General News

“Evolve or Die” – LBR webinar replay

 

I was swamped with feedback after the webinar I recently gave with Linda Raschke and have tried (!) to respond to everyone in the days since this took place.  Thank you to everyone who took part and I’m delighted so many people found it so thought provoking.

If you missed the live event or would like to watch the replay, here is a link to the video archive.  Just click on the picture below…


Enjoy it, let it percolate in your mind for a few days and see how you start to think differently about the markets and start to find ways to simplify what you yourself are doing each day!

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Copyright © Simon Townshend Ltd 2011, all rights reserved

A Century of Trading – June 25th

Jeff Quinto, George Kleinman and Simon Townshend together have over 100 years of experience in the markets!  That’s somewhat alarming to them but great news for you.

Call upon a century of experience and learn 6 trading techniques and money management strategies that these 3 traders use in the markets today.

At this one time, one day seminar in Los Angeles, Jeff, George and Simon will teach you techniques that have stood the test of time and that they personally use today.  These are all straight forward, based upon sound logic and a century of experience in the markets.

Each of these 6 individual techniques can be used on its own and each one is more than capable of boosting your bottom line.  Better still use them together as a powerful solution to long term trading success.


The 6 techniques you will learn are as follows (full details on the other 3 pages of this website):

  • George’s Secret Indicator (and a complete strategy for using it)
  • Behind the Chart (basic & advanced use in trend following and reversal trading)
  • Don’t be Afraid of the Money (how professionals handle their capital)
  • The Power of Natural Numbers (a breakthrough strategy for capturing profits)
  • The Keys to the Kingdom (the much overlooked power of trade sizing)
  • Overcoming Fear and Programming Confidence (turning a new trader into a survivor)


Best of all you can take any or all of these and start using them yourself straightaway on Monday morning.

To find out more, please visit:  www.CenturyOfTrading.com

Disclaimer, risk warning and copyright notice apply to all articles published on this site.

Copyright © Simon Townshend Ltd 2011, all rights reserved

Perception is not always reality

 

…but can be a real risk to performance!

The last few weeks we have really been getting beaten up.  At least that is how it feels.  Many of my friends that trade the same strategy with me are feeling the same frustration as I am feeling.  Few trades seem to be working and those that do just don’t deliver worthwhile profits.

At least that’s how bad it feels.  Yet when we step back from the day to day activity and look at the facts, we see a rather different picture.  Our daily strategy that usually has about 8 to 12 trades per month closed in November at all-time highs.  December delivered a small loss equivalent to just 2 losing trades.  January has been similar.

So in reality we are actually behind by about 4 losers.  That’s all!  Or put another way we are just 4 modest winning trades (or just a couple of decent winning trades) off of all-time highs!

That’s not exactly a bad situation is it?  Yet we are hurting and I want to understand why?

The only conclusion I have been able to draw is that our perception is being benchmarked against recent history rather than what it is reasonable for us to expect.  Psychologically we have become conditioned to expect to close every month at new equity highs, as that is exactly what we have been doing month after month for a long time.  So relative to our benchmark and expectations we feel like we are really getting a good kicking.

However in reality, 4 losing trades is so immaterial traders wouldn’t normally even discuss it.  So we are actually still in a good place, a place that many traders would be only too happy to have achieved.

So what’s the problem?

Well there actually is a very real problem.  Our perception of doing badly takes us psychologically to a very dangerous place and we have to be very careful how we handle this.  Feeling like we are doing badly is very destabilizing, even though it may not be true.  This in turn can lead to irrational behaviour, to lack of concentration and to silly errors.

It can also create a feeling of desperation to get back on track quickly, which in turn can lead to cutting corners, to taking sub-optimal trades, to over trading and to sloppy trade management.

Together all of these things can easily conspire to create the poor performance that we are actually trying to avoid!  This is why we have to be so careful about everything we do until this dangerous psychology is lifted.

So to counterbalance these risks we have to deliberately work to do the opposite – to minimise the number of trades we take, to double check we only take the best trades, to manage them strictly within the rules of our trading plan and to avoid impulsive, irrational decision making.  In truth half of the battle is just being aware of these increased dangers we face at odd times like this.  The other half is working on these opposites in order to achieve the balance that we are at risk of losing if we allow the false psychology to get in our way.

So watch out for this trap next time you feel you are going through a rough patch.  Ask yourself from an objective standpoint “Am I really doing badly or is it just a perception?”.  Then work hard to move the perception back into line with reality taking great care until the psychological trap has passed.

Disclaimer, risk warning and copyright notice apply to all articles published on this site.

Copyright © Simon Townshend Ltd 2011, all rights reserved

When to stop trading?

 

I had a great question the other day about how to trade into and around the holiday season.  When was I going to stop trading myself etc?

I thought this would be a useful topic to share with you too.  So here is my answer and the reasoning as to why…

As we move into the second half of December we can usually expect volume and volatility to drop away.  The solution to this, whenever it happens, is to move out to working larger timeframes if you want to trade.  If not then close down and hibernate your trading progressively starting with the smaller timeframes first.

The run up to Christmas / New Year is the one time when we can really anticipate this fall off in activity so we can plan in advance to take this evasive action.

Personally I trade daily, hourly and in theory,  5 minute and 1 minute timeframes.  I say in theory about the latter two as I have already shelved these over recent weeks due to the poor state of the market.  But daily and hourly trades have being going brilliantly and still have plenty of year left in them.

My own plan

My own plan is as follows:

  • Daily charts – I will trade these right the way through as this is a large enough timeframe to continue functioning properly.  The number of trades that set up may reduce, but we also have had some nice moves during this time of year in the past that can be harnessed with this large a timeframe.
  • Hourly charts – I will continue these through next week.  But then after December 17th they will be shelved until the New Year.  The number of opportunities and the probability of success is likely to fall away dramatically after this time, so there is no point pressing ahead in such an environment.
  • Shorter timeframes – This week will be about the limit for these and it is probably better to take the time off and enjoy an extended break rather than waste time trying to trade in a sub-optimal environment.  We can expect these to descend into pure noise, even more so than they are already.

Go out on a high

As a final thought, this is a little trick I have often used in the past especially for short-term trading.  Why not just artificially bring your year to a close after a really good day?

If you are able to end the year on a high – either closing at new equity highs ideally, or simply having had a great day – you will go into the holiday on a psychological high.

This will set you up for both having a great holiday and being in the perfect frame of mind to tackle next year when you return.  I really recommend this artificial year end.  So if you have a suitable day any time soon, use that to draw a line under 2010, enjoy your holiday and go and have fun with your family!

Disclaimer, risk warning and copyright notice apply to all articles published on this site.

Copyright © Simon Townshend Ltd 2010, all rights reserved

Busy, busy, busy!

 

Well it has been a few weeks since I last had a chance to write any articles. My word I have been rushed off my feet these last few weeks, with so many exciting projects all going on at once.

But the main thing is that each of these represent progress in our trading business. All of a sudden technology has been THE focus, with revisions to websites, launching a new chat room and a planned iPhone app to name but three.

So that got me thinking that I should add some technology insights to my list of planned articles to share with you over the coming months. I get lots of people asking me about what charting and execution platforms to use, etc. As this is an ever changing landscape, I have made considerable changes to our own technology here this year. So this does seem like a timely topic. Watch out for the first one on charting platforms heading your way soon.

The end of an era

Of course tackling lots of additional projects is all well and good as long as the main business is doing well. For me there have been some fundamental revisions over the summer as a result of which we are in great shape in our trading. For more years than I care to remember the primary focus of our business has been short term scalping in the S&P, with a few other profitable but smaller scale strategies traded alongside this.

I am sure you don’t need me to tell you that S&P scalping is a business that has been in real decline over the last year or two. Over the summer we did some serious questioning of how our time is spent and the returns we get from that invested time. It became very clear that with relatively little time being spent trading other strategies that have had phenomenal returns over the the last couple of years, it was no longer possible to justify most of my time being spent glued to 1 minute S&P charts that have produced almost completely flat returns of late.

So my days (or is it decades?) as a short term scalper are now at an end! Or at least very much on hold until such a time as “freely traded markets” return to being freely traded and both volume and volatility make the the S&P scalping business a viable alternative once again. That might be next month of course, but after all this time I am not banking on a return to normality any time soon.

Today’s money is in the real moves not the noise

Stepping away from the short term noise is a great feeling once you get used to it. Even during the difficult market conditions we have been banking great regular profits with our longer term swing trades. October was our 20th month since going live with this strategy and our 19th profitable one.

Needless to say this is where much more of my time and capital is being focused now that scalping is off the cards. It was a difficult decision to make, but such a logical one. Longer term subscribers to this newsletter may recall that I have a small group of professional traders who also trade this strategy for their own accounts and who are also enjoying great success. Personally I am really enjoying the vibrant community that is growing among this group of traders who have all become great friends.

It is also a real bonus and a pleasure to have George Kleinman working with me and executing the trades for those members who want the returns but without the hassle of actually taking the trades themselves.

So all together, everything is progressing brilliantly and we are also having a great time.

Fancy joining this exclusive club?

It is about 6 months since I last took on anyone and have essentially kept the door tightly closed ever since then. But I have now decided to accept just a handful of new members as we run into the year end.

If you are serious about your trading success and would like to take a look at the most consistently profitable trading strategy I have ever seen in my near 30 years in the markets, then please pay us a visit at www.SeriousInvestmentReturns.com

Disclaimer, risk warning and copyright notice apply to all articles published on this site.

Copyright © Simon Townshend Ltd 2010, all rights reserved

Politicians love to lie with statistics…

 

…but don’t overlook their ability to mislead with words!

Finally in Britain we have a government prepared to roll up its sleeves and deal with the horrible financial mess that has been allowed to develop over the last decade.  Almost every day on the news we hear about the state of “the deficit”, the 25% public spending cuts and ugly tax rises that are planned to deal with this problem.

The widely accepted figure for the UK’s deficit is £149bn.  An astronomical figure we all agree, even those who will be most impacted by the spending cuts accept the country cannot go on living on its credit card forever and action is urgently required.

But what are the facts that lie behind the headlines?  When we hear the word “deficit” the picture conjured up is that of an overdraft, a loan, a credit card bill.  That analogy is then built upon by the way journalists write their stories.  People sitting at home watching the news, sucking on their teeth in disbelief at the horror story of the Nation’s debts try to internalise otherwise incomprehensible numbers by thinking of themselves personally in a similar predicament.

Perhaps £149bn of National debt, may create a picture for the individual of they themselves sitting there with £149k on their mortgage or maybe £14.9k on a credit card bill?  They think of their personal deficit if you like, being of such magnitude that an easy way out of the hole eludes them.  All they know is that somehow in that position they would have to find a way of dealing with their “deficit”.

What’s in a word?

Very sadly what normal human beings have been allowed, encouraged and coerced into understanding the word “deficit” to mean, isn’t exactly the same definition as used by our politicians.  For them “deficit” doesn’t mean the whole horrible insurmountable mess.  They don’t mean the current credit card balance or the mortgage on the house.

Their version of the word “deficit” refers only to the rate at which the hole is continuing to be dug!  The £149bn is only the additional debt being added to the pile this single year.  It isn’t the credit card balance at all, just the new spending being added to it.  The actual debt is miles worse.  The last credit card bill stood at £927bn even before this £149bn started to be spent!

So hold on a minute here.  The 25% spending cuts and tax rises are intended to address just the £149bn annual increase in the mess and they don’t even deal with all of that, only a bit of it!  They don’t get anywhere near addressing the £927bn racked up over the last decade, which also has to be paid back.  We don’t hear about that at all when the discussion centres around just this £149bn figure.

I am sure that the majority of the population genuinely believe that if the £149bn could be eliminated, we would be out of the woods completely.  But in reality these 25% cuts and tax rises should only be seen as the first round.  There will have to much much deeper cuts and tax rises to follow if we are to deal with the actual problem once the incremental annual increase has finally been sorted out.

There are two other sorry aspects to this national problem too.  Firstly the public has been led to believe that we are in this mess because of the financial intervention when the banking system collapsed.  Politicians do nothing to defuse this misconception as it channels the public’s fury away from themselves.  So they are only too happy to have the bankers blamed for the pain.  However the truth is rather different from perception, again.  Without the financial intervention the true deficit would stand at £816bn.  So £9 out of every £10 of the true deficit has nothing to do with the credit crunch but everything to do with reckless and irresponsible government spending.  No wonder the politicians are so happy to see the bankers take the blame for this situation.

Growth?

The second buried fact is perhaps the most worrying of all.  In attempting to tackle this tip of the iceberg £149bn annual increase in debt, there is a third key element.  Over and above the spending cuts and tax rises there is an assumption of economic growth.  This is a big assumption, which is almost certainly flawed.  I suspect we don’t hear too much about this as it is probably already known to be flawed, yet the whole £149bn reduction is absolutely dependent upon this.  Yet basing your rescue upon growth is about as sensible as relying on a lottery ticket coming good.  It just isn’t going to happen.  At least you should not be banking on it, more treating it as a welcome surprise were it to materialise.

About 3 years ago a read a new book written by George Soros.  Well I say read, it was more like ploughed through with great difficulty as it was probably the most difficult book I have ever tried to read.  To the best of my ability I concluded from this a simple message – The world has experienced 60 years of almost uninterrupted economic growth.  That period is now at an end and there is no reason to expect any growth at all, on average, over the next decade or two.  In fact after such an extended period of growth, there is every reason to expect an extended period of no growth at all (at best!).  Traders might like to think of that as a retracement in an uptrend, but on a yearly chart perhaps.

He might be right?  He might be wrong?  If it was a politician making such predictions it would be guaranteed to be wrong.  But like him or loath him, this guy is no fool.  Our knowledge of market swings and even plain old common sense also support such a view.  So I would certainly not want to be relying on growth to fix the bulk of the country’s financial problems, yet wishful thinking seems to be about all we have left.

Don’t be a lemming

There may be an acceptance of tough times ahead, but there does seem to be a general consensus that the worst is now behind us.  Where this confidence is founded I can’t quite figure out.  From what I can see this is far from over.  In fact we don’t seem to have even finished the hors d’oeuvres yet.

As traders we are always getting bearish at the end of major bull markets and always getting bullish at the end of major bear markets.  In many ways it is our purpose in life to be taking the opposite view to that generally accepted by the public.  That is how we outperform the crowd over the long run.  Perhaps we are just wired differently?  Not to accept what we are told, to be forever suspicious?  The minute a room full of people agree with my view on the market, I know I am on the wrong side.

So I like being different, confrontational some might think, holding views that go against the grain.  There is supposed to be safety in numbers, but never forget the money is with the minority!  When people tell me “you have been way too pessimistic in the last few years” I have to tell them that 30 years ago I was a superbull.  You would never have found a bigger optimist at that time – a time where there was nothing to be optimistic about (mass unemployment, 3-day working week, power cuts, rubbish piling up in the streets etc.).

Markets move in cycles, life moves in cycles.  That always has been the case and always will be.  No I don’t buy into all this tripe about recovery that the masses are happy to swallow.  The facts simply point in a very different direction for the moment.  Once we really get into the pain of sorting out this mess, once the 25% spending cuts look like small beer, when there is real fear and desperation on the streets, when there is nothing to look forward to…then I’ll be bullish again.  I also know we will see the S&P back to 1650 and way beyond in the future.  I expect and hope that is in my lifetime, it just isn’t likely to be any time soon.

Disclaimer, risk warning and copyright notice apply to all articles published on this site.

Copyright © Simon Townshend Ltd 2010, all rights reserved

Rip-Off Britain – Chapter 2

I feel its time again to have another moan about my gas bills.  If you were reading my articles a little over a year ago you will probably remember my last rant on this subject.  At the time the wholesale price of Natural Gas had been in long term decline and was actually at its lowest price for 7 years, having FALLEN by over 75%.  Yet mysteriously we, the consumers, were facing bills escalating wildly out of control over these same years.  I wasn’t happy about it.

If you missed that article but these astounding facts interest you, here is the link:  http://simon-townshend.com/2009/05/rip-off-britain

I heard on the news a few days ago that the gas prices we consumers have witnessed more recently are due to the weakness of the Pound.  So the excuse seems to have evolved rather over the last year – maybe a few people with more influence than me started taking an interest in this market that so few people ever look at?

Needless to say when you compare the price of a Dollar (the currency in which Natural Gas trades) today to its price a year ago you notice something else that’s rather intriguing…A year ago a Pound bought you 1.5 Dollars.  Today it buys you errr 1.5 Dollars!  In the period in between the Pound has been STRONGER, not weaker, actually maintaining 1.6 to 1.7 for the majority of that time.  So that was a pretty feeble excuse then.  But maybe it served its purpose and diverted unwelcome attention away from the true wholesale gas price.

What will they think of next?  Actually I have a sneaking suspicion that the next excuse will in fact revert back to the “terrible rises in the wholesale gas price”.  The fact that these rises , if they do in fact happen, will come from an unbelievably low base will no doubt be overlooked as the con unfolds.

Why do I think this?  Well over that last few weeks the Natural Gas market has actually bottomed and is now starting a very pretty well behaved new uptrend.  How far it will rise is anyone’s guess but when you see just how far it fell over recent years, a very substantial rise is by no means out of the question:

NG Front Month

The real question on my mind is if my own gas bills were able to rise during the biggest fall in real gas prices in recent history, what the heck will happen to them now?  I fear we already know the answer to that!

On a slightly more positive note – my fund members and SIR subscribers have been long this market for the last few weeks and we plan to not only hold onto the existing position but to add to it at every opportunity if this new uptrend develops as it has the potential to.  So “They” may have really shafted us on the way down, but at least we are somewhat hedged against the next round of shenanigans that no doubt will start to become newsworthy over the coming months.  :-)

I dont know about you, but I am getting more than a little bored of being treated like a mushroom by the powers that be.

Disclaimer, risk warning and copyright notice apply to all articles published on this site.

Copyright © Simon Townshend Ltd 2010, all rights reserved

Last 4 Places Now Available

May was a pretty tough month for everyone I know, with so many shocks hitting the market and causing instant reversals on what felt like an almost daily basis.  It is difficult for any strategy to perform in such a wild and random environment.

We did not escape either and our swing trading strategy had its first losing month after 14 consecutive profitable months.  We knew a losing month had to arrive at some time and it finally chose May!  So that was our first losing month and our worst drawdown ever.

But I am pleased to say it still wasn’t a terrible drawdown.  I am even more pleased that on checking my figures last night I discovered that in the first 2 weeks of June our relatively few trades (4 winners and 1 loser) have completely recovered that drawdown and taken us right back up to equity highs.

Once again this strategy has proven just how powerful it is and I have decided to make available 4 new places for serious traders who are interested in joining myself and my small group of friends who take these trades with me.  Ideally I would like to take on 2 new members this month and 2 in July, as I work closely with each person until they are fully conversant with what we do and how we do it.

Before casting the net wider I would first like to offer these last 4 places to the readers of my newsletters.  So if you would be interested in adding something extra to your current trading activities please have a look at the following website and drop me a line to let me know you are interested:

www.SeriousInvestmentReturns.com

This is a swing trading strategy with typically 6 to 12 trades per month and you need to be able to risk $1,000 – $1,500 on a trade as the majority of our trades have this sort of initial risk.  There are some trades with initial risk of just $600 to $800 and also a few in the more volatile markets requiring a larger risk per trade (which I advise members to skip until they have built up a decent profit).   Here is the cumulative profit and loss chart for our 152 trades from the day we started (in March 2009), right up to last night:

If you are interested to hear how I came to develop this strategy, or for that matter what you need to do to develop your own, then here is a recording of an interview last year that you may find interesting:


Disclaimer, risk warning and copyright notice apply to all articles published on this site.

Copyright © Simon Townshend Ltd 2010, all rights reserved

FAQ #2

This week marks the anniversary of my second appearance on Friends and Quinto.

From last weeks feedback it sounds like newer subscribers who have not previously heard these interviews want to hear more.  So here is the second one, that Jeff refered to in last weeks recording.

In this interview Jeff and I discuss the process to moving from trading your own account to handling other peoples money.  I know this is a transition that many traders will eventually make.  But it is not without some hidden pitfalls that I discovered the hard way.  So hopefully this will help you avoid making the same mistakes.

Just click on the icon above to hear this 11 minute broadcast.


Disclaimer, risk warning and copyright notice apply to all articles published on this site.

Copyright © Simon Townshend Ltd 2010, all rights reserved

My First Anniversary

Time certainly flies.  I find it incredible that a whole year has past since my first appearance on Friends and Quinto.

If you missed it then, here is another chance to hear Jeff and me discussing the strange volatility extremes we had been witnessing in the markets.  This may be a year old, but it is every bit as valid today as it was then – now that is something that we would never have believed possible!

Just click on the icon above to hear this 8 minute broadcast.


Disclaimer, risk warning and copyright notice apply to all articles published on this site.

Copyright © Simon Townshend Ltd 2010, all rights reserved

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Friends and Partners

FuturePath Trading is run by my friends Damon Pavlatos and Linda Raschke and this is my primary brokerage firm for day trading

The Trading Den is my private club for serious professional short term traders

Commodity Resource Corp is run by my great friend George Kleinman who also runs an AutoPilot service for clients of SeriousInvestmentReturns.com

S-I-R is my premium longer term swing trading signal service

American Futures Trading provide an AutoPilot execution service for clients of my T1System.com signal service as well as system trading services

T1System.com is the lower cost entry into my longer term swing trading signals

I use my friends at Currencies.co.uk for cash currency transactions

My great friend Jeff Quinto assists many traders through difficult times in their trading careers via his brilliant mentoring service

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