Trading Tactics

Combining Disparate Timeframes

 

A popular topic in trading circles is the use of multiple timeframes. Lots of traders like to use more than one timeframe to support their hypotheses and used properly such techniques can have considerable benefits.

However most proponents use relatively similar timeframes and in my opinion in doing so they are missing the true value of such an approach. I like to use truly disparate timeframes, ones that are radically different to each other.

Copper last week gave us a timely example of this, so let’s use a real life example to illustrate the power of this often misunderstood concept.  We will start with a daily chart of copper…

Our strategy gave us a buy signal at 435 shown with the red arrow, which we duly entered and we are still holding the bulk of the open position. Actually our own buy signal was in fact supported by a more traditional technical feature on this same daily timeframe…

We can see an attempted downside break from the longer term chart formation a few weeks ago. A failed breakout can often lead to a much more impressive assault on the other side. So in this case the breakout to the upside which came the day after our buy signal could be expected to perform well.

So once we had a daily buy signal its next a case of trying to limbo in at the best possible price. To see this we drop down to an hourly chart, obviously a much smaller timeframe…

After the daily buy signal we actually entered overnight with a resting order as shown by the red arrow. What can we see here on this hourly chart? Here we have a simple little bull flag providing a nice lower timeframe entry into our main daily setup.

Sadly these things don’t set up perfectly as frequently as we would all like, but we are regularly talking in the chat room about looking for hourly entries into longer term positions. Why? Think about it from a Risk/Reward perspective. If you can occasionally combine the risk of an hourly trade with the reward of a daily trade – this is something to be played for any time such an opportunity shows its face!

Finally let’s look at the weekly copper chart…

Oooh! Now we have a weekly bull flag and with a little luck this may be ready to start kicking in for us. Only time will tell. But what I do know at this early stage is that an hourly entry into a daily set up with even the faintest possibility of capturing a weekly move – this is trading utopia and is the sort of thing that all professional traders should always be on the lookout for.

I know many traders like to use combinations of 5 minute and 15 minute charts, or hourly and 120 minute charts, etc. While there is nothing wrong with that per se, the real advantage of multiple timeframes is to be gained from the correct use of radically different timeframes.

We will be exploring the power of disparate timeframes at our seminar this summer. Are you ready to put a range of clear cut, logical and practical techniques to use in your trading? If so be sure to join me, George Kleinman and Jeff Quinto for this one time, one day event as we share the secrets gained from 100 years experience in the markets.

A maximum of 50 people worldwide may join our private clients at this exclusive event. If you are ready to take your trading to the next level, please reserve your place before this event is advertised to the general public. I hope you can join us for a truly revolutionary day… 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

“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!

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

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

“Greed is good”…except when is blows you out!

 

In Gordon Gekko’s universe greed may be good.  Alas in my more modest little world greed is usually the end of many trading careers.  Greed often manifests itself as trading with unrealistic size and that can be a time bomb!

One of the most frequent questions I get asked is “how much should I risk on each trade?”  The irony here is that such an important question is one that I have to steer very clear of, as in my country that is a question I would need to be licenced to answer!!!

However that doesn’t stop me sharing my thoughts on the subject generally, nor does it prevent me revealing what I personally do, so let’s get on with it!

Mr 10%

First I want to tell you a quick story about a guy who has come to be known as “Mr 10%” among my circle of friends.  I don’t know who he is, nor can I actually find him anymore.  But Mr 10% was someone I found on the internet a few weeks ago who was urging traders “to risk no more than 10% of their capital on each trade”!

My guess is this is someone who has never traded in his life.  Or if he has I am quite sure that just a few weeks on from seeing his ridiculous video, he is no longer trading.  Risking 10% is an express ticket to the poor house and it is beyond my comprehension why anyone would be so foolish to even attempt such an idiotic thing.

Of course just to be clear throughout this article I am referring to trading capital and not just the balance in any particular brokerage account.  Sure you can risk 10% of the $25k you have in an account if the other $250k of your trading capital is sitting the bank or in other accounts.  I don’t have a problem with that at all.  But if that $25k is your trading capital in its entirety…that is another matter altogether!

How about 0.1%?

At the other extreme, let’s say we are risking an incredibly small percentage of our capital on each trade, what then?

Well for most traders that would probably not be appropriate either as you are unlikely to make any money over the long run.  So why bother?

There is however one situation where such a tiny stake would be the right answer and this is in a situation where the strategy being traded has a very low percentage of winning trades.  This is not my scene at all, but I know of people who play for huge amounts on their successful trades at the expense of being paid regularly.  Perhaps only 1 in 10 trades is a winner, but when they come around the winners are 20 or 30 times the size of the losers.

Even though I couldn’t live with those sorts of numbers, that is still a profitable strategy.  But it will have huge losing runs!  Huge!  50 to 100 losers on the trot are quite feasible in this scenario, so you would have to trade such an ugly system with tiny leverage in order to trade through the almost constant drawdowns.

The middle ground

Clearly in between these two fairly ludicrous extremes there lies a middle ground containing the right answer for most of us.  What that right answer is depends on many different factors:

  • Strategy winning percentage
  • Relative size of average winners and average losers
  • Capital preservation plan
  • Personal risk tolerance
  • Overall trading objectives

Every one of these factors varies between individuals, which is one of the reasons I cannot give a simple answer to this question I get asked so frequently, even if I was allowed to give personal advice.

Most of the professional traders I know regularly speak in terms of 0.5% to 2% being the “right” amount for them personally.  Most of traders I know also work with similar sorts of statistics, i.e. 50%-75% winning trades and average winners being greater than or equal to average losers.  So with a strategy with that sort of edge 0.5% to 2% seems to be a well-accepted order of magnitude.

Mr 1%

For me personally 1% is a comfortable place to be.  I’ll never win trading competitions with this relatively conservative size, nor will I get blown out.  It is a simple fact of life that if 2 out of 3 trades are winners and 1 out of 3 are losers, these will not materialise in a convenient win, win, lose, win, win, lose pattern.  There will be long winning runs and clusters of losers.  That is just how it is.  So you have to be willing and able to trade through the drawdown periods.  That means understanding the importance of your unit size and how dangerous greed in this area can be to your survival.

Any fool can make money during the easy times.  But only those with commitment and sensible conservative leverage will survive the rough patches.

Yesterday I was doing some work with one of my partners on trade sizing.  We have been slowly increasing our unit size and are still below this 1% level, but are homing in on that as the place we want to reach and then maintain.

We looked at the real time results since launch using a fixed but modest 1% risk per trade and a maximum loss per month capped at 5%.  We can live with that and so can our investors.  We can absorb a few losers here and there and not have to panic or worry about being blown out.  This business is hard enough without having to endure stress that it completely avoidable.

At 1% risk this is the P/L since the strategy went live.  You can see it still makes decent returns at this nice safe level of leverage:

Now let’s consider these other two extremes we discussed.  At 0.1% risk we would be looking at a total return of 9.1% compared to the 136% we see above.  At something less than 5% per year this is simply not enough to make the exercise worthwhile.

At 10% the numbers would be huge, too silly to quote.  However even with a strategy this consistent those tiny little dips would have more than halved the capital – not quite a blowout but very close indeed and not something that many traders would live through.

Conclusion

I hope this illustrates the importance of finding an answer to this question that so many people ask, yet to which there is no “one size fits all” solution.

What I do know from my experience is that it is easy to start too low and slowly work upwards, whereas starting too high is likely to be fatal.  In fact I strongly recommend to all of my clients that they start so low that they are paper trading.  Only with some experience and confidence should they then venture to trading a single contract.  Then over time slowly build up to whatever percentage of capital they have decided is right for them.

This way time is on your side and everyone who has followed that advice has ultimately thanked me for it and told me they have learned how to ride both the financial and emotional dips without ever risking being blow out before hardly starting.  Every one of those that followed that advice remain with me today and their confidence levels remain resolutely high when handed a fistful of losers.  Whereas sadly there have been others who are gone at the first little set back.  I don’t know, but would be willing to bet that in every case these folk have been using too much leverage.

So if in doubt about the trade size you should be using – make the most balanced judgement you can and then halve it!

As a final thought on this topic – no trade should matter to you.  It is just one of a long series.

As one of my friends likes to say “It is just one of 10,000 trades you will be taking.  We are the house, we have the edge.  Its just our job to keep taking the trades.”  So if the next trade matters to you, or the next 2, or next 3…you know you are trading too big, so you need to work on this area of your trading plan.

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!

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Copyright © Simon Townshend Ltd 2010, all rights reserved

Slump busting (part 2)

Last time we discussed the theory of climbing back out of a dip having avoided the bulk of the drawdown that might have otherwise been experienced.  During the recovery the aim is to increase size quickly in order to further capitalise on our change of fortune.  This was the simple model we were working from:

This time I want to discuss some of the practical difficulties we have to face when translating this theory into reality.

The main problem we have is that the simple clean curve we see in theory is a very crude approximation for the noisy line that we will actually experience in real life.  The second problem is that we need to be able to identify when the bottom of the dip has actually been formed in order for us to be able to move from reducing size to increasing size.  If we can find a way to deal with these two factors, we can come surprisingly close to matching our theoretical model.

Identifying your bottom!

Let’s deal with identifying the bottom first as this is the first thing that we have to concern ourselves with in practice.  In our model you should recall that during our first recovery month we are trading exactly the unit size as dictated by our capital preservation plan in the previous month.  In other words we don’t have to worry about whether we have turned the corner or not during the month in which we actually do turn the corner.  We simply know when this has happened by virtue of having a profitable month.

Next we have to deal with the noise issue.  What if our profitable month was just a blip, just a bit of noise on a continuing downward path?  That’s a serious concern in the real world that we have to be prepared to deal with if necessary and here is how to do it.

When you had your first profitable month you were trading with a tiny monthly risk of just 1.05% of capital, having cut back from a starting point of 8% at the previous equity high.  The line in the sand is the equity low made at the close of the previous month and this must be defended at all costs.

The rule is simple – as you pull away from this line it becomes increasingly safe to increase trade size.  However should you head back down towards it again you have to be prepared to cut size again were you to reach that equity low again.  At the equity low, you immediately reset your trade size to whatever you were using during the 1.05% month, and reapply your capital preservation plan from that point going further down below that line.  The safety net provided by the capital preservation plan takes precedence over everything else.

Increasing size

OK, so that deals with the worst possible outcome, which in reality is not bad at all.  So let’s now consider how we operate once we do pull away from that equity low.  Our objective is to double our size each month as we climb back out of the hole, until our original unit size is reached, equating to 8% monthly risk in this example.

So after the first profitable month (the 1.05% month), you could just move straight up to 2.11% which is next step up on the theoretical model.  However this is where our practical noise problem has to be considered.  In simple terms you have a month’s worth of profit under your belt so far and this is the buffer between where you start the next month and that line in the sand.  If you double your unit size in one hit, you effectively halve the size of that buffer.

Is that what you really want to do in practice?  Probably not.  As you pull further and further away from the line in the sand, in becomes easier and easier to increase size and the additional risk becomes proportionately less.  But in these early stages of recovery we need to be more guarded in practice than in theory.  So here’s what we can do…

Split the month into 4 or 5 weeks and increase a little bit after each profitable week.  This is a tactic that will effectively preserve that buffer you have whilst achieving the goal of increasing size.  So for example if your previous size was say 6 contracts, don’t go straight up to 12 on the first day of the month, but maybe go to 8. As long as your first week at 8 contracts ends in profit go up to 10 for week 2.  If your first week wasn’t profitable be pleased that you were trading 8 lots and not 12s and stick at 8 for the next week.

If week 1 was positive, go up to 10 in week 2.  If week 3 is positive move up to 12 and maintain that for the remainder of the month.  At the end of the month you ended at the desired size but avoided risking your buffer unduly.  So yes in practice doing this costs you a few more days than in the noise free theoretical model.  But so what?  You just endured a 6 month drawdown and pulling away from that line in the sand as smoothly as possible is far more valuable than a few extra days in the overall scheme of things.

Now you have 2 months of buffer profits under your belt and you are well on your way to recovery.  Until you make new equity highs always keep that line in the sand in place and be prepared to act accordingly.

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

Copyright © Simon Townshend Ltd 2010, all rights reserved

Slump Busting (part 1)

The markets appear to have stabilised after a most challenging period.  For the first time in quite some while we seem to be seeing a period of more normal volatility.  That is not to say that conditions are perfect as clearly they aren’t.  However most markets are at least tradable once again.  So we are in with a fighting chance of fulfilling our objectives.

I have spoken at length in the past about managing your equity curve when entering a period of drawdown.  There is no doubt that recent months will have lead the majority of traders into some sort of drawdown.  Now things are starting to look a little brighter, it is time to think about how we manage our way back out of a drawdown.

To some traders, myself included, managing your way into and back out of a drawdown can be one of the most powerful tools in the armoury, so this is a subject worthy of significant personal study.  In this first article I want to cover the core principles of this technique and then next time I will expand upon this and discuss how we put the theory into practice.

Going Into The Hole

Let’s start at the beginning, with your capital preservation plan.  The purpose of this is to ensure you retain the majority of your capital – however long and however bad a drawdown period you have to endure.  Everyone has his or her own version of this, but I am going to use the simple model I gave you in Golden Rule #3.  In this we have (a) a maximum allowable loss limit per month and (b) loss levels at which we cut our unit size by 1/3rd each time a drawdown level is reached:

CPP

The main point here is that even with a somewhat conservative rate of cutting back the unit size, you still have 80% of your capital at the end of an astonishingly bad period.  You would also carry on cutting back if it went on further.  If you never recovered at all you would still have ¾ of your capital intact by the time you retired!  So don’t underestimate the importance of this.

Climbing Back Out

Once the tide has turned you then start to build your size back up.  However if you reinstate size more aggressively you can accelerate the recovery back to equity highs by taking fuller advantage of the upturn.

In the following model I show the effect of the same capital preservation plan which risks a maximum monthly loss of 8% initially and reducing by 1/3rd when going down.  When climbing back out this plan doubles the unit size after each successive profitable month, until full size is restored.  In this way it takes 6 months of reducing from full size down to a very small unit size, but only 3 months to build back up to full size which is then maintained in the final 3 months.  The result is the red line.

CPP2

In contrast the blue line shows the impact of sticking with a fixed unit size throughout but still using a maximum monthly loss limit – so this line is a simple 8% loss each month on the way down and a fixed 8% monthly gain when going back up.

So after 6 bad months and 6 good months the linear plan gets right back to where it started, after enduring a gut wrenching 48% drawdown and with no certainty that it couldn’t actually continue going down to zero if the second six months also turned out to be losers!

Whereas our planned and managed approach not only recovers fully but even generates a 10% profit on what is a very bad year.  But most important of all its drawdown is a much more tolerable 22%, plus the mathematical certainty that it actually cannot fall very much lower than that were the second six months to also be complete losers.

I don’t know about you, but I know exactly which one I prefer!  Yes there are several practical difficulties in implementing this, which prevent a simple theory working perfectly in real life.  But we can come surprisingly close with the right tactical approach and that is what I will cover next time.

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

Copyright © Simon Townshend Ltd 2010, all rights reserved

Managing through adversity

I have the pleasure of having met hundreds of traders, the majority of whom are full time professionals.  I have regular dialog with several dozen traders as well.  Guess how many have been telling me lately that they are having a great year?

Zero!  Not one single person has said to me “hey Simon I am doing well at the moment”.  Isn’t that strange out of all of these traders?  I have had people say to me:

  • “The market just doesn’t move, so I cant make money” – true earlier this year there was no opportunity whatsoever, at least none with a worthwhile risk/reward profile.
  • “The markets are moving randomly on news and manipulation, so my normal signals aren’t working” – also true nothing works when a sudden shock spontaneously rewrites the supply/demand dynamic.
  • “My strategy is broken, I need to throw it away and start building a new one” – wrong, don’t do it!  Living through freak times does call for modified daily behaviour, but don’t discard the tools that have served you well over many years throughout normal times.

Several people have asked me what I am doing to survive until things settle down to a higher degree of normality, so here are the three things at the top of my list:

Protect your capital

The first and absolute top priority is to protect the bulk of your capital.  How this is best achieved may vary from person to person, but whatever you do you must ensure you emerge from the rough times with your capital largely intact.  It is pointless waiting for better times when you can be profitable once again if you are effectively blown out of the game or nursing a drawdown that is too big to be quickly recovered from when the time is right.

Keep trading

The second point is that you must keep going.  That may sound at odds with the previous point.  But if you cut back on the number of trades you take and the size of those trades, you can actually continue indefinitely without doing any significant damage to your capital.  If necessary move onto a simulator or just paper trade.  But you must keep trading, for several reasons – it keeps you in touch with the market, it keeps you active and alert, it helps you practise and hone your execution skills.  Most of all it means you will be there when the silliness subsides.

That doesn’t mean you need to keep up the same long hours or to trade every day of the month.  Let’s face it you are not going to make money working 60 hours a week, working half time means you are simply going to not make money half as much – if you see what I mean!  There is nothing wrong with taking time off as long as you keep trading sufficiently long each week to still be in the game.  After all you wouldn’t want to be taking time off when things improve, so why not make the most of the tough times?

I used to think the solution to tough times was to put more time and effort in.  It was a natural way to think for those of us brought up to work harder and harder until we succeed.  But I was wrong!  If the market isn’t going to pay you it isn’t going to pay you and that’s all there is to know.

Do something positive

My third priority is finding something constructive to do in the business that keeps you positive.  Work on something that is within your control and not that of a crazy market.  It doesn’t really matter what you choose as long as you do something that is of value and something that you can feel a sense of achievement over.

I recently applied myself to taking overhead costs out of the business.  Fixed costs are a drag on any business and trading is no exception although mercifully our fixed costs are more limited that most businesses.  I was pleased to find savings amounting to 18% of our annual spend that I was able to eliminate.  That is quite a few thousand dollars a year.  But it is not the money that matters so much, although clearly it is better to have it than not.  What really matters is applying yourself to doing something constructive that you can feel proud of achieving at the end of the exercise.  It is certainly no replacement for getting your trading back into a profitable groove, but it is something that you have absolute control over and that no crazy market can derail you from.

So that’s my simple formula to weather the storm – protect your capital, keep trading and find something positive to do.


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

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

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