA and FA standpoint.... then I make the play but it seems to go nowhere or I lose a little on the trade while I see other stuff paying off that I could have been in. Then I get very bored with my trade and exit it with intentions of revisiting it later. "Later" comes and goes and I've turn my attention to something else.

          Here's an example of a trade I made in 2003.... I bought shares of FTO under $5 (I also owned MRO).... I was convinced that the sector was undervalued and I knew that cheap oil wouldn't last. I got bored with holding FTO and I sold it off for a small profit some months later.... My investment in FTO alone, had I just held on to it, turned off my computer and walked away.... would have been worth over seven figures today....

          Thanks for posting this Runner, it gives me much to think about.
          BEEF!... it's whats for dinner!

          Comment


          • #6
            Lye, I thought it would make us all think about what were doing. Here has been one of my biggest screw-ups. I get in the position I come home early from work and then end up freaking out because the intraday chart is ticking down on me. This would prompt me to sell for a small profit. The next day the stock would take off with out me. This is the emotional side of me kicking my butt. I’m getting much better in this area and sticking to my plans for the most part. A while back I learned some bad day trading habits that try to creep in. In fact since I’ve started giving more wiggle room in the positions I’ve actually become more profitable.

            When I first read this article I got pissed at myself because this dude was not only stepping on my toes, but he was stomping on them. He did get through to my thick head though and made me think differently. I’m glad you enjoyed it…

            Comment

            • Websman
              Senior Member
              • Apr 2004
              • 5545

              #7
              Originally posted by Lyehopper View Post
              gamblers mentality.

              I think that an experienced trader must hold his well researched plays longer term for them to pay off....
              This is my biggest fault...selling my positions too soon. I have found that my returns would be much better if I would have held my positions longer.

              Comment

              • IIC
                Senior Member
                • Nov 2003
                • 14938

                #8
                Originally posted by Websman View Post
                This is my biggest fault...selling my positions too soon. I have found that my returns would be much better if I would have held my positions longer.
                Better than selling them too late...Doug(IIC)
                "Trade What Is Happening...Not What You Think Is Gonna Happen"

                Find Tomorrow's Winners At SharpTraders.com

                Follow Me On Twitter

                Comment

                • lemonjello
                  Senior Member
                  • Mar 2005
                  • 447

                  #9
                  You got that right. In my mind the most important thing to pay attention to in investing.


                  Originally posted by Tatnic View Post
                  true...but easier said than done.
                  Donate: Salvation Army
                  Help: Any Soldier
                  Read: Fred on Everything

                  Comment

                  • IIC
                    Senior Member
                    • Nov 2003
                    • 14938

                    #10
                    "What is the difference between a winning trader and a losing trader?"

                    About 500 Grand...IIC
                    "Trade What Is Happening...Not What You Think Is Gonna Happen"

                    Find Tomorrow's Winners At SharpTraders.com

                    Follow Me On Twitter

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Van Tharp

                      Concentrating on Profits Will Lead to Losses


                      Have you ever wondered why you can paper trade successfully, but fail miserably when real money is at stake? The reason is simple: the trader who concentrates on profits will have difficulty winning, as will the investor who concentrates on losses.

                      When investors concentrate on the rewards of what they are doing, their behavior becomes rigid and less accurate. They become results oriented rather than solution oriented, which means they are more active and more careless.

                      In fact, many traders, when reflecting on their previous trading activity, realize they would have become better traders sooner without the hindrance of early success. Early profits teach bad habits that are extremely difficult to unlearn.

                      The solution? Concentrate on doing your best, not on your immediate profit and loss. Have a set of rules to guide you in the market and concentrate on following those rules.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        October 17, 2006 Van Tharp
                        Trade Through "Mindfulness" Part 5
                        Putting the Process Before the Outcome

                        People can imagine themselves taking gradual steps, while great heights seem totally forbidding. Yet, when you take enough gradual steps, you’ll reach great heights.

                        If you are concerned with the final result—the outcome—then you will probably have problems attaining the outcome. However, if you concentrate on the process of getting to the outcome, then you are much more likely to arrive at your destination.

                        Every outcome is proceeded by a process. You will not make money trading unless you follow a predetermined plan and continually stick to that plan. That’s why you should pat yourself on the back every day if you can honestly say that you totally followed your rules throughout the day. Every "market wizard" arrives at that stature by taking one trade at a time. The primary difference between that person and the average trader is that the market wizard probably continued to follow his plan every single day.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Many people think a move up on light volume is a bad thing. Rickard Arms calls this ease of movement. This means the stock is getting bid up. If volume is moving up on heavy volume lot of people buying and selling thus causing churning. Bottom line no right answer to the volume thing IMO…

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Resistance to Issues

                            By Van K. Tharp, Ph.D.

                            When Jack Schwager visited Ed Seykota to interview him for his book Market Wizards, Jack found that he was the person being interviewed, not Ed. Jack would start to say things and Ed would indicate how the assumptions behind Jack’s questions revealed his psychological issues. As a result, Jack returned to New York with no interview. Instead, he mailed a set of questions to Ed to answer. Again, Ed turned the questions around into Jack’s issues. However, once they’d done this process about five times, the result was one of the best interviews in Market Wizards.

                            Ed’s approach is full of danger as a teaching tool. Socrates, who was well known for turning questions back on people, which is called the Socratic method of teaching, was poisoned. And Socrates didn’t usually enter into the most dangerous of areas—asking questions about the psychological assumptions behind what people do. Most people don’t want to know their issues. Indeed, they interpret anything designed to get you to look inward as a real threat.

                            Let me give you an example.

                            How do I develop a system in which I can be right at least 60% of the time?

                            Van: You seem to have a fascination with being right?

                            What do you mean? I just asked a reasonable question can’t you answer it.

                            Van: What if you could make money being right 40% of the time? Would that be acceptable?

                            You’re not answering my question. I want to know how to develop a system that’s designed to be right 60% of the time. But I will answer the last question—no I want to be right 60% of the time or better.

                            Van: I was looking at the assumption under your question. You seem to have a strong need to be right. You’d probably be a much better trader if you didn’t have that need. What would happen if you were wrong? How would you feel if you were wrong?

                            How can I learn anything? Why are you asking all of these silly questions? I’m not interested in being wrong, I’m interested in being right. Understood? You want to turn everything into a psychological issue. Not everything is psychological. It’s really hard to learn anything from you when you are always throwing out all of this psychological stuff. Can’t you just answer a simple question?

                            That’s an example of resistance to the issue. Neither of us gets anywhere. But what if the conversation went a little differently?

                            How do I develop a system in which I can be right at least 60% of the time?

                            Van: You seem to have a fascination with being right?

                            Well, I do like to be right, naturally, doesn’t everybody?

                            Van: Why do you want to be right?

                            Well, I’ve always worked to do a good job, to get good grades, and be successful. To accomplish that, you have to be right.

                            Van: Do you? What if you could be right 20% of the time and make huge profits – just because you cut your losses short and let your profits run? If you had eight 1R losses and two 10 R wins, you’d only be right 20% of the time, but you’d be ahead by 12R…that’s pretty good.

                            I never thought about it that way.

                            Van: So what if you just accepted losses when you got them, allowing them to be small losses and let your profits run when you have a good trade? Don’t you think that might be a good idea? And you’ll have trouble doing that if you want to be right all the time. For example, if you had nine 1-R gains and one 10R loss, you’d be right 90% of the time and still lose money.

                            Again, I never thought about it that way.

                            Van: So why don’t you just play around with the idea that you can be wrong and still be successful. Being right or wrong is a meaningless invention of your mind. Instead, what if you just developed a good system and practiced following it? A loss has nothing to do with being wrong. Instead, a loss has everything to do with following your system and not making a mistake. Doesn’t that put losses in a different framework?

                            When you start looking at yourself, you’ll find that there are lots of things that come up for you. You’ll start noticing the patterns that you repeat over and over again. And that’s one of the most valuable lessons you could ever learn.

                            So, let me ask you a simple question: How do you respond when someone turns what you say into a question about your psychological assumptions?

                            More Examples:

                            Q: What do you consider good performance in a system? How does my system compare?

                            Response: Why haven’t you set objectives? Do you have a need to be the best?

                            Q: I am considering purchasing a system. Does anyone have a recommendation for one that works that allows you to see code?

                            Response: What you really mean is that you don’t feel comfortable developing your own system. Why not?

                            Q: Here’s my strategy. What do you think of it?

                            Response: You appear to need other people’s approval to determine if your strategy is any good. Why? How about testing it to see if meets your objectives?

                            Comment

                            • billyjoe
                              Senior Member
                              • Nov 2003
                              • 9014

                              #15
                              Runner,
                              Good stuff. What if a baseball player quit the game because he struck out 7 of every 10 times he came to bat even though he hit a single, a double, and a triple the rest of the time? He could make millions , but is ruined by dwelling on failure. 50% sounds great to me, maybe 40%.

                              ----------billyjoe

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