Day Traders Bible PDF
Day Traders Bible PDF
Day Traders Bible PDF
BIBLE
‘My Secrets of Day Trading’
By
RICHARD D. WYCKOFF
New York, 1919.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
• Chapter 1: Introduction
• Chapter 2: Getting Started In Tape Reading
• Chapter 3: The Stock Lists and Groups Analysed
• Chapter 4: Trading Rules
• Chapter 5: Volumes and Their Significance
• Chapter 6: Market Technique
• Chapter 7: Dull Markets and Their Opportunities
• Chapter 8: The Use of Charts as Guides and Indicators
• Chapter 9: Daily Trading vs. Long-Term Trading
• Chapter 10: Various Examples and Suggestions
• Chapter 11: Obstacles to be Overcome Potential Profits
• Chapter 12: Closing Trades (as important as opening trades)
• Chapter 13: Two Day's Trading - An Example Of My Method
• Chapter 14: The Principles Applied To Longer Term Trading
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- CHAPTER ONE -
INTRODUCTION
THERE is a widespread demand for more light on the subject of
Tape Reading or the reading of moment by moment transactions in
a stock.
A friend of mine once said: "Joe and I used to trade in ten share
lots together. He was an ordinary trader, just like me. We used to
hang over the same ticker." The speaker was, at the time he made
the remark, still trading in ten-share lots, while I happened to know
that Joe's bank balance -- his active working capital -- amounted to
$100,000, and that this represented but a part of the fortune built
on his ability to understand the tapes’ secrets and interpret the
language of the tape. Why was one of these men able to generate a
fortune, while the other never acquired more than a few thousand
dollars day trading?
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by either or both. The answer seems to be in the peculiar
qualifications of the mind, highly potent in the successful trader,
but not possessed by the other. There is, of course, an element of
luck in every case, but pure luck could not be so sustained in
Manning's case as to carry him through day trading operations
covering a term of years.
The famous Jesse Livermore used to trade solely on what the tape
told him, closing out every-thing before the close of the market. He
traded from an office and paid the regular commissions, yet three
trades out of five showed profits. Having made a fortune, he
invested it in bonds and gave them all to his wife. Anticipating the
1907 panic, he put his $13,000 automobile up for a loan of $5,000,
and with this capital started to play the bear side of the market,
using his profits as additional margin. At one time he was short
70,000 shares of Union Pacific stock. His whole lot was covered
on one of the panic days, and his net profits were over a million
dollars!
You might be urged to say: "Yes, but these are rare examples. The
average man or woman never makes a success of day trading by
reading moment by moment transactions of the market." Right you
are! The average man or woman seldom makes a success of
anything! That is true of trading stocks, business endeavours or
even hobbies! Success in day trading usually results from years of
painstaking effort and absolute concentration upon the subject. It
requires the devotion of one's whole time and attention to - the
tape.
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The Tape Reader aims to make deductions from each succeeding
transaction - every shift of the market kaleidoscope, to grasp a new
situation, force it, lightning-like, through the weighing machine of
the mind, and to reach a decision which can be acted upon with
coolness and precision. It is gauging the momentary supply and
demand in particular stocks and in the whole market, comparing
the forces behind each and their relationship, each to the other and
to all.
A floor trader on the exchange who stands in one crowd all day is
like the buyer for one department in a store - he sees more quickly
than anyone else the demand for that type of product, but has no
way of comparing it to what may have strong or weak demand in
other parts of the store. He may be trading on the long side of
Union Pacific stock, which has a strong upward trend, when
suddenly a decline in another stock will demoralize the market for
Union Pacific stock, and he will be forced to compete with others
who have stocks to sell.
The Tape Reader, on the other hand, from his perch at the ticker,
enjoys a bird's eye view of the whole field. When serious weakness
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develops in any quarter, he is quick to note the changes taking
place, weigh them and act accordingly.
Another advantage in favour of the Tape Reader: The tape tells the
news minutes, hours and days before the newspapers, and before it
can become current gossip. Everything from a foreign war to the
elimination of a dividend; from a Supreme Court decision to the
ravages of the boll-weevil is reflected primarily upon the tape.
The insider who knows a dividend is to be jumped from 6 per cent
to 10 per cent shows his hand on the tape when he starts to
accumulate the stock, and the investor with 100 shares to sell
makes his fractional impress upon its market price.
He never ventures far from shore; that is he plays with a close stop,
never laying himself open to a large loss. Accidents or catastrophes
cannot seriously injure him because he can reverse his position in
an instant, and follow the newly-formed stream from source to
mouth. As his position on either the long or short side is confirmed
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and emphasized, he increases his line, thus following up the
advantage gained.
A pure tape reading day trader does not care to carry stocks over
night. The tape is then silent, and he only knows what to do when
it tells him. Something may occur at midnight which may crumple
up his diagram of the next day's market. He leaves nothing to
chance; hence he prefers a clean sheet when the market gong
strikes. By this method interest charges on margin are avoided,
reducing the percentage against him to a considerable extent.
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The Tape Reader evolves himself into a ‘trading machine’ which
takes note of a situation, weighs it, decides upon a course and gives
an order. There is no acceleration of the pulse, no nervousness, no
hopes or fears concerning his actions. The result produces neither
elation nor depression: there is calmness before, during and after
the trade.
The Tape Reader, on the other hand, is like a fine train, which
travels smoothly and steadily along the tracks of the tape,
acquiring direction and speed from the market engine, and being
influenced by nothing else whatever.
Having thus described our ideal Tape Reader in a general way, let
us inquire into some of the pre-requisite qualifications.
He must study the various swings and know where the market and
the various stocks stand; he must recognize the inherent weakness
or strength in prices; understand the basis or logic of movements.
He should recognize the turning points of the market; see in his
mind's eye what is happening on the floor of the exchange.
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- CHAPTER TWO -
GETTING STARTED IN TAPE READING
To study Tape Reading "on paper" is one thing, but to practice and
become proficient in the art is quite another. Almost anyone can
make money on imaginary trades because there is no risk of any
kind - the mind is free from the strain and apprehension that
accompanies an actual trade; fear does not enter into the situation;
patience is unlimited.
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success is not eventually realized you will be many dollars better
off for having risked a minimum quantity. It has already been
shown by experience that the market for odd lots (100 shares or
less) on the exchanges is very active, so there is no other excuse
for the novice who desires to trade in round lots than greed-of-
gain, or a get-rich-quick mentality.
The dollars will come along fast enough if you can make more
points net than you lose. The professional billiardist playing for a
stake aims to out-point his antagonist. After trading for a few
months don’t consider the dollars you are ahead or behind, but
analyse the record in points. In this way your progress can be
studied.
As the initial losses in trading are likely to be heavy, and as the
estimated capital must be a more or less an arbitrary amount, we
should say that units of $5,000 would be necessary for each 50
share lot traded in at the beginning. This allows for more losses
than profits, and leaves a margin with which to proceed. Some
people will secure a footing with less capital; others may he
obliged to put up several units of $5,000 each before they begin to
show profits; still others will spend a fortune (large or small)
without making it pay, or meeting with any encouragement.
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Look over the causes of failure of most businesses and you will
find the chief causes to be: 1) Lack of capital, and 2)
Incompetence. Lack of capital in Wall Street trading can usually be
traced to over-trading. This proves the saying, "Over-trading is
financial suicide." It may mean too large a quantity of stock being
traded, or if the trader loses money, he may not reduce the size of
his trade to correspond with the shrinkage in his capital.
To make our point clear: A man starts trading in 50 share lots with
$1,000 capital. After a series of losses he finds that he has only
$500 remaining. That’s on 10 points on 50 shares, but does he
reduce his orders in shares? No. He risks the $500 on a 50 share
trade in a last desperate effort to recoup. The stock loses 10 points
and he’s out $500.
After being wiped out he tells his friends how he "could have made
money if be had had more capital." Incompetence really deserves
first place in the list. Supreme ignorance is the predominant feature
of both stock market lamb and seasoned speculator.
It is surprising how many people stay in the Street year after year,
acquiring nothing more, apparently, than a keen scent for tips and
gossip. Ask them a technical question that smacks of method and
planning in trading and they are unable to reply. Such folks remain
on the Street for one of two reasons: They have either been "lucky"
or their margins are replenished from some source outside of the
markets.
Let me give an instance of how this works out in practice: You are
long 100 shares of Union stock, with a stop-order just under the
market price; a dip comes and 100 shares sells at your stop price -
say 164. Your careful, and not too busy broker, stands in the
crowd. He observes that several thousand shares are bid for at 164
and only a few hundred are offered at the price.
He does not sell the stock, but waits to see if it won't rally. It does
rally. You are given a new lease of life. This handling of the order
may benefit you $50, $100 or several hundred dollars in each
instance, and is an advantage to be sought when choosing a broker.
Having knowledge of the depth of the market – how much is
offered for sale and at what price and how much is bid and at what
price; the placement of bid and ask orders are of tremendous
importance to the tape reader.
Half this time is consumed in putting your broker into the crowd
with the order in hand; the other half in transmitting the report.
Hence, when Union Pacific comes 164 on the tape and you
instantly decide to buy it, the period of time between your decision
and the execution of your order is as follows:
The tape is behind the market …30 seconds Time elapsed before
broker can execute the order … 30 seconds It will therefore be
seen that your decision is based on a price which prevailed half a
minute ago, and that you must purchase if you will, at the price at
which the stock stands one minute after.
If you think the law of supply and demand is altered to catch your
$25, floor - you better reorganize your thinking. Were you on the
floor you could probably buy at 164 the minute it touched that
figure, but even then you have no certainty. You would, however,
be 60 seconds nearer to the market. Your commission charges
would also be practically eliminated.
If you are trading in 100 share lots, your stock must move your
way one point to make $100 profit. Which class of stocks are most
likely to move a point? Answer: The higher priced issues. Looking
over the records we find that a stock selling around $150 will
average 2½ points fluctuations a day, while one selling at 50 will
average only one point. Consequently, you have 2½ times more
action in the higher priced stock. The commission and tax charges
are the same in both. Interest charges are three times as large, but
this is an insignificant item to the Tape Reader who doses out his
trades each day.
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- CHAPTER THREE -
ANALYZING THE LIST OF STOCKS
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decline in Union, with proportionate declines in the rest of the
groups' list.
The operator who was watching only Union would have been
surprised at this; but had he viewed the whole market he must have
seen what was coming. Knowing the point of distribution, he
would be on the lookout for the accumulation which must follow,
or at least the level where support would be forthcoming. Had he
been expert enough to detect this, quick money could have been
made on the subsequent rally as well.
There may be nothing the matter with the "leader," but its strength
will be affected by weakness among all the others. A bad break
may come in Brooklyn Rapid Transit, occasioned by a political
attack, or other purely local influence. This cannot possibly affect
the business of the large transportation stocks or transcontinentals,
yet St. Paul, Union, and Reading decline as much as B. R. T.
The market does not break in two, even when it receives a severe
blow. If something occurs in the nature of a financial disaster,
interest rates rise, investment demand falls, public sentiment or
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confidence is shaken, or corporate earning power is declining or
are deeply affected - a tremendous break may occur, but there is
always a level, even in a panic, where buying power becomes
strong enough to produce a rally or a permanent upturn.
The market is made by the minds of many men. The state of these
minds is reflected in the prices of securities in which their owners
operate. Let’s examine some of the individuals, as well as the
influences behind certain stocks and groups of stocks in their
various relationships. This will, in a sense, enable us to measure
their respective power to affect the whole list or the specific issue
in which we decide to operate.
The market leaders are, at the time of this writing – and for
illustration only -, Union Pacific, Reading, Steel, St. Paul,
Anaconda and Smelters. Manipulators, professionals and the
public derive their inspiration largely from the action of these six
issues, in which, except during the "war" markets of 1914-16, from
forty to eighty per cent of the total daily transactions are
concentrated. We will therefore designate these as the "Big Six".
The various stocks in the market are like a gigantic fleet of boats,
all hitched together and being towed by the tugs "Interest Rate,"
and "Business Conditions". In the first row are the Big Six; behind
them, the Secondary Leaders, the Minors, and the Miscellaneous
issues. It takes time to generate steam and to get the fleet under
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way. The leaders are first to feel the impulse; the others follow in
turn.
Should the tugs halt, the fleet will run along for a while under its
own momentum, and there will be a certain amount of bumping,
hacking and filling. In case the direction of the tugs is changed
abruptly, the bumping is apt to be severe. Obviously, those in the
rear cannot gain and hold the leadership without an all-around
readjustment.
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No other stock on the list is such a true index of the attitude of the
public, or the technical position of the market. Including those who
own the stock out-right, and those who carry it on margin. Reports
of the steel trade are most carefully scrutinized, and the
corporation's earnings and orders on hand minutely studied by
thousands. This great public rarely sells its favourite short, but
carries it on margin until a profit is secured, or until it is shaken or
scared out in a violent decline.
So, if the stock is strong under adverse news, we may infer that
public holdings are strongly fortified, and that confidence is strong
as well. If Steel displays more than its share of weakness, an
untenable position of the public is indicated. At this point public
sentiment becomes intensely bullish and spreads itself in the low-
priced speculative shares. Insiders in the junior steel stocks take
advantage of this and are able to advance and find a good market
for their holdings.
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- CHAPTER FOUR -
TRADING RULES
- Commissions
- Invisible eighth (i.e. the difference between bid and ask price,
assuming that you buy and sell at the market price)
- Income Tax on sale
- Exchange fees
- In addition… interest if the trade is leveraged and carried
overnight.
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difference follows you all through the trade and has been
designated by the writer as the "invisible eighth".
Yet it is this insidious item that frequently throws the net result
over to the debit side. The expression is frequently heard, "I got
out even, except for the commissions," the speaker evidently
scorning such a trifling consideration. This sort of self-deception is
ruinous, as will be seen by computing the fixed charges on a trade
of 100 shares. Bear in mind that a loss of the commission on the
first trade leaves double that amount-to be made on the second
trade before a dollar of profit is secured.
This stop should not be thrust in when net cost is too close to the
market price. A small reaction must be allowed for. A Tape Reader
is essentially one who follows the immediate trend. An expert can
readily distinguish between a change of trend and a simple, minor
reaction.
When his mental barometer indicates a change he does not wait for
a stop order to be caught, but cleans house or reverses his position
in an instant. The stop order at net cost is, therefore, of advantage
only in case of a reversal which is sudden and pronounced. A stop
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should also be placed if the operator is obliged to leave the tape for
more than a moment, or if the ticker suddenly is out of order.
While he has his eye on the tape the market will tell him what to
do. The moment this condition does not exist he must act as he
would if temporarily stricken blind - he must protect himself from
forces which may attack him in the dark.
I know a trader who once bought 500 shares of Sugar and then
went out to lunch. He paid 25 cents for what he ate, but on
returning to the tape he found that the total cost of that lunch was
$5,000 and 25 cents! He had left no stop order, Sugar went down
ten points, and his broker sent him a margin call.
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A closer stop may be obtained by noting the "points of resistance"
in a stock - the levels at which the market turns after a reaction.
For example, if you are short at 130 and the stock breaks to 128,
rallies to 129, and then turns down again, the point of resistance is
129. The more time it turns at 129 the stronger the case you have.
In case of temporary absence or interruption to the service, a good
stop would be 129¼ or 129¼. These "points of resistance" will be
more fully discussed later.
This gradually and automatically reduces the risk, and if the Tape
Reader be at all skilful, his profits must exceed losses. As soon as
the stop is thus raised to cover commissions, it would seem best
not to make it automatic thereafter, but let the market develop its
own stop or "signal" to get out.
One trouble with this kind of a stop is that it interferes with the free
play of judgment. An illustration will explain why: A tall woman
and a short man attempt to cross the street. An automobile
approaches. The woman sees that there is ample time in which to
cross, but he has her by the arm and being undecided himself backs
and fills, first pushing, then pulling her by the arm until they
finally return to the curb, after a narrow escape.
Left to herself, she would have known exactly what to do. It is the
same with the Tape Reader. He is hampered by an automatic stop.
It is best that he be free to act as his judgment dictates, without
feeling compelled by a prior resolution to act according to hard and
fast rule.
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There is another time when the stop order is of value to the Tape
Reader, viz., when his indications are not clearly defined. The
original commitment should, of course, be made only when the
trend is positively indicated, but situations will develop when he
will be uncertain whether to stand pat, close out, or reverse his
position. At such a time it seems better to push the stop up to a
point as close as possible to the market price, without choking off
the trade.
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regards the prices at which his orders are executed. The main
consideration is, he knows whether he is in or out.
Obviously, if the indication is true, the price will not again break
128, having met buying sufficiently strong to turn it up twice from
that figure and a third time from 128 1/8. The fact that it did not
touch 128 on the last down swing forecasts a higher up swing; it
shows that the downward pressure was not so strong and the
demand slightly larger and more urgent. In other words, the point
of resistance was raised 1/8.
Having bought at 128 3/4, the stop is placed at 127 7/8, which is ¼
below the last point of resistance. The stock goes above its
previous top (129 1/8) and continues to 130 3/4. At any time after
it has crossed 130 the trader may raise his stop to cost plus
commission (129). The stock reacts at 129 7/8, then continues the
advance to above 131. As soon as a new high point is reached the
stop is raised to 129 5/8, as 129 7/8 was the point of resistance on
the dip. In such a case the initial risk was 7/8 of a point plus
commissions, etc…the market giving a well defined stop point,
making an arbitrary stop not only unnecessary but expensive.
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The illustration is given in chart form, but the experienced Tape
Reader generally carries these swings in his head. A series of
higher tops and bottoms are made in a pronounced up swing and
the reverse in a down swing. Arbitrary stops may, of course, be
used at any time, especially if one wishes to clinch a substantial
profit, but until a stock gets away from the price at which it was
entered, it seems best to use the stops it develops for itself.
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It is not our aim to assume the role of an oracle. Rather, we are
reasoning things out on paper, and as we progress in these studies
and apply these tentative rules to the tape, in actual or paper
trading, you probably have occasion to modify some of our
conclusions.
A Tape Reader must close a trade: 1) when the tape tells him to
close; 2) when his stop is caught; 3) when his position is not clear;
4) when he has a large or satisfactory profit and wishes to utilize
those funds for better opportunities.
The first and most important reason for closing a trade is: The tape
says so. This indication may appear in various forms. Assuming
that one is trading in a Leader stock, the warning may come in the
stock itself.
Within the recording of sales, there runs the fine silken thread of
the trend. It is clearly distinguishable to one sufficiently versed in
the art of Tape Reading, and, for reasons previously explained, is
most readily observed in the leaders. So, when one is short of
Union Pacific and this thread suddenly indicates that the market
has turned upward, it’s foolish to remain short.
Not only must one cover quickly, but if the power of the
movement is sufficient to warrant the risk, the operator must go
long. In a market of sufficient breadth and swing, the Tape Reader
will find that when it is time to close a trade, it is usually time to
reverse his position. One must have the flexibility of whalebone,
and entertain no rigid opinion. He must obey the tape implicitly.
The indication to close a trade may come from another stock,
several stocks or the general market.
If the selling was not sufficient to check the upward move, the
market for Reading would have absorbed all that was offered and
advance to a higher level, but in this case the selling was more
effectual than the buying, and Reading fell back, warning the
operator that the temporary leader on the bull side of the market
had met with defeat. At this point the operator was, therefore, on
the lookout for a slump. Reading subsided, in small lots, back to
143 7/8. Union Pacific, after selling at 183 5/8, declined to 183 ¼.
Both stocks developed dullness, and the whole market became
more or less inactive.
Suddenly Union Pacific fell to 183 1/8. Then UP traded 500 shares
@183, 200 at 182 7/8, 500 at 183, 200 at 182 7/8, and 500 at 182
3/4, indicating not only a lack of demand, but remarkably poor
support. Immediately following this, New York Central, which
sold only a few minutes before 400 shares at 131½ came 131 on
1700 shares, 130¼ on 500 shares and ended at 130 on 700 shares.
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This demonstrated that the market was remarkably hollow and in a
position to develop great weakness.
The large quantities of New York Central at the low figure, after a
running decline of a point and one-half, showed that there was not
only an absence of supporting orders, but that sellers were obliged
to make great concessions in order to dispose of their holdings.
The quantities, especially in view of the narrowness of the market,
proved that the sellers were not small traders. Coupled with the wet
blanket put on Reading and the poor support in Union Pacific, this
weakness in New York Central was another advance notice of a
decline.
On any indication of this kind, the trader must be ready to jump out
of his long stock and get short of the market. While waiting for his
cue, the Tape Reader has time to consider which stock among the
leaders is the most desirable for selling. He quickly chooses
Reading, on the ground that the large lots which have apparently
been distributed around 144 will probably come into the market as
soon as weakness develops.
Those who make their purchases after this fashion are quickest to
become scared at the first sign of weakness, and throw overboard
what they have bought. First greed and then fear controlled them.
In choosing Reading, therefore, the Tape Reader is picking out the
stock in which he is likely to have the most help on the bear side.
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At 12.30 PM the market is standing still, the majority of
transactions being in small lots and then only fractional changes.
Reading shows the effect of the recent unloading. It is coming out
500 at 143 3/4, 500 at 143 5/8, 400 at 143 ½ and 400 at 143 3/4.
The operator realizes that Reading is probably a short sale right
here, with a stop order at 144 1/2 or 5/8, on the ground that the
bulls must have an extraordinary amount of buying power to push
the stock above its former top, where, at every eighth advance over
144 3/8, they will encounter a considerable portion of 50,000
shares.
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begins to look upon the stock as the possible shears which will cut
the thread of the market and let everything down.
12.45 PM Gas trades 500 at 161 1/2. It is very weak. The balance
of the list is steady, Union Pacific 182 5/8, Central 130 3/8,
Reading 143 3/4. There is a fractional rally - Union Pacific to 182
7/8 and Gas to 162. Plenty of Central for sale around 130; Reading
is 143 1/2. The rally peters out gradual weakening all around, but
the Tape Reader cannot go with the trend until he is sure of a big
move.
Central trades at 129¾, showing that after all the buyers at 130 are
filled up considerable stock is still for sale. The others show only
in small lots. The market is on the verge of a decline; it is where a
jar of any sort will start it down. Union Pacific is heavy at 182 1/2
- trades 300 at 182 3/8, 200 at 1/2; Reading 143 1/2, 3/8, and 1000
shares at 1/2; Central trades 2000 at 130 and 800 at 1/8.
Here is the thrust he has been looking for! Gas 163¾ on 200, 1/2
on 400, 161 on 300, 160 on 400! He waits no longer and gives an
order to sell Reading short at the market. They are all on the run
now, Reading 143 1/2, 600 at ¼, 1300 at 1/4. Central 130, 129 1/2,
Gas trades 500 at 159 1/2. Something's very rotten about Gas and
it's a cinch to sell it short if you don't mind trading in a buzz-saw
stock.
The market breaks so rapidly that he does not get over 142 3/4 for
his Reading, but he is short not far from the top of what looks like
a wide open break. Everything is slumping now - Steel, Smelters,
Southern Pacific, St. Paul. Union Pacific is down to 181 5/8 and
the rest in proportion. Gas 158 1/2,158 on 300, 157, 156, 155, 154,
153 and the rest "come tumbling after." Reading 141 3/8, 500 at ¼,
400 at 141, 140 3/4, 500 at 1/2, 200 at 140, 600 at 139 3/4, 500 at
5/8. Union 181 - 180 7/8, 3/4, 1/2, 1/4, 600 at 1/8, 500 at 180, 179
3/4, 500 at 1/2, 300 at 1/4, Central 127 1/2.
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The above illustrates some of the workings of a Tape Reader's
mind; also how a break in a stock, entirely foreign to that which is
being traded in, will furnish an indication to get out and go short of
one stock or another. The indication to close a trade may come
from the general market where the trend is clearly developed
throughout the list all stocks working in complete harmony. One of
the best indications in this line is the strength or weakness on
rallies and reactions.
Of course the break in Gas, which finally touched 138, was due to
the Supreme Court decision, announced on the news tickers at 1:10
PM, but, as is usually the case, the tape told the news many
minutes before anything else. This is one of the advantages of
getting your news from the first place where it is reflected.
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- CHAPTER FIVE -
VOLUMES AND THEIR SIGNIFICANCE
First of all, we must recognize that the market for any stock - at
whatever level it may be - is composed of two sides, represented
by the bid and the asking price. Remember that the "last sale" is
something entirely different from the "market price." If Steel has
just sold at 50, this figure represents what has happened. It's
history. The market price of Steel is either 49 1/8@50 or 50@50
1/8.
The bid and asked prices combined form the market price. This
market price is like a pair of scales, and the volume of stock
thrown out by sellers and reached for by purchasers, shows toward
which side the preponderance of weight has momentarily shifted.
For example, when the tape shows the market price is 50 1/8, and
the large volumes are on the up side.
US
500 @ 50
1000 @ 50 1/8
200 @ 50
1500 @ 50 1/8
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certainty, because supply and demand is changing with every
second, not only in Steel but in every other stock on the list.
US
1000 @ 182 1/8
200 @182
1500 @ 182 1/8
200 @ 182 1/4
3500 @ 182 3/8
2000 @ 182 1/2
200... 47 1/4
100... 45 7/8
100... 45 7/8
1900... 46 3/4
100... 46 1/8
100... 46
100... 46 5/8
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100... 46
600... 45 7/8
100... 46 1/2
200... 46 1/4
500... 45 3/4
100... 46 3/8
100... 46 3/8
200... 45 5/8
600... 46 1/4
11 A. M.
100... 45 1/2
100... 46 1/8
300... 46 3/8
100... 45 5/8
600... 46
100... 46 1/8
400... 45 7/8
100... 45 7/8
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100... 46
100... 45 3/4
200... 45 3/4
100... 45 7/8
400... 45 5/8
100... 46
100... 46
100... 45 3/4
Here the opening market price was 46 3/4 bid @ 47¼ asking, and
the buyers of 200 shares "at the market" paid the high price. All
bids at 46 3/4 were then filled. This is proved by the next sale,
which is at 46 5/8. The big lots thereafter are mostly on the down
side, showing that pressure still existed. The indications were,
therefore, that the stock would go lower. A lot of 1900 shares in
some stocks would be a large quantity; in others insignificant.
Now let us see what happens on the floor to produce the above-
described effect on the tape. Let's prove that our method is correct.
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A few years ago the control of a certain railroad was being bought
on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. One brokerage
house was given all the orders, with instructions to distribute them
and conceal the buying as much as possible. The original order for
the day would read, "Take everything that is offered up to 38".
38 was about 3 points above the market of the day before. This left
considerable leeway for the broker to whom the buying order was
entrusted. He would instruct his floor broker as follows: "The stock
closed last night at 35. You take everything offered up to 35 1/2
and then report to me how things stand. Don't bid for the stock -
just take it as it is offered and mark it down whenever you can". In
such a case the floor member stands in the crowd awaiting the
opening.
On the markets open the chairman's gavel strikes and the crowd
begins yelling. Someone offers "Two Thousand at an eighth."
Another broker says "Thirty-five for five hundred." Our broker
takes the 2000 at an 1/8 then offers one hundred at one-eighth
himself, so as to keep the price down. Others also offer one or two
hundred shares at 1/8, so he withdraws his offer, as he wishes to
accumulate and only offers or sells when it helps him buy more, or
puts the price down.
The buyer at 35 has 300 shares of his lot cancelled, so he alters his
bid to "thirty- five for two hundred." The other sellers supply him
and he then bids "7/8 for a hundred." Our broker sells him 100 at
7/8 just to get the price down. Someone comes in with "a thousand
at five." Our broker says, "I'll take it." Five hundred more is
offered at 1/8. This he also takes.
Open 35
2000 @ 35 1/8
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200 @ 35
100 @ 34 /7/8
100 @ 35
500 @ 35 1/8
The day trader interprets these transactions: Opening bid and asked
price was 35 1/8 someone took the large lot (2000 shares) at the
high price. The two sales following were in small lots, showing
light pressure. The 100 @ 35 after 34 7/8 shows that on the “7/8
bid” -“5 ask” market the buyer took the stock at the offered price
and followed it up by taking 500 more at the eighth. The demand is
dominant and it does not matter whether the buyer is one
individual or a dozen, the momentary trend is upward.
Open 80
1000 sold@ 79 ½
1000 sold @ 79
500 sold @ 79
800 @ 79
300 @ 79 1/8
1000 @ 79
500 @ 79 1/4
200 @ 79 1/2
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…showing that at 79 there was a demand for more than he was
willing to supply. (For example: There might have been 10,000
shares still wanted at 79 which is more than he could supply).
Frequently a broker meeting such an obstacle will leave the crowd
long enough to phone his principal.
His departure opens the way for a rally, as the stock is no longer
under pressure, and the large buying order at 79 acts as a back log
for floor traders. So those in the crowd bid it up to 79 1/2 in hopes
of scalping a fraction on the long side.
Take another case where two brokers are put into the crowd - one
to depress the stock and the other to accumulate it. They play into
each other's hands, and the tape makes the following report of what
happens:
Open 80 1/8 - 80
200 @ 79 7/8
1000 @ 79 7/8
200 @ 79 5/8
500 @ 79 3/4
300 @ 79 3/4
1500 @ 79 1/2
500 @ 79 1/4
100 @ 79 1/8
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Were we on the floor we should see one broker offering the stock
down, while the other grabbed every round lot that appeared. We
cannot tell how far down the stock will be put, but when these
indications appear it makes us watch closely for the turning point,
which is our time to buy.
These volume indications are not always clear. Nor are they
infallible. It doesn’t do any good to rely upon the indications of
any one stock to the exclusion of the rest. There are times when
certain stocks are run up, while volume indications in other active
stocks show clearly that they are being distributed as fast as the
market will take them. This happens frequently on a large or small
scale. Especially is it apparent at the turning point of a big swing,
where accumulation or distribution requires several days to
complete.
Volumes can be studied from the reports printed in the Wall Street
Journal, but the real way to study them is from the tape. If you are
not able to spend five to seven hours a day at the tape while the
ticker is in operation, you can arrange to have the tape saved for
you each day. The tape can then be studied at leisure. In studying
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under these conditions let it be on as small a scale as you like, but
make actual trades with real money.
There are times when the foregoing rule of volumes indicates
almost the reverse of what we have explained. One of these
instances was described in our last chapter. In this case the
transactions in Reading suddenly swelled out of all proportion to
the rest of the market and its own previous volume.
100... 144
12 P.M.
5000... 144
3000... 144
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2200... 144 1/8
3500... 144
1000... 144
500.... 144 1/8
1100... 144
It is just as important to study the small lots as the large lots. The
smaller quantities are like the feathers on an arrow - they indicate
that the business part of the arrow is at the other end. In other
words, the smaller lots keep one constantly informed as to what
fraction forms the other side of the market. For example: During
the first five trades in Reading, recorded above, the market
quotation is shown to have been 5/8@3/4; it then changed to
3/4@7/8 and again to 7/8@4. On the way down it got to be 4@1/8,
and at this level the small lots were particularly valuable in
showing the pressure that existed.
Stocks like Union, Reading and Steel usually make this sort of a
turning point on a volume of from 25,000 to 50,000 shares. That is,
when they meet with opposition on an advance or a decline it must
be in some such quantity in order to stem the tide. Walk into the
hilly country and you will find a small river running quietly on its
way. The stream is so tiny that you can place your hand in its
course and the water will back up.
The public and the floor traders do not stand aside while the
manipulator is at work, nor is the reverse true. Everybody's stock
looks alike on the tape. The following is a good illustration of E.
H. Harriman's work at an important turning point in Union Pacific:
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When a stream breaks through a dam it goes into new territory.
Likewise the breaking through of a stock is significant, because it
means that the resistance has been overcome. The stronger the
resistance, the less likelihood of finding further obstacles in the
immediate vicinity. Dams are not usually built one behind the
other. So when we find a stock emerging into a new field it is best
to go with it, especially if, in breaking through it, it carries the rest
of the market along.
While a lot can be learned from the reports printed in the daily
newspapers mentioned above, the moment by moment transactions
– trades as they appear - is the only real instruction book. A live
tape is to be preferred, for the element of speed with which you
receive the information is of no small concern. The comparative
activity of the market on peaks and breaks is a guide to the
technical condition of the market. For instance, during a decline, if
the ticker is very active and the volume of sales large, voluntary or
compulsory liquidation is indicated.
1000 @ 180
This is a mistake. Under the old exchange rule a buyer who desired
to influence the market in an upward direction could bid for 10,000
shares or any other very large quantity, and no one could sell him
any less than the quantity bid for, unless the buyer was willing to
take it. Under the present rules, the buyer is obliged to take any
part of 10,000 shares, or whatever quantity he bid for if he does not
specify “all or none” to his broker. This revision of the rules, and
the other restrictions against matched orders, manipulations, etc.,
eliminates a very large number of transactions in big quantities at
the advanced or the decreased price.
It was an old trick of Harriman's and some of the old Standard Oil
party, as well as other minor manipulators and floor traders, to
make these bids and offers in round lots and have some one else
supply or take them for its effect on the market. But the change in
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the rules has greatly reduced the volume and decreased the value
of these indications. Hence, while they are still very suggestive to
an observant tape reader, and while the principle is unchanged, it
will not do to depend on them entirely.
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- CHAPTER SIX -
MARKET TECHNIQUE
This was a vicious three-point jab into a market that was only just
recovering from a decline in early February. What was its effect on
the other principal stocks? Union Pacific declined only 3/4,
Southern Pacific 5/8 and Steel 5/8. This proved that they were
technically strong; that is, they were in hands which could view
with equanimity a three-point break in a leading issue. Had this
drive occurred when Reading was around 145 and Union 185 the
effect upon the others would probably have been very different.
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U.P. 84 1/4 12 3/8 14.7
Reading 73 1/4 26 3/8 33.6
Steel 36 1/4 16 1/2 44.6
The above shows that the public was heavily extended in Steel
somewhat less loaded with Reading, and was carrying very little
Union Pacific. In other words, Union showed technical strength by
its resistance to pressure, whereas Reading and Steel offered little
or no opposition to the decline.
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in one day. Southern Pacific, after creeping up from 97 to 112,
reached a climax in a seven-point jump during one session.
Instances are so numerous that they are hardly worth citing. The
same thing happens in the market as a whole - an exceptionally
violent movement, after a protracted sag or rise, usually indicates
its termination. A stock generally shows the Tape Reader what it
proposes to do by its action under pressure or stimulation. For
example: On Friday, February 19, 1909, the United States Steel
Corporation announced an open market in steel products.
The market hinges upon this one stock. Let's see how it acts." The
opening price of U. S. Steel was three-quarters of a point down
from the previous closing - a perfectly natural occurrence in view
of the announcement. The real test of strength or weakness will
follow. For the first ten minutes Steel shows on the tape:
200 @ 47 7/8
4500 @ 47 3/4
1200 @ 47 7/8
1500 @ 47 3/4
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with the market" - in the direction of the trend. Union is up 7/8
from the opening and Southern Pacific is reinforcing it.
But Steel does not respond. Not once does it get out of that 3/4 -
7/8 rut - not even single hundred share lot can be sold at 48. This
proves that it is freely offered at 47 7/8 and that it possesses no
rallying power, in spite of the leadership displayed by the
Harrimans. Union seems to make a final effort to induce a
following:
2000 @ 178 1/2
6800 @ 47 ½
2600 @ 47 3/8
500 @ 47 1/4
8800 @ 47 1/8
From this time on there is a steady flow of long stock all through
the list. Reading and Pennsylvania are the weakest railroads.
Colorado Fuel breaks seven points in a running decline and the
other steel stocks follow suit. U.S. Steel is dumped in bunches at
the bid prices, and even the dignified preferred is sympathetically
affected.
At the end of the two hour session, the market closes at the bottom,
with Steel at 46, leaving thousands of accounts weakened by the
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decline and a holiday ahead for holders to worry over. It looks to
the Tape Reader as though the stock would go lower on the
following Tuesday. At any rate, no covering indication has
appeared, and unless it is his invariable rule to close every trade
each day, he puts a stop at 47 on his short Steel and goes his way.
(His original stop was 48 1/8). Steel opens on the following session
at 44 ¾ @ 1/2, and during the day makes a low record of 41¼.
The tape usually indicates what this is. One of the muckraking
magazines once showed that Rock Island preferred had been
driven down to 28 one August to the accompaniment of
receivership rumours. The writer of the article was unable to prove
that these rumours originated with the insiders, for he admitted that
the transactions at the time were not fully understood. Perhaps they
were inscrutable to a person inexperienced in tape reading, but we
well remember that the indications were all in favour of buying the
stock on the break. The transactions were very large - out of all
proportion to the capital stock outstanding and the floating supply.
So, by casting out the unlikely factors, a Tape Reader could have
arrived at the correct conclusion. The market is being put to the
test continually by one element of which little has been said, i.e.,
the floor traders. These shrewd fellows are always on the alert to
ferret out a weak spot in the market, for they love the short side.
Lack of support, if detected, in an issue generally leads to a raid
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which, if the technical situation is weak, spreads to other parts of
the floor and produces a reaction or a slump all around. Or, if they
find a vulnerable short interest, they are quick to bid up a stock and
drive the shorts to cover.
With these and other operations going on all the time, the Tape
Reader who is at all expert is seldom at a loss to know on which
side his best chances lie. Other people are doing for him what he
would do himself if he were all-powerful. While it is the smaller
swings that interest him most, the day trader must not fail to keep
his bearings in relation to the broader movements of the market.
When any of these occur, he knows what to look for next. In a bull
market he expects a drop of 10 points to be followed by a recovery
of about half the decline, and if the rise is to continue, all of the
drop and more will be recovered. If a stock or the market refuses to
rally naturally, he knows that the trouble has not been overcome,
and therefore looks for a further decline.
Of course, these things are mere guide posts, as the Tape Reader's
actual trading is done only on the most positive and promising
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indications; but they are valuable in teaching him what to avoid.
For instance, he would be wary about making an initial short sale
of Smelters after a 15 point break, even if his indications were
clear. There might be several points more on the short side, but he
would realize that every point further decline would bring him
closer to the turning point, and after such a violent break the safest
money was to wait for an opportunity on the long side.
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- CHAPTER SEVEN -
DULL MARKETS AND THEIR OPPORTUNITIES
Such people are not Tape Readers. They are Sitters. As a matter of
fact, dull markets offer innumerable opportunities and we have
only to dig beneath the crust of prejudice to find them.
Dullness in the market or in any special stock means that the forces
capable of influencing it in either an upward or a downward
direction have temporarily come to a balance. The best illustration
is that of a clock which is about run down - its pendulum gradually
decreases the width of its swings until it comes to a complete
standstill, like this:
Turn this diagram sideways and you see what the chart of a stock
or the market looks like when it reaches the point of dullness:
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These dull periods often occur after a season of delirious activity
on the bull side. People make money, pyramid on their profits and
glut themselves with stocks at the top. As every one is loaded up,
there is comparatively no one left to buy, and the break which
inevitably follows would happen if there were no bears, no bad
news or anything else to force a decline.
Nature has her own remedy for dissipation. She presents the
debauch with its start, its climax and its collapse, with a thumping
head and a moquette tongue. These tend to keep him quiet until the
damage can be repaired.
When a market is in the midst of a big move, no one can tell how
long or how far it will run. But when prices are stationary, we
know that from this point there will be a pronounced swing in one
direction or another. There are ways of anticipating the direction of
this swing.
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This was particularly true of Reading, in which the shakeouts
around 120 (one of which was described) were frequent and
positive. When insiders shake other people out it means that they
want the stock themselves.
These are good times for us to get in. When a dull market shows its
inability to hold rallies, or when it does not respond to bullish
news, it is technically weak, and unless something comes along to
change the situation, the next swing will be downward.
No one can tell when a dull market will merge into a very active
one, therefore the Tape Reader must be constantly on the watch. It
is foolish for him to say: "The market is dead dull. No use
watching it today.
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He might have bought more than he wanted for scalping purposes,
with the intention of holding part of his line for a long swing, using
the rest for regular trading.
As the stock drew away from his purchase price he could have
raised his stop on the lot he intended to hold, putting a mental label
on it to the effect that it is to be sold when he detects inside
distribution.
He feels easy in his mind about this stock, because he has seen the
accumulation and knows it has relieved the market of all the
floating supply at about this level. This means a sharp, quick rise
sooner or later, as little stock is to be met with on the way up.
Reading opened at 132 3/4, high was 133¼, low 132¼, last 132
5/8. Union's extreme fluctuation was 5/8! - from 180 5/8 to 181¼.
Activity was confined to Beet Sugar, Kansas City Southern, etc.
Beet Sugar was down 5/8, with sales at 32. Reading showed 1100
@ 132¼, 800 @ 3/8, Union 800 @ 181, 400 @ 181, 200 @ 181
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1/8, 400 @ 181. A single hundred Steel at 45½ 1/8. B& O 100 @
109 7/8.
Market dead, mostly single 100 share lots… Ah! Here's our cue!
Reading 2300 @ 132½., 2000 @ ½, 500 @ 5/8. Coming out of a
dead market, quantities like these taken at the offered prices can
mean only one thing, and without argument the Tape Reader takes
on a bunch of Reading "at the market."
St. Paul Copper and Smelters begin to lift a little. Around 11 A.M.
there is a brief period of hesitation, in which the market seems to
take a long breath in preparation for another effort.
Reading makes 134 3/8, Union 183, Steel 46 1/8, Central 128 7/8,
and the rest in proportion. The market has gained such headway
that it will take dire news to prevent a high, wide opening on
Monday, and the Tape Reader has his choice of closing out at the
high point or putting in a stop and taking his chances over Sunday.
There are other ways in which a trader may employ himself during
dull periods. One is to keep tab on the points of resistance in the
leaders and play on them for fractional profits. This, we admit, is a
rather precarious occupation, as the operating expenses constitute
an extremely heavy percentage against the player, especially when
the leading stocks only swing a point or so per day.
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But if one chooses to take these chances rather than be idle, the
best way is to keep a chart on which should be recorded every
fluctuation. This forms a picture of what is occurring and clearly
defines the points of resistance, as well as the momentary trend.
In the following chart the stock opens at 181¼ and the first point of
resistance is 181½. The first indication of a downward trend is
shown in the dip to 181 1/8, and with these two straws showing the
tendency, the Tape Reader goes short "at the market," getting, say,
181¼ (we'll give ourselves the worst of it).
These indicate that the pressure is heavy enough to force the price
to new low levels, and at the same time it is sufficient to prevent
the rally going quite as high as on the previous bulge. At 180 1/8 a
new point of resistance appears.
The decline is checked. The Tape Reader must cover and go long -
the steps are now upward and as the price approaches the former
point of resistance he watches it narrowly for his indication to
close out.
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This time, however, there is but slight opposition to the advance,
and the price breaks through. He keeps his long stock. In making
the initial trade he placed a "double" stop at 181 5/8 or 3/4, on the
ground that if his stock overcame the resistance at 181 1/2 it would
go higher and he would have to go with it.
Being short 100 shares, his double stop order would read "Buy 200
at 181 5/8 stop". Of course the price might just catch his stop and
go lower. These things will happen, and anyone who cannot face
them without becoming perturbed had better learn self-control.
After going long around the low point, he should place another
double stop at 180 or 179 7/8, for if the point of resistance is
broken through after he has covered and gone long, he must switch
his position in an instant. Not to do so would place him in the
attitude of a guesser. If he is playing on this plan he must not dilute
it with other ideas.
There must be wide swings if profits are to exceed losses. and the
thing to do is wait for good opportunities. "The market is always
with us" is an old and true saying. We are not compelled to trade
and results do not depend on how often we trade, but on how much
money we make.
Take Beet Sugar on March 26, 1909, the day on which Union and
Reading were so dull. It was easy to beat Beet Sugar. Even an
embryo Tape Reader would have gone long at 30 or below, and as
it never left him in doubt he could have dumped it at the top just
before the close, or held it till the next day, when it touched 33½.
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- CHAPTER EIGHT -
THE USE OF CHARTS AS GUIDES AND INDICATORS
I have been in Wall Street a number of years, and like many others
have always shown a sceptical attitude toward charts and other
mechanical methods of forecasting trends; but after a thorough trial
of the chart on Union Pacific, I find that I could have made a very
considerable sum if I had followed the indications shown.
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wedded to any particular issue, and, if he chooses, can work
without pencil, paper or memoranda of any sort. He also has his
code of rules - less clearly defined than those of the chart player.
So many different situations present themselves that his rules
gradually become intuitive - a sort of second nature evolved by
self-training and experience.
Your mind may be on something else but your judgment tells you
when to start and how fast to walk. That is the position of the
trained Tape Reader”. The difference between the Chart Player and
the Tape Reader is therefore about as wide as between day and
night. But there are ways in which the Tape Reader may utilize
charts as guides and indicators and for the purpose of reinforcing
his memory. The Figure Chart is one of the best mechanical means
of detecting accumulation and distribution. It is also valuable in
showing the main points of resistance on the big swings.
A figure chart cannot be made from the open, high, low and last
prices, such as are printed in the average newspaper. We produced
a Figure Chart of Amalgamated Copper showing movements
during the 1903 panic and up to the following March (1904):
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It makes an interesting study. The stock sold early in the year at 75
5/8 and the low point reached during the above period was 33 5/8.
The movements prior to those recorded here show a series of
downward steps, but when 36 is reached, the formation changes,
and the supporting points are raised. A seven-point rally, a reaction
to almost the low figure, and another sixteen-point rally follows.
On this rally the lines 48-49 gradually form the axis and long rows
of these figures seem to indicate that plenty of stock is for sale at
this level.
There is a dip to 33 5/8, which gives us the full figure 34, after
which the bottoms are higher and lines commence forming at 38-9.
Here are all the earmarks of manipulative depression and
accumulation - the stock is not allowed to rally over 39 until
liquidation is complete. Then the gradually raised bottoms notify
us in advance that the stock is about to push through to higher
levels.
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Let anyone, who thinks he can make money following a Figure
Chart or any other kind of a chart have a friend prepare it, keeping
secret the name of the stock and the period covered. Then put
down on paper a positive set of rules which are to be strictly
adhered to, so that there can be no guesswork. Each situation will
then call for a certain play and no deviation is to be allowed.
Cover up with a sheet of paper all but the beginning of the chart,
gradually sliding the paper to the right as you progress. Record
each order and execution just as if actually trading. Put my name
down as covering the opposite side of every trade and when done
send me a check for what you have lost. I have yet to meet the man
who has made money trading on any kind of Chart over an
extended period.
This will be found a more reliable guide than the Dow Jones
averages, which only consider the high, low and closing bid of
each day, and which, as strongly illustrated in the May, 1901,
panic, frequently do not fairly represent the day's actual
fluctuations.
His reason is that even a well planned bull campaign in a stock will
not usually be pushed to completion in the face of a down trend in
the general market. Therefore he waits until the trend conforms to
his indication.
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It seems hardly necessary to say that an up trend in any chart is
indicated by consecutive higher tops and bottoms, like stairs going
up, and the reverse by repeated steps toward a lower level. A series
of tops or bottoms at the same level shows resistance. A protracted
zigzag within a short radius accompanied by very small volume
means lifelessness, but with normal or abnormally large volume,
accumulation or distribution is more or less evidenced. Here is a
style of hand chart especially adapted to the study of volumes:
Besides, if he keeps the charts himself the very act of running them
distracts his attention from the tape on which his eye should be
constantly riveted. This can of course be overcome by employing
an assistant; but taking everything into consideration - the division
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of attention, the contradictions and the confusing situations which
will frequently result - we advise students to stand free of
mechanical helps so far as it is possible.
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- CHAPTER NINE -
DAILY TRADING VERSUS LONGER TERM TRADING
This is exactly how the market acts on the tape when its absorptive
powers are greater than the supply - large quantities are taken at
the offered prices and at the higher levels. Prices leap forward. The
demand seems insatiable. After two or three blots had thus been
absorbed, the blotter would take no more. It was thoroughly
saturated. Its demands were satisfied. Just in this way the market
comes to a standstill at the top of a rise and hangs there. Supply
and demand are equalized at the new price level.
Then I filled my pen with ink, and let the fluid run off the point
and onto the blotter. (This illustrated the distribution of stocks in
the market). Beyond a certain point the blotter would take no more.
A drop formed and fell to the paper. (Supply exceeded demand).
The more I put on the blotter the faster fell the drops. (Liquidation
- market seeking a lower level).
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His stock may start upward with a rush-apparently with power
enough to carry it several points; but after advancing a couple of
points it may run up against a larger quantity of stock than can be
absorbed or some unforeseen incident may change the whole
complexion of the market.
A little later the market quiets down. The rally does not hold well.
He expects the stock to react again to the low point. This it does,
but it fails to halt there; it goes driving through to 176,
accompanied by considerable weakness in the other active stocks.
This is his indication that fresh liquidation has started. So he, sells
200 Union Pacific at 176 That is, he dumps over his long stock and
goes short at 176.
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The weakness continues and there is no sign of a rally until after
the stock his struck 174 1/2. This being a break of 6¼ points since
yesterday, the Tape Reader is now wide awake for signs of a turn,
realizing that every additional fraction brings him nearer to that
point, wherever it may be. After touching 174 1/2 the trend of the
market changes completely. Larger lots are in demand at the
offered prices.
There is a final drive but very little stock comes out on it. During
this drive he, buys 100 Union Pacific at 175 7/8, and as signs of a
rally multiply he buys 100 at 175 1/4 From that moment it is easy
sailing. There is ample opportunity for him to unload his last
purchase just before the close when he sells 100 at 176 5/8.
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Let us see whether he might have used better judgment. His first
trade seems to have been made on what appeared to be inside
buying. No trend had developed. He saw round lots being taken at
178 3/4 and over and reasoned that a rally should naturally follow
pronounced support. His mistake was in not waiting for a clearly
defined trend.
If waiting for the buying was strong enough to absorb all offerings
and turn the market, he would have done better to have waited
until this was certain. When a stock holds steady within a half
point radius it does not signify a reversal of trend, but rather a
halting place from which a new move in either direction may
begin.
Had he followed the first sharp move, his original trade would
have been on the short not the long side. This would have saved
him his first loss with its attendant expenses, aggregating $89.50,
and would have nearly doubled the day's profits.
His second loss was made on a trade which involved one of the
finest points in the art of Tape Reading - that of distinguishing a
rally from a change in trend. A good way to do this successfully is
to figure where a stock is due to come after it makes an upturn,
allowing that a normal rally is from one-half to two-thirds of the
decline. That is, when a stock declines two and a half points we
can look for at least a point and a quarter rally unless the pressure
is still on.
In case the decline is not over, the rally will fall short. What did
Union do after it touched 176½? It sold at 176 5/8 – 177 ¾ - 177 ¼
. Having declined from 179 1/8 to 176 ½, 2 5/8 points, it was due
to rally at least 1¼ points, or to 177 ¾ . Its failing to make this
figure indicated that the decline was not over and that his short
position should be maintained. Also, that last jump of half a point
between sales showed an unhealthy condition of the market.
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For a few moments there was evidently a cessation of selling, then
somebody reached for a hundred shares offered at 177¼. As the
next sale was 176 7/8 the hollowness of the rise became apparent.
While this rally lasted, the lots were small. This of itself was
reason for not covering. Had a genuine demand sprung from either
longs or shorts a steady rise, on increasing volumes, would have
taken place. The absence of such indications seems to us now a
reason for not covering and going long at 176 7/8.
And this fact reminds us: Is it better to close trades each day, or
hold through reactions, and if necessary, for several days or weeks
in order to secure a large profit? The answer to this question
depends somewhat upon the temperament of the Tape Reader.
If his make-up be such that he can closely follow the small swings
with profit, gradually becoming more expert and steadily
increasing his commitments, he will shortly "arrive" by that route.
If his nerves are such that he cannot trade in and out actively, but is
content to wait for big opportunities and patient enough to hold on
for large profits, he will also "get there."
On the other hand, trading for the larger swings requires one to
ignore the minor indications and to put some stress upon the
influential news of the day, and its effect upon sentiment; he must
stand ready to take larger losses and in many ways handle himself
in a manner altogether different from that of the day trader.
There is no reason why the Tape Reader should not make long-
term trading an auxiliary profit producer if he can keep such trades
from influencing his daily operations. For example, in the
previously mentioned shake-down in Reading from 144 3/8 to 118,
on his first buying indication he could have taken on an extra lot
for the long swing, knowing that if the turn had really been made, a
rally to over 130 was due.
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A stop order would have limited his risk and conserved his profits
as they rolled up and there is no telling how much of the
subsequent forty point rise he might been able to ride. Another
case was when Steel broke from 58 3/4 (November, 1908) to 41¼
in February. The market at the time was hinging on Steel and it
was likely that the Tape Reader would be operating in it.
His first long trade under this plan would be for at least a hundred
shares more than his usual amount, with a stop on the long pull lot
at say 40 3/4. He would naturally expect a rally of at least 8 3/4
points (to 50), but would, in a sense, forget this hundred shares, so
long as the market showed no signs of another important decline.
When it reached 60 he might still be holding it.
You can readily foresee how a trader with one hundred shares of
Steel at 43 for the long-term, and two hundred for the day, would
be tempted to close out all three hundred on indications of a
decline. This is where he can test his ability to act in a dual
capacity.
He must ask himself: Have I good reason for thinking Steel will
sell down five points before up five? Is this a small reaction or a
big shake-down? Are we still in a bull swing? Has the stock had its
normal rally from the last decline? These and many other questions
will enable him to decide whether he should hold this hundred
shares or "clean house."
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It takes an exceptionally strong will and clear head to act in this
way without interfering with your regular trading. Anyone can sell
two hundred and hold one hundred; but will his judgment be
biased because he is simultaneously long and short-bullish and
bearish? There's the problem! The real Day Trader is more likely
to prefer a clean slate at market closing every day, so that he can
sit down to his ticker at the next morning's opening and say, "I
have no commitments and no opinion. I will follow the first strong
indication."
He would rather average $100 a day for ten days than make $1,000
on one trade in the same length of time. The risk is generally
limited to a fraction and having arrived at a point where he is
showing even small average daily profits, his required capital per
100 shares need not be over $1,500 to $2,000. Suppose for sixty
days on 100 share a day trading his average profits over losses
were only a quarter of a point – or $25 a day.
At the end of that time his capital would have been increased by
$1,500, enabling him to trade in 200 share lots. Another thirty days
with similar results and he could trade in 300 share lots, and so on.
I don’t mention these figures for any other purpose than to again
emphasize that the objective point in Tape Reading is not large
individual profits, but a continuous chipping in of small average
net profits per day.
Some time ago, I am told, a man from the West Coast came into
my office and said that he had been impressed by this series on
Tape Reading, and had come to New York for the sole purpose of
trying his hand at it. He had $1,000 which he was willing to lose in
demonstrating whether he was fitted for the work. I was later
informed that he called again and related some of his experiences.
It seems that he could not abstain from trading, but started within
two or three days after he decided on a brokerage house. He stated
that during the two months he had made forty-two trades of ten
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shares each and had never had on hand over twenty full shares at
any one time. He admitted that he had frequently mixed guesswork
and tips with his Tape Reading but as a rule he had followed the
tape. His losses were seldom over a point and his greatest loss was
one and a half points.
I have no doubt that having mastered the art of cutting losses and
keeping commitments down and returning to Tape Reading
fundamentals, he will soon overcome his other deficiencies and
begin showing remarkable progress. Given a broad, active market,
he should show increasing average daily profits. Speculation is a
business. It must he learned.
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- CHAPTER TEN -
VARIOUS EXAMPLES AND SUGGESTIONS
The expert operator will not ordinarily let all of three points get
away from him. He will keep pushing his stop up behind until the
first good reaction puts him out at close to the high figure. Having
purchased at such a time, he will sell out again as the price once
more approaches the high figure, unless indications point to its
forging through to a new high level.
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immediately go with the trend, but until it is clearly defined and
the stock breaks its former limits with large and increasing
volumes, he must use caution. The reason is this: If the stock has
been suddenly advanced, it may be for the purpose of facilitating
sales by a large operator.
The best way to distinguish the genuine from the fictitious move is
to watch out for abnormally large volumes within a small radius.
This is usually evidence of manipulation. The large volume is
simply a means of attracting buyers and disguising the hand of the
operator.
A play of this kind took place when Reading struck 159 3/4 in
June1909. I counted some 80,000 shares within about half a point
of 159 - unmistakable notice of a coming decline. This was a case
where the stock was put up before being put down, and the Tape
Reader who interpreted the move correctly and played for a good
down swing would have made considerable money.
Everyone recognizes the fact that when the smoke clears away, the
Street is full of victims who didn't know how and couldn't wait to
learn. Their buying and selling produce violent fluctuations,
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however, and in this respect are of advantage to the Tape Reader
who would much rather see ten-point than three-point swings. To
offset this, there are some disadvantages.
His tape prices are five minutes behind and his broker is so busy it
takes four or five minutes for an execution instead of seconds. In
the next place, stop orders are often filled at from small fractions to
points away from his stop price-there is no telling what figure he
will get, while in ordinary markets he can place his stops within ¼
of a resistance point and frequently have the price come within 1/8
of his stop without catching it.
Speaking of stop orders, the ways in which one may manipulate his
stops for protection and advantage, become more numerous as
experience is acquired. If the Tape Reader is operating for a
fractional average profit per trade, or per day, he cannot afford to
let a point profit run into a loss, or fail to "plug" a larger profit at a
point where at least a portion of it will be preserved.
One of my recent day's trading will illustrate this idea. I had just
closed out a couple of trades, in which there had been losses
totalling slightly over a point. Both were on the long side. The
market began to show signs of a break, and singling out Reading as
the most vulnerable, I got short at 150 3/4. In a few moments it
sold below 150. My stop was moved down so there couldn't be a
loss, and soon a slight rally and another break gave me a new stop
that insured a profit.
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A third drive started, and I pushed the stop down to within ¼ of the
tape price at the time, as it was late in the day and I considered this
the final plunge. By the time my order reached the floor the price
was well away from this latest stop and when the selling became
most violent I told my broker to cover "at the market." The price
paid was within ¼ of the bottom for the day, and netted 2 5/8 after
commissions were paid.
This plan of using stops is a sort of squeezing out the last drop of
profit from each trade and never losing any part that can possibly
be retained. Suppose the operator sells a stock short at 53 and it
breaks to 51. He is foolish not to bring his stop down to 51¼ unless
the market is ripe for a heavy decline.
With his stop at this point he has two chances out of three that the
result will be satisfactory: 1) The price may go lower and yield a
further profit; 2) The normal rally to 52 will catch his stop and
enable him to put the stock out again at that price; 3) The stock
will rally to about 51 ¼, catch his stop and then go lower. But he
can scarcely mourn over the loss of a further profit. If the stock
refuses to rally the full point to which it is entitled, that is, if it
comes up to 51½ or 5/8 and still acts heavy, it may be expected to
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break lower, and there usually is ample time to get short again at a
price that will at least cover commissions.
The best time for both covering and going long is on a recession
that in such a case serves a double purpose. The mind should he
made up in advance as to which deal offers the best chance for
profit, so that when the moment for action arrives there will he
nothing to do but act. This is one great advantage the Tape Reader
has over other operators who do not employ market science.
Tape Reading is the only known method of trading which gets you
in at the beginning, keeps you posted throughout the move, and
gets you out when it has culminated. Has anyone ever heard of a
man, method, system, or anything else that will do this for you in
Wall Street? It has made fortunes for the comparatively few who
have followed it. It is an art in which one can become highly expert
and more and more successful as experience sharpens his instincts
and judgment and shows him what to avoid.
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- CHAPTER ELEVEN -
OBSTACLES TO BE OVERCOME - POTENTIAL PROFITS
When a Tape Reader has his emotions well in hand, he will play as
though the game were dominoes.
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3. Don’t trade when the market isn’t acting right! The market may
be unsuited to Tape Reading operations. When prices drift up and
down without trend, like a ship without a rudder, and few positive
indications develop, the percentage of losing trades is apt to be
high. When this condition continues it is well to hold off until the
character of the market changes.
4. Get a broker you can trust! One's broker may be giving poor
service. In a game as fine as this, every fraction – every second
counts. Executions of market orders should average not over one
minute. Stop orders should be reported in less time as such orders
are on the floor and at the proper post when they become
operative. By close attention to details in the handling of my
orders, I have been able to reduce the average time of my
executions to less than one minute. The quickest report obtained
thus far required but 25 seconds. A considerable portion of my
orders are executed in from thirty to forty seconds, varying
according to whether my broker is near the phone or in a distant
crowd when the orders reach the floor and how far the identical
"crowd" is from his 'phone.
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satisfactory as my own broker handles the orders and not the
specialist or some other floor broker.
6. Keep alert, calm after losses! The Tape Reader should be careful
to trade only in such amounts as will not interfere with his
judgment. If he finds that a series of losses upsets him it is an easy
matter to reduce the number of shares to one-half or one-quarter of
the regular amount, or even to ten shares, so that the dollars
involved are no longer a factor. This gives him a chance for a little
self-examination.
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GROSS $12,137.50 in 250 Days
One trader who for years has been trying to scalp the market and
who could never quite secure a profit, reports that his first attempts
at applying these rules resulted in a loss of about $20 per trade.
This he gradually reduced to $12, then to $8, finally succeeding in
throwing the balance over to the credit side and is now able to
make a daily profit of from $12 to $30 per 100 shares. That’s only
an example of small traders. A medium size traders goal should be
to make $150 to $350 per 1000 shares. This is doing very well
indeed. I have no doubt that profits will continue to increase as
experience increases.
Some people seem to hold the opinion that as the profits desired
are only 1/8 average per trade one should limit himself in taking
profits. Perhaps I have not made myself clear. I buy and sell when
I get my indications. In going into a trade I do not know whether it
will show a profit or a loss, or how much. I try to trade at a point
where I can secure protection with a stop from ¼ to ½ point away,
so that my risk is limited to this fraction plus commission and tax.
Here are the details: I had no open trades at the market’s open bell.
Kansas City Southern, which had been intensely dull, came on the
tape 2600 at 46 3/4. I gave a buying order and before it could reach
the "post" the Tape said 46 7/8 and 47. The stock rose steadily and
after selling at 48 5/8 and coming back to 48 1/2 I gave the selling
order. It did not touch 48 5/8 again.
The next trade was in Reading. I saw that it was being held in
check in spite of its great strength. The stock had opened at 158.
After a certain bulge I saw the reaction coming. When it arrived,
and the stock was selling at 157 1/2, I gave the buying order, and
got mine at 157 5/8. It immediately rose to 158 3/4. I noted selling
indications and gave the order while the stock was at that price on
the tape. It did not react sufficiently to warrant my picking it up
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again and later went to 159 3/8, which was 5/8 above my selling
indication.
If one makes 2 3/8 points one day and loses 2 points in the next
two days, he is 3/8 ahead for the three days, or an average of 1/8
per day. He may have losing and winning streaks, get discouraged
and lose his nerve at times, but if he is made of the right stuff he
will in time overcome all obstacles and land at the desired goal.
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- CHAPTER TWELVE -
CLOSING THE TRADE
I watched them closely and the moment I saw that the selling of
these two stocks had ceased, gave my order to buy New York
Central, getting it at 137 1/4. It never touched there again, and in
ten minutes was 139 bid for 5,000 shares. Here I should have sold,
as my buying indication was for that particular advance. Especially
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should I have sold when I saw the rise culminate in a spectacular
bid which looked like bait for outside buyers. Of course the stock
might have gone higher.
The main trend for the day was upward. But for the time being 139
was the high point. I knew the stock was due to react from this
figure, and it did, but at the bottom of the normal reaction selling
broke out in fresh quarters and the whole market came down
heavily.
The result was that my profit was only a fraction of what it ought
to have been. This is the way the trade might have been made: I
should have sold when 139 was noisily bid, and when the reaction
had run its course, picked it up again, provided indications were
still bullish. If they were not I would have been in the position of
looking to get short instead of waiting for a chance to get out of my
long.
Having reserved in the early part of this book the right to revise my
views, I will here record the claim that the best results in active
Tape Reading lie in recognizing the moves as they occur, getting in
when they start and out when they culminate. This will in most
cases cause failure to get all of the moves in the one most active
stock for the day, but should result in many small profits, and I
believe the final results will exceed those realized by sitting
through reactions with any one stock.
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and a downward move like this:
After closing out a trade the tape will tell on the following reaction
whether you are justified in taking the same stock on again or
whether some other issue will pay better. Frequently a stock will
be seen preparing for a move two or three swings ahead of the one
in which it becomes the leader. This is a fine point, but with study
and practice the most complicated indications clarify.
And now a word about you – you who are endeavouring to turn
day trading to practical account. The results which are attainable
depend solely upon the YOU. Each must work out his own method
of trading, based on suggestions derived from these suggestions or
from other sources.
Wall Street is crowded with men who are there in the hope of
making money, but who cannot be persuaded to look at the
proposition from a practical business standpoint. Least of all will
they study it, for this means long hours of hard work, and Mr.
Speculator is laziness personified.
Frequently I have met those who pin their faith to some one point,
such as the volumes up or down, and call it Tape Reading. Others,
unconsciously trading on mechanical indications such as charts,
pretend to be reading the market. Then there is a class of people
who read the tape with their tongues, calling off each transaction, a
certain accent on the higher or lower quotations indicating whether
they are bullish or bearish.
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doubt those who have written represent but a small percentage of
the number who are thus inclined.
To all such persons I would say you can make a success of Tape
Reading but you must acquire a broad fundamental knowledge of
the market. A professional singer who was recently called upon to
advise a young aspirant said: "One must become a 'personality' -
that is, an intelligence developed by the study of many things
besides music". It is not enough to know a few of the underlying
principles; one must have a deep understanding.
But real Tape Reading takes everything into account - every little
character which appears on the tape plays its part in forming one of
the endless series of "moving pictures". In many years study of the
tape, I do not remember having seen two of these "pictures" which
were duplicates.
I should say that it is almost impossible for one who has never
before traded from the tape to go into a broker's office, start right
in and operate successfully. In the first place, there are the
abbreviations and all the little characters and their meanings to
know, the abbreviations of the principal stocks; it is necessary to
know everything that appears on the tape, so that nothing will be
overlooked. Otherwise the trader will be like a person who
attempts to read classic literature without knowing words of more
than four letters.
It is a common impression that anyone who has the money can buy
a seat on the Stock Exchange and at once begin making money as a
floor trader. But floor trading is also a business that one has to
learn, and it usually takes months and years to become accustomed
to the physical and nervous strain and learn the ropes. Frequent
requests are made for the name of someone who will teach the Art
of Tape Reading.
I do not know of anyone able to read the tape with profit who is
willing to become an instructor. The reason is very simple. Profits
from the tape far exceed anything that might be earned by charging
tuition fees to his students. It’s simple economics. In addition to
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the large operators and floor traders who use Tape Reading in their
daily work, there are a number of New York Stock Exchange
members who never go on the floor, but spend the session at the
ticker in their respective offices.
Experience has taught them that they can produce larger profits by
this method, or else they would not follow it. The majority of them
trade in 5000 share lots and up and their business forms an
important share of the daily volume. A number of so-called semi-
professionals operate on what may be termed pure ‘intuitive’ tape
reading.
For in addition to learning the art they must form a sort of trading
character, which no amount of reverses can discourage nor turn
back and which constantly strives to eliminate its own weak points
such as fear, greed, anxiety, nervousness and the many other
mental factors which go to make or unmake the profits in this
business. Perhaps I have painted a difficult proposition. If so, the
greater will be the reward of those who master it. As stated at the
beginning, Tape Reading is hard work. There seems no good
reason for altering that opinion.
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- CHAPTER THIRTEEN -
TWO DAYS TRADING - AN EXAMPLE OF MY METHOD
APPLIED
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200 Reading Long 168 1/8 168 1/2 3/8
200 Reading Long 168 1/4 169 3/4
200 Reading Short 169 1/4 168 3/8 7/8
2700 7/8 11
Commission 3 3/8
Tax (about) 1/4
-4 1/2
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- CHAPTER FOURTEEN -
THE PRINCIPLES APPLIED TO LONGER TERM
TRADING
THE first edition of this book having been exhausted, it has been
my privilege to edit the foregoing chapters in preparation for the
second edition. This has required a consideration of the principles
therein set forth, and has enabled me to test and compare these
principles in their adaptation to the stock market of 1916.
Proof that these rules and methods are correct is also found in their
adaptation to other forms of trading, chief among which is the
detection of accumulation and distribution at certain important
turning points in the market. I have used this method successfully
in forecasting the market for these principal swings and find it to
be a much more comfortable way of following the market, because
it is not so confining.
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The same elements will be found in a drop of water as in the
ocean, and vice versa. A study of the stock market means a study
in the forces above and below the present level of prices. Each
movement has its period of preparation, execution and termination,
and the most substantial of movements are those that make long
preparation. Without this preparation and gathering of force, a
movement is not likely to be sustained.
On the other hand, the greater the preparation, the greater the
probable extent of the swing. Preparation for the principal
movements in the market will very often occupy several months.
This may be preceded by a decline, in which large operators
accumulate their stocks. They may even precipitate this decline in
order to pave the way for such accumulation.
For several years past I have applied the principles in this book to
the forecasting of the swings of from 5 to 20 points. Results have
been highly outstanding. For this reason I can recommend that the
subject be studied with a view to the formation of a method of
trading, especially adapted to the individual requirements of those
who wish to follow this intensely interesting and highly profitable
business.
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