📖 Market Wizards: ResumePublished by Jack D. Schwager in 1989, "Market Wizards" marks the beginning of an indispensable series for traders and investors alike. Through engaging interviews, Schwager brings to light the experiences of titans such as Bruce Kovner, Richard Dennis, Paul Tudor Jones, Michael Steinhardt, Ed Seykota, Marty Schwartz, and Tom Baldwin, making learning from the best an enjoyable journey.
To keep things short, we highlighted the most important parts of the interviews and came back with these key takeaways:
There is no holy grail to trading success. The methodologies employed by the "market wizards " cover the entire spectrum from purely technical to purely fundamental and everything in between. The time they typically hold a trade ranges from minutes to years.
Although the styles of the traders are very different, many common denominators
were evident:
1. All those interviewed had a driving desire to become successful traders - in many cases, overcoming significant obstacles to reach their goal.
2. All reflected confidence that they could continue to win over the long run. Almost invariably, they considered their trading as the best and safest investment for their money.
3. Each trader had found a methodology that worked for him and remained true to that approach. Significantly, discipline was the word most frequently mentioned.
4. The top traders take their trading very seriously; most devote a substantial amount of their waking hours to market analysis and trading strategy.
5. Rigid risk control is one of the key elements in the trading strategy of virtually all those interviewed.
6. In a variety of ways, many of the traders stressed the importance of having the patience to wait for the right trading opportunity to present itself.
7. The importance of acting independently of the crowd was a frequently emphasized point.
8. All the top traders understand that losing is part of the game.
9. They all love what they are doing.
Below we've gathered a list of opinions from the traders interviewed in the book:
1. Implementation is as IMPORTANT as direction:
Getting the direction of the trade right is only part of a successful trade; putting the trade in the right way is critical.
2. You don’t get paid for being right.
Many traders fail not so much because of the trades they make when they are wrong, but rather because of the trades they don’t make when they are right.
3. Sometimes it is what you don’t do that counts.
“Music is the space between the notes.” – Claude Debussy. Analogously, the space between investments – the times one is out of the market – can be critical to successful investing.
4. Risk Control
Many market wizards interviewed in this book consider risk control even more important than the methodology.
5. Trade size can be more important than the entry point.
Traders focus almost entirely on where to enter a trade. In reality, the entry size is often more important than the entry price because if the size is too large, a trader will be more likely to exit a good trade on a meaningless adverse price move. Don’t let your greed influence position sizing beyond your comfort level.
6. Don’t try to be 100 percent right.
The market is moving against you and you are well aware of the dangers of an unconstrained loss, but you also still believe in your position and you are worried about throwing in the towel before the market turns. You are frozen in indecision.
7. Flexibility is a critical trait.
Flexibility is an essential quality to successful trading. It is important not to get attached to an idea and to always be willing to get out of a trade if the price action is inconsistent with your trade hypothesis.
8. The best remedy for a losing streak.
When you are in a losing streak, you can’t turn the situation around by trying harder. When trading is going badly, often the best solution is to stop trading for a while.
9. When everything is going great, watch out!
The worst drawdowns often come suddenly right on the heels of periods when just about everything seems to be working as well as if it had been optimistically scripted. In this case, a trader will be most susceptible to being lulled into complacency.
10. The market doesn’t care where you entered a trade.
Don’t make trading decisions based on where you bought (or sold) a stock or futures contract. The market doesn’t care where you entered your position. A common error traders make when they realize they are in a bad trade is to commit to getting out, but only after the market returns to their entry level – the proverbial “I will get out when I am even”. The linkage of liquidation to entry level is one of the major causes of turning small losses into large ones.
In conclusion , "The Market Wizards" by Jack D. Schwager serves as an illuminating guide into the minds and strategies of some of the most successful traders of our time.
Through insightful interviews and analysis, Schwager provides invaluable lessons on trading psychology, risk management, and market tactics. However, this is just the beginning of the journey into the world of market mastery.
To delve even deeper and expand your understanding, we highly encourage traders to explore the following volumes penned by Schwager: "The New Market Wizards" (1992), "Stock Market Wizards" (2001), "Hedge Fund Market Wizards" (2012), and "The Little Book of Market Wizards" (2014) . These sequels offer a rich tapestry of new interviews, anecdotes, and wisdom from a diverse array of trading luminaries, further enriching your knowledge and empowering your trading endeavors.
Whether you're a novice or a seasoned trader, these volumes are indispensable companions on your quest for trading success. Dive in, absorb the wisdom, and let it guide you on your path to becoming a true market wizard.
Investors
Understanding the Differences between Traders and Investors
Trading and investing are two approaches to the financial markets, each with distinct characteristics and objectives. While both involve buying and selling financial instruments, understanding the differences between traders and investors is crucial for anyone looking to navigate the markets effectively. This article will provide an in-depth comparison between traders and investors, highlighting their key differences, strategies, and goals.
1. Time Horizon:
Traders: Traders aim to profit from short-term price fluctuations. They closely monitor market trends and frequently execute orders within hours, days, or weeks.
Investors: Investors focus on long-term growth and may hold their investments for years or even decades.
2. Risk Tolerance:
Traders: Traders are often comfortable with higher levels of risk, as they aim to profit from short-term market volatility.
Investors: Investors tend to have a more conservative risk appetite. They prioritize capital preservation and are willing to ride out short-term market fluctuations for potential long-term gains.
3. Trading Strategies:
Traders: Traders utilize a variety of strategies such as day trading, swing trading, and scalping. They rely on technical analysis, charts, indicators, and patterns to make rapid buy and sell decisions.
Investors: Investors typically adopt a buy-and-hold strategy, focusing on long-term trends and the fundamental analysis of companies or assets.
4. Market Focus:
Traders: Traders often concentrate on specific markets or asset classes, such as stocks, currencies, commodities, or derivatives.
Investors: Investors have a broader focus, investing in diverse asset classes such as stocks, bonds, real estate, or mutual funds. Their goal is to create a well-diversified portfolio for long-term growth and income generation.
5. Profit Objectives:
Traders: Traders aim to generate regular, short-term profits. They capitalize on market inefficiencies, fluctuations, and price movements to execute trades and make profits from both rising and falling markets.
Investors: Investors are primarily focused on long-term capital appreciation and income generation. They typically seek to benefit from the overall growth of their investment portfolio over a more extended period.
6. Emotional Factors:
Traders: Traders usually need to stay emotionally detached from their trades, as rapid decision-making and swift actions are often required. They often practice disciplined risk management and maintain strict control over emotions like fear and greed.
Investors: Investors have a more relaxed approach and can afford to take a long-term perspective. While they still need to manage emotions during market downturns, their investment decisions are less driven by short-term market fluctuations.
Conclusion:
Understanding the differences between traders and investors is crucial when deciding which approach aligns best with your financial goals, risk tolerance, and time commitment. Both trading and investing have their merits, and individuals may choose to adopt either approach or a combination of both. By considering factors such as time horizons, risk tolerance, strategies, and goals, individuals can effectively navigate the financial markets and work towards achieving their desired outcomes.
What do you want to learn in the next post?
Retail vs Institutional InvestorsRetail
✔️Retail Traders are individual traders who buy or sell stocks, securities, or assets from their personal accounts.
✔️Retail Investors mostly focus on technical analysis, price patterns, and Indicators.
✔️Because of low volume, orders submitted by a retail trader cannot affect the price of an asset.
✔️Retail traders can come out of trades or their positions easily at any time with minimum slippage.
✔️Retails investors have more quality of life as they don't have to trade on a regular basis and can take a break whenever they want.
Institutions
✔️Institutional traders are highly skilled individuals who have a degree in finance, economy, or math and are employed by large institutions to do the trading.
✔️Institutional traders carry out the most trades over any major exchanges and greatly influence the price of a security, commodity, stock, or cryptocurrency.
✔️Institutional Traders have access to a large amount of capital and exotic products. They also have early access to the latest news and buzz as they have the
ability to pay a good amount to various media outlets.
✔️Institutional Traders manage accounts for larger groups or institutions, banks, hedge funds to buy and sell stocks.
✔️Because of large volume orders, institutional traders can greatly impact the prices of a security
✔️Institutional traders focus on fundamentals, sentiments, and trading psychology.
What kind of trader are you? And let us know more differences between these two in the comments box below.
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Happy Trading!
How to chart financials for any companyThis chart shows some key financial metrics for Netflix. We're using the multi-chart layout feature to show the following financial situation:
1. Netflix Quarterly Revenue
2. Netflix Cash & Equivalents
3. Netflix Total Debt
4. Netflix Forward Price-to-Sales ratio
With the financials feature on TradingView, we could chart a lot more than this. Including EPS, R&D, PE ratio, EBITDA, Market cap, and more. We wanted to share this layout with you to demonstrate what's possible. Whether you're a value investor or a short-term trader you can chart the financial situation for a company to better understand the fundamentals that are driving price or telling the story behind a particular asset.
For example, Netflix's cash is growing and so is Netflix's revenue. But this chart layout shows that it's not all good news. Netflix has taken on some massive amounts of debt. Debt continues to rise as content becomes more expensive. This post is not investing or trading advice, instead it is educational. As a TradingView member, this data is available to you right now. You can examine the financial situation for Netflix or other companies.
To get started, click the Financials button located at the top of your chart. The Financials icon looks like the bar chart 📊 emoji. Once you've opened the Financials menu, you can sort by Income Statement, Balance Sheet, Cash Flow, and Statistics. You can also use the search field to find specific financial metrics that are relevant to you.
Before you head to the comments to leave a positive review with some interesting feedback 😁, we have a few more tips to share:
1. When you open the Financials menu, you can hover your mouse over a Financial metric. To the far right of that metric select either Quarterly or Annual. Quarterly will show you the numbers a company reported every 3 months or quarter and annual will show what a company reported every 12 months or full year.
2. For other financial metrics, when you hover your mouse over them, to the far right you will see a question mark icon appear. You can click this question mark to get a definition for that specific financial metric. So if you ever need to learn something new, it's just one click away. Below we've shared some examples:
Price to Sales Ratio
Research and Development
Basic EPS
Free cash flow
Enterprise value
Thanks for reading and following along. If you have any questions or comments, please write us below. You can also leave feedback or product requests. Our team is listening! 💙
THE NEW GOLD - WAITING.There is a new gold in the world. Yes - that's right! Most people don't know about it. It's lying dormant and about to take of, in my estimation.
In this chart I show - mainly for investor interest - 5 graphene stocks. Nobody seems to want them at this point in time. But what do you know about graphenes? Most people know nothing. For total transparency, I have no pecuniary interests or investments in these companies (as yet). In keeping with the house rules I am promoting none of these highlighted. This post is largely educational.
Well, for electric bikes and cars, to aeroplanes that are on the horizon - graphene, a super-powerful and versatile material, is about to rise in demand. If you're a serious investor, you'll be jumping on the net to search the several uses of graphenes and technology developments.
Let's step back a bit. In the midst of the COVID crisis, we saw the rise of tech, biotech and game industries. So think - what's gonna happen after COVID? The world is already moving swiftly away from petroleum based energy sources into renewable energies and the rise of 'electricity'. All this is likely to accelerate. Do that research.
A few new developments are:
1 - Graphene batteries
2 - Graphene super-capacitors that will enhance current Lithium batteries, prolonging their life by up to 4 times.
3 - A new range of graphene conductors.
4 - Super-strong materials made from graphenes.
There are dozens and dozens of graphene stocks lying dormant at this time. My job here is not to make any recommendations or give advice. I'm only raising awareness.
Once COVID is either conquered or controlled, investments into uses of graphene are expected to rocket.
As you can see in the recent price fluctuations, interest is beginning to bubble in these stocks.
Disclaimers : This is not advice or encouragement to trade securities. Chart positions shown are not suggestions. No predictions and no guarantees supplied or implied. Heavy losses can be expected. Any previous advantageous performance shown in other scenarios, is not indicative of future performance. If you make decisions based on opinion expressed here or on my profile and you lose your money, kindly sue yourself.
Best investors of our timeHere are the best. Under 10 years it's too luck based, and even up to 20 years. So all the people on the list will always be old.
Warren Buffet & Jesse Livermore started investing full time in their teens (Warren started at 8 but the track record starts later maybe late teens or twenties, Jesse started at 14 I began the track record estimate at 16), George Soros started in his 30s, Jim Simons started in his 40s and his monstruous medallion fund was launched on his 50th year.
For Jesse Livermore I looked at Dow Jones dividends reinvested returns from 1893 to 1930 which were about 11%, and he managed to grow to 10k in 1893, made 100 million in 1929 (so he had 100,000k + x) so he made at the very least 30% a year... Why I placed him at 18-19% over the stock market returns, but it is possible he made more than this. In any case he got better results than Soros.
Special mention: Carl Ihcan got returns of 26% from 1968 to 2011 versus Buffet 20% (or at least that's the book value of Berkshire), while the S&P with dividends reinvested over that period produced 9.5% so Buffet overperformed by a little over 10% and Ihcan by 16% putting him above Warren Buffet (but for less long) and close to Jesse Livermore & George Soros. But since then Ihcan has done terribly, so Warren Buffet is still numero uno.
Jim Simons secretive medallion fund made 66% a year over 30 years so that's an overperformance of pretty much 55%.
This is not where all his money is, and the fund is capped so there won't be growth futher (for medallion fund, but overall he'll still make lots of money via medaillion flat gains & his other funds).
The overrall perf is so off the charts anyway that in any case he is clearly number 1.
In the game we got:
- An overwhelming majority of sheep shadowing the stock market and making sure they perform same as the rest of the herd every quarter
- Alot of fundamental investors (including short sellers like Jim Chanos I guess)
- A couple of value investors
- A handful of speculators (why bother if you can't beat the stock market anyway? Investors that speculate on the side to reduce portfolio volatility not included)
- A herd of retail traders that look at oversold indicators, fight obvious trends, and think they'll beat Livermore that could read & write at 3 years old
- 1 secretive mathematician/geometrist/pattern recognition master (wink wink) that finds patterns in enormous amounts of data
- Hundreds of day trading educators that claim they can massively outperform a one in 100 million genius that gets his edge from seeing things others cannot
EW Analysis: GBTC Can Be Forming A Bullish TriangleHello traders!
Today we will talk about GBTC - Grayscale Bitcoin Investment Trust from Elliott Wave perspective, which is telling us where Crypto investors are hiding.
As you can see, in the recent rise, GBTC came to the upper triangle line in three waves A-B-C only, so recovery looks corrective, ideally for wave (d), especially if we consider a triangle in wave B in the middle, which also means that BTC and friends may slow down into a deeper corrective pullback. Well, currently we are tracking another three-wave A-B-C decline again, probably down to 8.0 - 6.0 support zone for the final wave (e) and this is where a big bullish triangle may come to an end.
That being said, watch out for a limited gains here at the intraday highs, because a bigger decline into a deeper correction can be around the corner and it can be the same with BTCUSD and ALTcoins. Later then, we can expect the real bull run, when everyone will be very bearish again.
Be humble and trade smart!
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Disclosure: Please be informed that information we provide is NOT a trading recommendation or investment advice. All of our work is for educational purposes only.
Red alert: Idiots are selling! [Entertainment & lesson]We have a code red. I repeat, we have a code red.
I can barely breathe! 🤣
I'm crying
After USO had their reverse split, the price gapped up.
You can check it on robintrack, first there was a strong decline which might be all the people so wiped out they could only afford <8 shares (LOL), but then even after this it keeps going down!
robintrack.net
It only went up before you can check for yourself. Since february they have only kept buying, the number of holders line never went down even for a day no matter what.
And now even after the initial drop that might be explained for other reasons number of holders went down by ~7%
There is only 1 explanation: These masterminds thought the price really went up, and they outsmarted institutions, and have locked up profit 😆
Now I don't know if Robinhood had an erronous display, or if they only show the gains since the split maybe (so investors saw green and thought they got their money back), perhaps some are doing "automated trading"?
All I know is the price rallied up because of a reverse split and a group of people known to be stupid and have been strictly buying for 2 months without even 1 day of pause, have started selling.
These can't be humans... They must be... something else...
Hey so if a really solid company made a 1 > 10 split all the animals would be aggressively buying thinking the price dropped 90%?
Making money in markets isn't that hard if you take it seriously, just look what kind of absolute imbeciles we are playing against!