Book Getting Into Futures
Book Getting Into Futures
Book Getting Into Futures
com
FUTURES TRADING
Critical Early Steps That Can Lead to Success
by Jim Wyckoff
NE W
TraderPlanet.com is the world's coolest social network built exclusively for traders. We're building a community where people who have common interests in trading worldwide markets can come together and share resources, embrace new friendships, and make charitable
T H E B E G I N N E R S G U I D E TO
FUTURES TRADING
Critical Early Steps That Can Lead to Success
Intro
This may seem like a strange way to start a book that is intended to encourage you to get into futures trading, but the very first point that must be emphasized is that trading is not an easy undertaking, despite marketing hype you may have seen or heard about trading being a simple to-master, get-rich-quick scheme once you learn some gurus trading secrets. Folks, the plain truth is that there are no trading secrets and no easy paths to quick success in trading markets. Now that we have that out of the way, we can begin to look at some factors a person needs to consider to begin trading. Its not just a matter of taking some amount of money, opening an account with a broker and then buying what seems to be priced too low or selling what seems to be priced too high. Your preparation for trading needs to begin well before you get to that stage. One of the biggest obstacles to success in trading markets is a lack of knowledge and understanding of the process of trading. The process of trading includes understanding the instruments you are trading, understanding financial leverage, understanding market behavior and understanding yourself. Understanding the process of trading can be achieved with perseverance and a willingness to continue to learn. Knowing what you dont know Its not coincidental that trading markets is similar to most other human endeavors: Hard work and experience are required to achieve notable success. A person who enjoys classic automobiles would not attempt to tear down and successfully rebuild an engine without having some previous experience or without having learned about the workings of an automobile engine, including knowing about the tools involved in the operation. Ironically, one of the major advantages that experienced traders have is knowing what they dont know about markets and trading. There are certain elements of futures trading that you cannot know and never will. You will never know for sure what markets are going to do in the future. You might think that successful traders have special insights, but market analysis and trading is not a business of bold predictions but one of exploring market probabilities based upon market knowledge, price history, human behavior and trading experience and then reacting to price action as it unfolds. The fact that you know that you dont know exactly what a market will do actually gives you a trading edge because you will exercise more caution and will plan
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for what could happen if a trade position turns against you. Some trades will inevitably turn against you, and you need to be prepared to take losses before they wipe out your trading stake. Protecting your trading stake is critical to give you a chance to succeed as a trader.
Trading Prudently
One sure-fire clue that traders do not have much trading and market experience (and need more!) is when they know a market is going to do something. What can be even worse is when a trader thinks he or she knows what the market is going to do and then makes a trade that turns out to be a winner. That type of psychological reinforcement of a flawed trading characteristic only sets up the trader for a bigger disappointment at some point in the future likely sooner rather than later. The wise trader will prudently place protective buy and sell stops on trades because they do not know what the markets will do. It is better to absorb a small trading loss and be termed wrong about that trade than to risking trading with no protective stops and seeing a small loser turn into a big loser, all in the hope the market will turn around so they can be proven right. Not wanting to be wrong is a psychological barrier many traders have to overcome. Traders absolutely must respect the markets. Only the markets are 100% right. Traders who think they know exactly what a market will do are not showing the markets respect.
Summary
One of the biggest obstacles to success in trading markets is a lack of knowledge and understanding of the process of trading. The process of trading includes understanding the instruments you are trading, understanding financial leverage, understanding market behavior and understanding yourself. Each of these topics are discussed in this eBook in chapters like:
Study and preparation Trading psychology Spotting a trading setup When to quit your day job
Bio
Jim Wyckoff, a senior market analyst at TraderPlanet.com, and the proprietor of an analytical, educational, and trading advisory service, "Jim Wyckoff on the Markets," is into his third decade of involvement with the stock, financial and commodity futures markets. As a financial journalist with Futures World News for many years, he spent day after day reporting from the futures trading floors in Chicago, New York and abroad. At one time or another, Jim has covered every futures market traded in the United States and several overseas. Born, raised, and still residing in Iowa, Jim loves adventures, from driving a Jeep across the highest mountain pass in the continental U.S. to extreme winter camping in the Boundary Waters Wilderness in Minnesota to hiking the jungles of South America. This may seem like a strange way to start a book that is intended to encourage you to get into futures trading, but the very first point that must be emphasized is that trading is not an easy undertaking, despite marketing hype you may have seen or heard about trading being a simpleto-master, get-rich-quick scheme once you learn some gurus trading secrets. Folks, the plain truth is that there are no trading secrets and no easy paths to quick success in trading markets. Now that we have that out of the way, we can begin to look at some factors a person needs to consider to begin trading. Its not just a matter of taking some amount of money, opening an account with a broker and then buying what seems to be priced too low or selling what seems to be priced too high. Your preparation for trading needs to begin well before you get to that stage. One of the biggest obstacles to success in trading markets is a lack of knowledge and understanding of the process of trading. The process of trading includes understanding the instruments you are trading, understanding financial leverage, understanding market behavior and understanding yourself. Understanding the process of trading can be achieved with perseverance and a willingness to continue to learn.
Read some good books by successful futures traders. Not only do you need to know the
markets, but you also need to know how the successful traders trade them. Much of a trader's success comes from his or her "trading psychology." Study a variety of trading methods, not just one trading system. When studying, don't dive into one subject or one market and focus solely on it. Spend study time touching on several topics, then come back for more details on those you find most interesting. If you get into complicated subject matter, sometimes it's better absorbed when it's digested in smaller pieces.
positions most of the time. There is no doubt that there is much more pressure on the person who tries to be a full-time trader. Any trading plan for the full-time trader needs to be that much more concise, including contingency plans for losing streaks and bigger account drawdowns.
The pain of standing aside and missing a good trade that your method told you to take is much worse than the pain of losing on a trade that you entered and exited properly and according to your trading plan. Your own life experiences shape how you think about trading. If your first experience with trading was a negative one, the odds are high that you will not trade in that particular market again for a long time maybe never. The psychological impact of loss and defeat can be much greater and last much longer than the effects of physical pain. If you were not defeated psychologically by a negative trading experience, then the loss does not have such a negative and lasting impact. Education plays an important role in shaping the way traders think about trading. A formal business education can give you an edge in understanding the economy and the market in general, but it is no guarantee of success in trading. Most of the information you learned in a formal college setting will not give you the specific knowledge necessary to be a successful trader. To succeed in trading, you must learn to perceive opportunity where most others see none, and you must seek out the information that gives you the knowledge necessary for success. Your ego and winning can make you broke. Winning can create powerful emotions that distort reality. The more you win, the better you feel, and your ego takes over. The joy of winning is what gamblers seek. A gambler will lose as many times as necessary just for the thrill of winning once. You are the sole person responsible for winning or losing in trading. Don't blame the market or your broker. Losses are an opportunity to focus on whatever problem occurred during the trade. Don't get caught up in personal denial. A successful trader quantifies, analyzes and truly understands and accepts risk. Emotional and psychological acceptance of risk is what determines your mental state in each trade. Individual risk tolerance and preferred trading time frame make each trader unique. Select a trading methodology that reflects your preferred time frame and risk tolerance. The market is not physical. It's an amalgamation of the mindset of all trading participants. The daily tug-of-war between the bulls and the bears reveals what they are thinking on a daily basis. Make sure to look at the market's close in relation to the session high and low. Never buy just because the price is low nor sell just because the price is high. Never average a losing trade. Don't become impatient with the market. Always have a good reason for initiating every trade. Remember, the markets are always right. Traders need to listen to the market. To listen effectively to the market, traders need to know and pay attention to their trading methods but also need to pay just as much attention to themselves as they pay to their charts and the market. The trader's challenge: Learn who you
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actually are and then consistently and consciously develop the qualities that allow you to trade well. Markets tend to be the most bullish at the very top and most bearish at the very bottom. Traders who follow the herd may have a hard time recognizing the clues that suggest a top or bottom is in place because technical indicators can become less reliable. Thus, being content to catch a bigger part of a price trend should be the goal of the trader. Fear and greed are strong emotions that can be both a blessing and a curse for traders. They can motivate a trader to jump on a potential trading opportunity or to get out of a losing position quickly. However, too much fear will not allow a trader to even pull the trigger to enter a trade or prompt a trader to exit a trade too soon. Greed can cause a trader to become intoxicated with thoughts of hitting the "grand slam" of trading, an event that occurs only rarely in trading futures. Becoming greedy and trying to capture all of a move will usually get a trader into serious trouble. As traders, the more you can detach yourselves from the emotions of hope, greed and fear, the better your chances for trading success. Why are there hundreds of good technical analysts but few good traders? Because they need to spend more time on their personal psychology than their analytical methodology. "If I had eight hours to chop down a tree, I'd spend six hours sharpening my axe." Abraham Lincoln. This maxim is similar to the trading experience: Research, learning and preparation for trading takes much longer than executing and watching the trade. The market has far more patience than the majority of traders. There is an old saying that the market will do whatever it takes to drive the largest number of traders crazy. Trends can persist as long as there are traders fighting them. Don't fight the tape.
Purchasing options on futures. Buying options is a great way for individuals, especially beginners, to participate in futures market trading and limit their risk to the price paid for the option. Traders sleep well at night, knowing that if the market makes a violent turn against them, they won't get a margin call from their broker. The trade-off: For traders who purchase options, the timing of the trade has to be even more precise than straight futures trading, as options pricing is based on volatility, and time decay continually erodes the option premium. If an option that is purchased is not "in the money," any favorable moves in the underlying futures contract price will likely not be matched on a one-to-one price basis by gains in the option's value. Selling options on futures. There's an old market adage that says the vast majority of the profits made in options trading are made by the sellers and not the buyers. Probably so but heres the trade-off: Whatever profits that options sellers make on a number of trades can be wiped out quickly in that one time when a market turns unexpectedly and violently against them. Option selling is attractive but not for the uninitiated.
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A market will do anything and everything possible to frustrate the largest amount of traders, and the traders who are most frustrated are those hanging on to losing positions because they didnt have a trading plan and didnt use sound money management tactics. Here are just a few very general money management guidelines: For smaller-capitalized traders, don't commit more than one-third of your trading capital to one trade. For medium- and larger-capitalized traders, you should not commit more than 10% of your capital to one trade. The larger your trading account, the smaller should be the percentage committed to one trade. In fact, some trading veterans suggest larger trading accounts should not commit more than 3%-5% of their capital to one trade.
Dont hold your breath too long while under water. Big losses can get bigger. Cut your losses short and let the winners ride the trend. Never, never, never add to a losing position.
Never meet a margin call. If a position gets so bad that it reaches this point, get out and look for trading opportunities elsewhere. Your risk-reward ratio in a futures trade should be at least three to one. In other words, if your risk of loss is $1,000, your profit potential should be at least $3,000. Remember, preservation of your trading stake is more vital than profits in the early stages of trading.
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the contract to push up through a resistance level and begin a fledgling uptrend. Then, if do get a long position, set a sell stop just below a support level that's not too far below the market. If the trend does not develop and the market turns back south, you are stopped out for a loss that's not too painful. Another way to enter a market that is trending preferably just beginning to trend is to wait for a minor pullback in an uptrend or an upside correction in a downtrend. Prices don't go straight up or straight down, and minor corrections within a trend offer good entry points. The key is to try to determine if it is indeed just a correction and not the end of the trend. Here is one simple, yet very effective, way to know when to get out of a position. Upon entering the trade, place a sell stop below the market if you're long (buy stop if you're short). Then you know right away approximately how much money you might lose in any given trade. Conservative traders will probably prefer to set tighter stops so they can survive financially to trade another day. They may get stopped out and miss the move they had expected when they established the trades, but with tighter stops, they will not be in a position to lose substantial money fighting the market. When you do have a winner going with good profits, this is the time to employ "trailing stops." For example, if you're long and the market reaches your initial upside objective, you might want to stick with it because you think there may be more upside potential. Put a sell stop at a level below the market that allows you to stay in the winning trade. If the market does turn down, you are stopped out but still have a decent profit. The exact guidelines for setting a stop or trailing stop below the market for the long position (above the market if short) depend on a number of conditions. Markets are different at different times, and traders have different views on how much money they can stand to lose. However, a general rule of thumb is to place stops and trailing stops fairly close to the support or resistance area.
Staying protected
Protective stops a sell stop if you are long and a buy stop if you are short are not a perfect money management tool, but they are very effective in helping to solve one of the most important elements of futures trading: When to exit a position. Protective stops do have several disadvantages. Prices may run right through your stop during illiquid trading periods or if there is a sudden new market development, causing you to get filled at a price far from where you expected. Also, large traders who know, or think they know, where most of the resting buy or sell stops are located may try to gun for stops, triggering stop orders and then profiting when prices return to previous levels. Gunning for stops was probably more prevalent in the old days when all trading occurred on exchange floors as locals sometimes took advantage of their inside position to push a market around, but its important to remember that no one group of traders not even floor traders can
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control market prices very much or for very long. As advances in technology and communications became available in the 1990s, traders gained better access to news events, and electronic trading leveled the playing field for traders of all sizes around the world, negating the edge that floor traders once had. Now coat-tailing the actions of commodity funds has become an issue as the practice sometimes exaggerates price moves and creates another challenge for traders using stops.
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www.tradertech.com
Other traders like to use technical indicators in conjunction with typical chart patterns. In addition to clues that traders get from the indicator readings themselves, one of the more useful feature is when these indicators diverge from the price action on the chart. The sugar futures chart below provides an example as prices make a new high while the Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD) indicator is moving lower. Typically, the price action will resolve itself in the direction of the indicator.
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www.tradertech.com
This chapter has covered only a few of the many possible trading setups that a beginning trader might see on a chart. As you get more gain more experience with charts, youll encounter many other potential setups that might fit into your trading plan as you find entry/exit points and stops that fit your trading style.
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What it takes
What are some clues that you could be one of the fortunate few that actually could succeed at being a full-time trader? Here are a few questions to ask yourself if you think you might be ready to trade futures full-time: 1. Are you a successful part-time trader? You'll need to be successful at trading futures on a parttime basis before you think about moving into the full-time trader ranks. Don't be fooled into thinking that trading futures on a full-time basis will allow you to spend more time to cure your part-time trading ailments. In other words, don't say to yourself, "If only I could spend more time trading markets, I could have more success than I've had just trading one lots here and there." 2. Do you have enough money available to live on when yes, when, not if you hit a streak of losing trades? A losing streak will inevitably occur, probably sooner rather than later, and it may be a stretch of poor performance of up to six months, or longer. 3. Do you have the psychological stamina to be a full-time futures trader? Quite frankly, most people do not. Can your psyche, not to mention your pocket book, handle six months of mostly losing trades? Ego and emotions can be very demanding forces. 4. Will your immediate family members support you, even during a prolonged rough stretch of trading? For example, if your spouse does not support your decision to trade full-time, then you are likely doomed to failure. The pressure of having to produce winning trades and knowing that your spouse is skeptical of your efforts is almost insurmountable. 5. Will you be able to uphold your family or other important responsibilities even during a rough
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trading stretch? Or will you brood and kick the dog when it happens to cross your path? Financial strain is not conducive to good relationships and a happy life. The questions above may not apply to you. You may be one of those people who have retired from their day job and are ready to trade full time as long as you can define what full time means to you. You may already have significant amounts of money derived from means other than trading futures and want to spend the autumn of your life not in a rocking chair but in a field that is challenging to you. If that is your situation, youll find that futures trading is probably the most challenging endeavor you could ever undertake but, at the same time, one of the most exhilarating. Good luck in tackling your new career!
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Less-experienced traders are always asking questions about how to best learn and study "fundamentals" or "technicals" in markets. market fundamentals, and few trading books focus only on fundamentals that books on fundamental analysis of futures markets are so rare is because the subject matter is so enormous. Here is just a smattering of macro fundamental factors futures prices: weather, world politics, consumer tastes and consumer demand, interest rates, currency values, natural disasters ... and the list could go on and on. Technical analysis addresses part of the dilemma of keeping up with all the fundamental factors impacting futures market prices because price activity is a
and/or other fundamental factor known to all traders. Price activity also factors in ideas and speculation about the future prospects, and future news, for the market. But the big challenge for traders has always been to be among those people who know about all those fundamentals and chart patterns in a timely manner and can interpret what they mean for prices in the market they are trading. Now a new trading portal called TraderPlanet (www.TraderPlanet.com) gives traders a source of fresh fundamental and technical analysis information daily as well as many trading education features to help move the trader down the road of more successful trading. Markets are changing constantly every day and every minute, as anyone who has observed recent events can attest. What you read in newspapers and magazines can become outdated quickly, and traders need current information and data to succeed.
But TraderPlanet is more than just a one-way conduit of current news and information directed to users. It is a new social networking experience for traders that provides them with plenty of interaction with other traders and with top trading analysts and experts blogs on a variety of topics, chat rooms, trading contests, sentiment surveys and a new gauge of market opinion, the TraderPlanet Indexes for eight market areas. And there are even My Planet personal pages for photos and details you may want to share with other traders. Got a question and looking for an answer about a product, trading strategy or whatever else is on your mind? It is quite likely that theres someone else out there on this trading planet who has been wondering the same thing or is willing to share their experience to help you out. Want to talk to a corn farmer in Iowa or a sugar cane grower in Brazil or a banker in London? Somewhere on this planet someone may want to share their views with you, and TraderPlanet.coms goal is to facilitate those connections wherever is now a local community, and TraderPlanet.com is designed to get you acquainted with your trading neighbors. Now, TraderPlanet.com is not going to guarantee you instant market knowledge and trading success. Many traders feel almost "naked" if they attempt to trade a market when they know little about the to know all of the details about the market
I have been fortunate in my career in the futures industry. When I was a reporter and editor for Futures World News (now Dow Jones Newswires), I was forced to learn about the fundamentals impacting all the markets I covered, which included all the U.S. markets and some traded overseas. I was able to talk to traders and analysts every day for about a dozen years regarding the fundamentals and chart action that impacted the particular market on which I was reporting. Indeed, very few get that kind of unique opportunity to learn about markets. But now TraderPlanet.com gives almost any trader access to the same kind of information and insights at no charge.
Trader Planet has helped me develop my investment strategy by blogging, which is the best way I can imagine to keep a rolling journal. The trading community's comments on my investment ideas really give important feedback about complex ideas.
the timing of key economic reports, the potential head-and-shoulders top and all those other things that make for an informed trader.
Grant Stern
Chris Mahlmann
The markets volatility has made it more important than ever for the trader or investor to be educated, and TraderPlanet is the one community that brings all of us that education. It gives me the opportunity to share my experience and insight with other traders around the world, and learn from them to build my knowledge base. Having so much educational content from so many providers, in so many dierent forms like the videos, webinars, and blogs, all in one place that I can trust, helps me ultimately become a more successful trader! Keep up the great work TraderPlanet.
But wouldnt you feel more comfortable trading if you had access to current news reports and expert commentaries and could tap the views and opinions of others in the trading community around the world? And do all of this for free? TraderPlanet.com is a web site where, as its motto says, traders are likely to gravitate in the future.