The Bible of Trend Following - Table of Contents
The Bible of Trend Following - Table of Contents
The Bible of Trend Following - Table of Contents
Following Bible
Andrew Abraham
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10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Foreword ix
Preface xiii
Introduction My Journey as a Trend Follower 1
Conclusion 193
Disclosure 195
Index 197
I ve been trading for investors for over 30 years. My first fund, Tactical Commodity
Fund, started in mid1981. Tacticals current program began in 1993 as an offshoot
of that first fund but with lower leverage and some evolutionary changes. Ive learned
a lot over the years. Ive seen a lot of markets, a lot of bull moves, a lot of bear moves.
And I can tell you I wish I had read this book 30 years ago. I would have made more
money, especially near the beginning. Do yourself a favor. Read it. Now.
My tradingforinvestors career began not long after gold peaked around 870 and a
bit over a year before the S&P bottomed near 100. I subsequently watched gold drop ix
more than 70 percent over 19 years and then rally over 700 percent in the next 12. I
watched the stock market rally for over 17 years with just one big, brief pullback along
the way only to witness two retracements greater than 50 percent in the next 10 years.
Ive seen almost too numerous to remember booms and busts in the commodity,
currency, and interest rate markets. Ive seen things happen that everyone said never
would and watched as things didnt happen that everyone said were inevitable. Ive
traded and held positions in these markets nearly every single day since mid1981.
Tactical was one of the first systematic, computerized fund managers. We started
out on a Radio Shack TRS 80, before the first Apple. Historical data that costs pen-
nies now took months to type in by hand. We ran Fourier transforms and proved
there were in fact no repeatable hidden cycles in the markets while everyone else was
still talking about them. We tested all the market lore to see what was true and what
wasnt. We tested the early mechanical systems that were touted and found most of
them didnt hold up. Indicators that people still use today we learned years ago dont
really give you a statistical advantage.
I wrote my own backtesting software and tested everything I could think of.When
personal computers advanced we bought the latest. For a number of years we had two
Sun workstations running 24/7 doing systems testing when those were state of the
art. Of course, now you can do the same things much faster on a laptop. But that was
then and this is now. We kept testing. We kept learning.
and that would have put me farther ahead today. Andy Abraham has written a gem. His
writing style is enjoyable, clear and entertaining. He covers all the main ingredients
needed for successful trend trading. He tells the truth.
What impresses me most about Andys writing is his honesty. He doesnt sugarcoat
things. He doesnt tell you its easy to make money. He tells you that you need patience
and discipline. (By the way, Patience and Discipline has been Tacticals slogan since its
inception.) Andy tells you drawdowns and losses are part of the business. He presents
a track record of one of his own programs that he started just a few years ago that has
not made new highs in 17 months. Thats exactly how it works sometimes. What is so
refreshing is Andys honesty about it. The man has integrity.
A characteristic of those traders who have been successful over many years is hon-
esty with respect to their trading.You need to understand your own psychology, where
you are mentally strong and weak, how you deal with baser emotions, particularly
fear and greed. If you lack honesty with yourself, you will almost certainly fail. Andys
honesty, more than anything, tells me he understands trading psychology and gives
me confidence he is qualified to teach others what he knows. I have yet to run across a
trading book that emphasizes the psychological aspect of trading better than this one.
This book is not a cookbook. It does not outline a mechanical system. It explains
the psychology needed to succeed in trend trading, gives some examples of traders
Foreword
time will employ the general psychological and fundamental trading rules Andy out-
lines. The specifics of everyones approach will vary, but the broad principles outlined
here will be present in one form or another in virtually all robustly successful trend
following approaches. People say that markets have changed and new rules are needed
for the new game. Ive heard that for over 30 years. The markets do change but the
underlying fundamental rules for success dont seem to. They are all outlined here.
How great.
You are lucky to have picked up this book. If you are a seasoned trader, reviewing
the basic elements of winning psychology makes this book worth perusing cover to
cover. We can all use reminders, yours truly always. If you are new to trading, this
book can save you years of trial and error and monetary losses. This book is now on
my short list of recommended reading material for traders. I sincerely thank Andy for
having written it. Have fun reading it. I wish you all the best in your trading.
Dave Druz
Tactical Investment Management
CTA / CPO since 1981
Haleiwa, Hawaii
April 2012
I wanted to write a book that I wished I could have read when I first began to trade.
This book is unique and I hope it will give you all the tools needed to help you
become a successful trader over time. I have had help along the way of my journey of
trend following. Writing a book that encompasses all aspects of trading is my way of
giving back and helping new and aspiring traders. By teaching and enlightening others
I know I will make a difference in many aspiring traders.
Hopefully you will learn from my mistakes and avoid the 18year learning curve I
have been on so far. The lessons I have presented in this book will help you achieve the xiii
goals that you are seeking.
I wanted to share my insightfrom the perspective of a professional who trades
for a livingwhat one goes through on a daily basis and what a trader needs to know
and internalize to become a consistent and successful trader over time. The majority
of books I have read over the years seemed to try to boost my confidence by demon-
strating how easy trading success can be. Trading for a living is not easy by a long shot.
My goal is to illustrate the major issues and challenges that traders face. I would
assume there are those readers who would prefer to seek the easy. It really does not
exist! My purpose and goal was to dispute all the snake oil, hope, hype, unrealistic get
rich quick falsehoods. There is no easy money in the markets. You will have to work
hard to achieve success.You will make plenty of mistakes; however, look out the front
window and learn from your mistakes.
I would assume that many of you have picked up this book because you are hoping
to improve your trading. My goal is to give specific methods instead of vague gener-
alities that can be used in your everyday trading and improve it. My goal is that you
instill in yourself that ultimately you are the only one responsible for your success or
failure. It is never the market, never the broker, or me, with my advice. I want you to
realize that the markets can be cooperative at times and giving, as well as also ruth-
less and unforgiving. No matter what stage of trading you go through, there will be
times of severe aggravation (if you let it). How you react to the realities of trading will
to write. Over the Christmas holidays in 2011 I decided to write a book on trend fol-
lowing and trading for a living that would be different from all of the existing books
on the market.
It was partly due to a catharsis and in conjunction with the request by my oldest
daughter who has been trading with me since she was 13. She had asked me to teach
some of her friends how to trade. I had time on my hands and started to write.
My bookshelves are full of trading books. I have read books regarding Warren Buf-
fett, Value Investing, and all the books you can ever imagine on technical trading, but
none of them got me to the point that 18 years of struggle did. I thought the more
books, the more successful my trading would be. This is why I really believe my book
will stand out among the many other trading books. I continued on this holy grail
search with trading systems and formulas. I was so overwhelmed with courses and
gurus. I could not figure out why everyone wasnt rich. I could not understand why
more than 90 percent of traders fail. Many of these 90 percenters are engineers, pi-
lots, and successful people in all types of fields. I read the various success stories of
traders in Market Wizards by Jack Schwager whom I called the 10 percenters and was
encouraged. There are other great books in recent years that focus on successful trad-
ers such as Michael Covels books Trend Commandments: Trading for Exceptional Returns,
Trend Following: How Great Traders Make Millions in Up or Down Markets, and The Little Book
Preface
countless mistakes and I paid for these mistakes, but introspectively I was of the camp
seeking holy grail systems and indicators, which was a waste of time. These mistakes
were required learning lessons for me in order to become a consistent trader even
though I had people trying to help me. It is not just me. Behind all the glory of the Mar-
ket Wizards was the reality. Richard Dennis, the teacher of the Turtles, lost 50 percent
of his and his investors accounts and has stopped trading. Michael Marcus borrowed
money from his mother and lost it before he internalized his mistakes! Larry Williams,
whose claim to fame was in a trading contest and book, How I Made One Million Dollars
LastYear Trading Commodities, lost a million dollars the following year.
There are countless stories of unknown traders who have blown up. They focused
too much attention on the easy profits they thought they would make. They had no
concept of risk management. They had no concept of hard work. Too many believed
they could buy a trading system or trading robot and find their proverbial retirement
in a box.
The reality of successful trading comes down to several basic tenets and the realiza-
tion that you have to work hard:
1. Robust trading plan applicable to all time frames and markets.
2. Complete risk and money management.
that it is nothing about being right or predicting. The point that these successful
trend followers have internalized is to identify where they are located currently in
relation to the trend and just take the trade if they have one.
As I believe any trade is 50/50, you never know which trade will work. Too many
traders are looking for certainty. Certainty does not exist in the markets. Traders want
to know when trends start and stop. The reality is you never know. The flipside of the
50/50 is that you do not know how bad a trade can go against you. The concept of
cutting losses is a paramount issue if one wants to stay in this business. If losses get out
of control, one can easily be overwhelmed financially and emotionally.
Letting profits run is very hard for some traders. They have that urge to ring the
cash register. They do this primarily out of fear. In trend following one needs these
rare big winners to offset all of the inherent small losses. Your trading plan must have
the contingent for following trades that are working. This is the key to making money
in the long run and building your positively sloping equity curve. With a trading plan
there is no Should I, Could I, Would I, Shoot, why didnt I take that trade, or
worse, Why did I let this happen to me? When we trade, we should trade for the
primary reason to make money and build a positive equity curve. This primary reason
is so powerful we are all trying (should be) to better our trading. This is why we try
to perfect our trading. This leads us at times to second guess ourselves. We second
Preface
Even with your trading plan there will always be problems and surprises. Thou-
sands of traders were caught in the MF Global debacle. A situation in which client seg-
regated accounts were violated was an industry first. On Halloween 2011 MF Global
went bankrupt. Client accounts were frozen. Not just cash was frozen; positions could
not be offset for days. Frantic traders were calling 24 hours for days trying to exit their
positions. I know traders that flew to Chicago to try to exit their positions. Another
colleague of mine had three people on speed dialer trying to get through to the trade
desk, to no avail. This was a nightmare for traders as well as the futures industry. The
fortunate traders who had multiple accounts were able to offset their positions. Other
traders who fortunately had the majority of their funds at Treasury Direct (the U.S.
Federal Reserve bank) or at a cash management firm such as Horizon survived. Plan-
ning saved traders.Those that did not plan are not in business.Thank God I planned for
the unthinkable and had a vast percentage of assets at Treasury Direct (the U.S. Fed).
Luckily due to my paranoia and the advice of a colleague I transferred out some funds
from MF Global before they collapsed. I still got burned, however, but not destroyed.
The MF Global issue was extreme; anything can and anything will happen in trading.
The only certainty is uncertainty. Who would have thought the Nasdaq would still be
down 10 years from the highs? Who would have really believed the Japanese stock
market would be down from 39,000 to approximately 9,000? What is shocking is that
Andrew Abraham
xviii
THE TREND FOLLOWING BIBLE