Steve Burns
Steve Burns
Steve Burns
In trading more action and time spent watching screens is not necessarily rewarded with more
profits. The majority of the time trading every day and watching every tick in price is not rewarded
by making more money the odds are greater that emotional errors of over activity will be made.
Ed Seykota had some of the best annual trend trading returns for decades and traded strictly
with end of day data. Nicolas Darvas also made millions by only placing trades after the market
close. For small accounts the more you trade the more commissions you pay that can cost you a
percentage of your profits. New traders can be tempted to make bad decisions outside their
trading plan intra-day when watching the market for hours if the desire to to something becomes
too strong. Some of the most profitable professional money managers and traders in history were
trend followers and position traders that executed quantified trend following systems that simply
got on the right side of some trends and stayed there until there was a good signal to exit their
trade.
Trading does not reward the time you spend watching price action or how many times you
entered and exited trades. Over the long term the market rewards right action, following trends,
buying big dips in price during up trends, creating trades with great potential risk/reward ratios,
and your edge over other traders.
Over trading is when a trader takes a trade based on fear, greed, desperation, or ego instead of
a valid entry signal. Over trading is due mostly to wanting to be profitable so bad that impulses
are driving decisions instead of a trading plan. If a trader has an edge over the markets then they
want to take the trades presented to them within their system parameters, the more signals the
better. If a trader takes trades that are not based on robust entry parameters the more trades
they take the quicker they will lose money and have a draw down in capital.
1. For smaller accounts over trading can rack up large commission costs that can eat into
profitability.
2. The bid/ask spread is an expense that pays the market makers. The more you trade the
more you pay.
3. The more you trade the more you can be front run and gamed by High Frequency
Traders. You can beat High Frequency Traders with Low Frequency Trading. You avoid
the intra-day price action noise they feed off of.
4. Trading too much gets you into bad entries when you should have been waiting for good
entries. Entries have to be based on signals and risk/reward ratios not the emotional
chasing of gains.
5. Over trading is bad trading. Generally over trading is the external results of bad internal
self controls. It is the epitome of not having a trading plan, lacking discipline, and not
following a trading plan. Over trading will cause you to lose faith in yourself as a trader
with the discipline to follow a plan. Over trading can lead to mental ruin only take the right
trades that meet your own guidelines and trading plan based on homework and research.
In most professions working more is what makes you more money. If you are paid for your time
the more you work the more money you make. This does not transfer into trading. Over trading
can be expensive in trading losses, losing in the bid/ask spread, and commission cost. The best
trades come when you are patient and wait for the right entry signal and set up. More trading
does not necessarily mean more profits, it is usually means the opposite, losses.
Here are 10 productive things that you can do to improve your trading when the market is too
dull, too volatile, or you are waiting for your entry signal.
Chart Facts:
The ascending triangle is a bullish chart pattern that usually forms during an uptrend as a
continuation pattern.
Sometimes an ascending triangle pattern will form as a reversal pattern as a downtrend
comes to an end, but they are usually continuation patterns in an uptrend.
Regardless of their location during a trend ascending triangles are bullish patterns that
indicate accumulation. The higher lows in the pattern are a clue that sellers are not letting
their position go at lower prices as the pattern makes higher lows.
The top horizontal resistance line on this pattern holds until the sellers are worked
through and buyers come in at higher prices, this signals a buy signal for the potential
breakout to higher prices and the continuation or the beginning of an uptrend.
Ascending triangle patterns can be longer in timeframe and wider in range than a flag or
a pennant. The length of this pattern can range from a few weeks to months with the
average lasting for 1-3 months. Many times the catalyst of earnings will trigger a breakout
for a stock.
Many times volume will contract as the pattern gets near to a breakout. A breakout with
higher than average volume can give a higher rate of success for a buy signal.
Many times a return to the breakout price level will happen as old resistance becomes
new support for a second chance entry.
Traditionally the price projection for this pattern after the breakout is found by measuring
the longest distance in the price range of the pattern and projecting after the resistance
breakout.
The below $XES chart shows the horizontal trend line that lasted 6 months around the $16.50
area and the ascending trend line of higher lows that started in the middle of August. The large
candlestick bullish breakout over resistance carried through for a run to $18 and could go farther.
This chart trend could be from the breakout of $16.50 to $20.50 equal for a $4 trend equivalent to
the longest range of the triangle from $12 support low to resistance at $16.50.
Trading for a Living
Posted By: Steve Burnson: August 10, 2019
I first read the original version of this book over fourteen years ago, and it was the book that
finally cemented for me the overall structure I needed to understand all the dynamics of profitable
trading. I have read hundreds of trading books, and this one still stands head and shoulders
above the rest. It explains how to manage the risk, overcome negative psychology, and the
importance of developing and following a trading method with an edge.
I especially like the clarity of the charts in this new edition. Dr. Elder used charts from the
StockCharts.com website, and these are great charts for clarity and easy to use.
If you read and follow the principles in this book, you will make enough money on your trades to
pay for this book many times over. I have been an active participate in the markets for over 25
years, as a trader of trends, and I agree with Dr. Elder completely, having experienced the greed,
fear, and mistakes that he illustrates. Read this book and save yourself a lot of unnecessary
losses of both financial and mental capital.
The first section of this book teaches you the psychology of successful trading:
2) Learn all that you can, but be skeptical, go with what works.
6) Understand that you can be your own worst enemy through greed, fear, and emotions.
7) You must change bad behaviors and bad habits to be a profitable trader.
Dr. Elder explains, in great detail, his own trading tactics and methodology. For example, in the
Risk Management section, he covers the most important strategy of when to exit. He suggests
setting a stop-loss on every trade so you keep losses small. He also emphasizes the importance
of protecting profits with trailing stops as a winning trade goes in your favor, and never risking
more than 2% of your account on any one trade based on your position sizing and where your
stop loss is placed. He also warns against losing more than 6-8% of your account in any one
month, this is a dangerous amount of capital to lose in a short amount of time.
A critical point made by Dr. Elder, is that professionals in any field do not count their money daily.
Traders should focus on their trading, and not their daily profits. Traders should focus on
following their trading plan and let the profits take care of themselves. Dr. Elder’s background in
psychology makes him the perfect person to explain the pitfalls of trading emotionally and without
discipline.
Dr. Elder has written one of the most all-encompassing trading books on the market today. You
will profit from it, whether you are a beginner or an advanced trader. It will make you more
professional and logical, and it will show you that traders are only profitable by trading a winning
method, using risk management, and psychological discipline. This book was one of the most
important and influential for me in my trading as it brought together the importance of what Dr.
Elder calls the three legs of the trading stool. Managing your money, your method, and also your
mind, the three M’s that are required for profitable trading over the long term.
In trading defence is under rated and offense is over rated. Too many new traders want to make
money so bad they don’t even consider the risk of loss when the market becomes very volatile
and plunges.
Here are ten ways to manage risk and limit your losses during market plunges.
1. Your maximum position size on any one should never be more than 10% to 20% of your
total trading capital.
2. Every trade you make should have a planned stop loss price where you are proven
wrong about the trade and must exit.
3. Your biggest loss on any one trade should be no more than 1% of your total trading
capital based on your position size and your stop loss.
4. You should trade with diversified traidng signals: dip buying signals, trend trading signals,
and swing trading so you have a chance to make money in multiple types of markets.
5. The less your positions are correlated the lower your risk of loss at one time.
6. Position size based on volatility not your opinion or ego.
7. Trade in the direction of the trend on your time frame.
8. Realize bull markets have no long term resistance and bear markets have no long term
support and do not get stubborn and hold a position on the wrong side of a trend.
9. Also enter a trade understanding the odds that it can be a losing trade.
10. You must test any trading system through mutiple types of markets: up trends, down
trends, volatile, and crashes to completely understand your risk of ruin.
Risk management can both save you from big losses and eventual ruin during losing streaks.
The most valuable lessons you can learn in trading is how to protect the capital you do have to
give it a chance to both survive and grow.
A big stumbling block for new traders is the goal of perfection. If you think it is possible to
be right about every trade, every time, and hate to be wrong you are going to have a bad time.
Trading is much like being an entrpreneur, during the creative process you win some and you
lose some. Some businesses are profitable and some lose money and go out of business.
Some trades make money and some trades lose money and profitability really comes from
bigger wins and smaller losses not all wins. Few bowlers every bowl a perfect 300 and no
baseball hitter has every batted over a .410 batting average in a season. Perfection is not
possible because you are competing against the composite of all other traders and investors in
the markets.
You can have winning streaks and be profitable but no matter what you will eventually have
losing streaks and drawdowns, that is just the reality of the markets. Even the best traders in
the world have ‘only’ 50%-70% win rates. Both value investor Warren Buffett and trend
follower Bill Dunn have had +50% drawdowns in there capital and they are some of the best
of all time in their fields and using their methods. There are few delusions greater than
entering the markets with the goal of perfection. Focus on making money with an edge, focus
on a repeatable quantified system.
Accept your losses quickly and maximize your gains by letting your winners run until you
have a reason to lock in your profits. To be a profitable trader you have to be a good loser.
Accept there will be losses and you will cut them short and not hold on to a losing trade on
the wrong side of a trend because you don’t want to exit it and admit you were wrong about
the trade. Admitting to your losses is one of the biggest parts of the trading game.
Perfection makes you wait to enter a good trade. Perfection makes you hold on to a losing
trade hoping it will come back to even. Perfection makes you upset about every losing trade.
Perfection keeps you in the learning process far too long when only trading can teach you the
toughest lessons. Perfection keeps you looking for the perfect trading system and ignoring a
good trading system with an edge becuase it is not good enough.
“There are just four kinds of bets. There are good bets, bad bets, bets that you win, and bets
that you lose. Winning a bad bet can be the most dangerous outcome of all, because a success
of that kind can encourage you to take more bad bets in the future, when the odds will be
running against you. You can also lose a good bet no matter how sound the underlying
proposition, but if you keep placing good bets, over time, the law of averages will be working
for you.” – Larry Hite
Steve Burns
What can you tell readers about your risk management approach?
“My goal is to never lose more than 1% on a single trade when it goes against
me. I do not want to be exposed to more than 3% total risk at one time in
correlated positions.
I want to be in losers briefly and move on if I do not make money pretty fast. I try
to limit my drawdowns in capital to 5% each year. Risk management is my #1
priority. I want to keep what I have more than try to go for big winning trades.”
What trading moments make you the most proud?
“In my main accounts I averaged +20% returns from 2003-2007 and went to
cash in January of 2008 in those accounts suffering no drawdown in 2008.
I traded Apple and Priceline breakouts in the 1st quarter of 2012 with weekly
option rolling a 52% return in 3 months. I made a 100% return on options in a
big Apple strangle in mid 2012 in an overnight trade.”
The most upset?
“I suffered two 50% drawdowns in my trading accounts over the last 16 years
through trading too big and aggressively.
I learned the lessons of position sizing and trend fighting the hard way. I came
back from both drawdowns to return to all time account highs. It is hard road to
come back from. I advise not travelling it. It tends to break most traders.”
What books, websites, or other resources would you recommend to
those wanting to broaden their trading knowledge?
I tried to create the most affordable and informative books and e-courses on the
market for new traders to get them started. I
use stockcharts.com, ETFreplay.com and Finviz. I strongly advise educating
yourself before you start to trade. The books from those I mentioned
before, Michael Covel, Alexander Elder, Van Tharp, and Jack Schwager were all
life changing for me.
What advice can you offer readers regarding position sizing?
“Trade small enough where you emotions don’t interfere with you following your
trading system and trading plan. Never losing more than 1% of your trading
capital on one trade is a great place to start.”
A lot of traders plateau and have trouble evolving beyond this level.
What advice can you give to them?