Van-Tharp - Trading Systems
Van-Tharp - Trading Systems
When Tom Basso, who is interviewed in The New Market Wizards, did workshops with
me, he always described himself as a businessman first and a trader second. Part of
Toms perspective was to look for repetitive tasks that a human being in his organization
has to repeat over and over again. When he found such tasks, his job was to develop a
program to take that task out of human hands. Routine computer programs are great
examples of simple systems.
The Investor: The last person on the quadrant is the investor. The investor is someone
who invests in businesses and his/her most important criterion should be, What is the
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rate of return of the business? In other words, this person is continuing to ask, If I put
money in this investment, what kind of return will I get on it? High return investments
(i.e., high returns on equity) are typically good businesses in which to put your money.
Robert Kiyosaki describes this as the quadrant in which money is converted to wealth.
Rich people, according to Kiyosaki, derive 70% of their income from investments and
30% or less of their income from wages.
Most traders are probably not investors by this definition. They buy low or sell high,
trading stocks. As a result, there is something they must do to generate their money.
Investors, in contrast, are people who typically look for places where they can put their
money that generate rates of returns of 25% or higher without them doing anything. If
know how to get those types of returns, then you want to hold onto those investments as
long as possible. Many high tech stocks were showing earnings growth rates of well over
25%, and when they did, the prices went up dramatically because this is what investors
want. The problem with such investments, is they are not guaranteed to continue forever.
Many of you have probably discovered that in the last 18 months.
What is a Trading System?
What most people think of as a trading system, I would call a trading strategy. This
would consist of eight parts: 1) a market filter; 2) set up conditions; 3) an entry signal; 4)
a worst case stop loss; 5) re-entry when it is appropriate; 6) profit-taking exits; 7) a
position sizing algorithm; and 8) you might need multiple systems for different market
conditions.
A market filter is a way of looking at the market to determine if the market is
appropriate for your system. For example, we can have quiet trending markets, volatile
trending markets, flat quiet markets, and flat volatile markets. And, of course, the
trending markets can either be bullish or bearish. Your system might only work well in
one of those market conditions. As a result, you need a filter to determine whether your
system has a high probability of working. Should you trade your system or not?
The set up conditions amount to your screening criteria. For example, if you trade
stocks, there are 7,000 plus stocks that you might decide to invest in at any time. As a
result, most people employ a series of screening criteria to reduce that number down to
50 stocks or less. Examples of screens might include William ONeils CANSLIM
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criteria or a value screen for stocks with good PERs or a good PEG ratio or a
fundamental screen having to do with management and its return on assets. You might
also have a technical set up, just prior to entry such as watching the stock to go down for
seven straight days.
The entry signal would be a unique signal that youd use on stocks that meet your initial
screen to determine when you might enter a positioneither long or short. There are all
sorts of signals one might use for entry, but it typically involves some sort of move in
your direction that occurs after a particular set-up occurs.
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The next component of your trading system is your protective stop. This is the worstcase loss that you would want to experience and it defined 1-R (or your initial risk) for
you. Your stop might be some value that will keep you in the stock for a long time (i.e., a
25% drop in the price of the stock) or something that will get you out quickly if the
market turns against you (i.e., a 25 cent drop). Protective stops are absolutely essential.
Markets dont go up forever and they dont go down forever. You need stops to protect
yourself. As I said in Trade Your Way To Financial Freedom, entering the market
without a protective stop is like driving through town ignoring red lights. You might get
to your destination eventually, but your chances of doing so successfully and safely are
very slim.
The fifth component of a trading system is your re-entry strategy. Quite often when you
get stopped out of a position, the stock will turn around in the direction that favors your
old position. When this happens, you might have a perfect chance for profits that is not
covered by your original set-up and entry conditions. As a result, you also need to think
about re-entry criteria. When might you want to get back into a closed out position?
Under what conditions would this be feasible and what criteria would trigger your reentry? These are what you need to address in thinking about re-entry.
The sixth component of a trading system is your exit strategy. The exit strategy could be
very simple. For example, it might simply be a 25% trailing stop where you adjust the
stop to 75% of the closing price whenever a stock makes a new high. The stop is always
adjusted up, never down.
However, you may have many possible exits in addition to a trailing stop. For example, a
large volatility move (i.e., 1.5 times the average daily volatility) against you in a single
day is a good exit. Crossing a significant moving average (i.e., the 50 day) might be a
great exit. Technical signals are good exits (i.e., breaking a significant trend line.)
Exits are one of the more critical parts of your system. It is one factor in your trading of
which you have total control. And it is your exits that control whether or not you make
money in the market or have small losses. You should spend a great deal of time and
thought on your exit strategies.
The seventh component of your system is your position sizing algorithm. Position
sizing is that part of your system that controls how much you trade. It determines how
many shares of stock should you buy. A general recommendation would be to
continually risk 1% of your portfolio. Thus, if you have a $25,000 portfolio, you
wouldnt want to risk more than $250.
Lets say you wanted to buy a stock at $10. You decided to keep a 25% trailing stop,
meaning if the stock dropped 25% to $7.50 you would exit your position. Since your
stop is your risk per share, you would divide that $2.50 risk into $250 to determine the
number of shares to purchase. Since $2.50 goes into $250 100 times, you would
purchase 100 shares of stock. Notice that you would be buying $1,000 worth of stock
(100 shares @ $10.00 each) or four times your risk of $250. This makes sense since your
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stop is 25% of the purchase price. Thus, your risk would be 25% of your total
investment. If you want to know more about position sizing, Id suggest that you read
and review Trade Your Way to Financial Freedom, my Money Management Report, or
my Position Sizing DVDs..
Finally, depending upon how robust your trading system is, you might need multiple
trading systems for each type of market. At minimum, you might need one system for
trending markets and another system for flat markets.
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Remember that I said that what most people consider a trading system, is simply a trading
strategy that should be part of an overall business plan. Without the overall business
plan, many people would still lose money. As a result, lets look at the overall context in
which a trading strategy should be madeyour business plan. Nevertheless, here is a
summary of what we consider to be essential for a good trading plan.
I have written extensively on this subject, therefore for the purposes of this article, the
following is just a brief overview:
1) The Executive Summary. This is usually the last section written. It reviews all of
the material of the plan and presents it in summary form. It should describe in
detail the objective of the plan and then briefly describe, without a lot of detail,
how the objectives will be achieved.
2) A Business Description. The business description should include the mission of
the business, an overview of the business and its history, the products and services
you provide (which is growth of capital and risk control as a trader), your
operations, operational considerations such as equipment needed and site location,
and your organization and management of employees (if any). All of these topics
are fairly self-explanatory, but you should take the time to write them out as part
of your plan.
3) An Industry Overview and Competition. In the industry overview you need to
look at the factors influencing the market. For example, Ed Yardeni in his web
site lists ten major factors influencing the market. These include a globally
competitive economy, a revolution in innovation, wireless access to the Internet,
low tech companies having access to high tech tools and changing their
businesses as a result, the need to outsource to increase productivity, and many
other themes. See www.yardeni.com for more information. In addition, you also
need to know who/what your competition is. Who are you trading against? What
are their beliefs? What advantages do they have that you dont? What
advantages do you have that they dont?
4) Self-Knowledge Section: You need to know your strengths and your weaknesses
and list them in this section. You need to know how to capitalize on your
strengths and avoid (or overcome) your weaknesses.
5) Your Trading Plan Itself. The tactical trading plan should be a part of your
trading plan, but it should also include (a) your trading beliefs that form the basis
of your plan, (b) any strategic alliances you may have, and (c) what you plan to do
in terms of education and coaching.
6) Your Trading Edges: I believe your trading plan should also include a listing of
all of the trading edges that you have in the market. When you list your edges,
you can review them often and be sure that you capitalize upon them. For
example, your edges might include a) the fact that you dont have to trade; b) your
understanding of R-multiples and position sizing (which give people a huge edge
over those who have no idea about these concepts); c) your ability to read a level
II screen to get excellent stock trades; d) your sources of information; e) your
ability to plan well in advance so that you have a game plan each day; f) your skill
in following the ten tasks of trading; g) your knowledge of yourself and your
strengths and weaknesses. This is just a sample of the possible edges that you
might have over the average trader/investor.
7) Financial Information. This section should include three parts. The first part is
your budget. How much money do you have? What will the trading process cost
you? The second part will be your cash flow statement. Does your plan make
sense in terms of cash flow? And finally, the third part will include profit and
loss statements. If you have no trading record, you need to make estimates based
on historical testing and based on paper trading.
8) Worst Case Contingency Planning. Things always happen that you have not
accounted for or planned for in your trading plan. How will you deal with these
elements? What will you do if any of these things come up? How will you make
decisions when these elements come up?
If you want more information, I have Market Mastery newsletters that were devoted to
business planning.
Developing a System
I am revisiting an interview I did with LTC Ken Long, a systems expert with the U.S.
Army. Heres what Ken said about developing a system:
Define Who You Are: Before you conduct any planning or system design, you must
have a thorough understanding of who you are and what your objectives are. Individual
investors, private hedge fund managers, public mutual fund managers, and trust
managersthese groups will have different dynamics, time frames, and risk profiles.
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This relates to system design in that the final product must fit the circumstances and
dynamics of the group or individual. If you jump into system design without considering
these basics, you will sow the seeds of future problems.
Objectives: In trading system design, the problem is to define what you want the system
to accomplish. With as many ideas, events, circumstances and adjustments that occur in
system development, you have to have your objectives crystal clear in your mind. If you
dont know where you are going, then any old road will do.
Objectives give you the basis for making choices and prioritizing actions. This is not to
say that objectives are static. In fact, they can change as you discover either unexpected
limitations or advantages in your system as it matures. But before you start you must
have an initial set of goals and objectives to guide you.
Calibration: After the system is deployed and operational, part of the process of
calibrating the system is checking to see if the objectives still fit the person or
organization that you have become. Thats a very exciting part of system design. I cant
tell you how often Ive been part of a design team that started with a limited set of
objectives and discovered in the imagineering phase that by adjusting our sights we
were able to accomplish far more for much less. But, you have to start somewhere. If
you dont start with objectives, you are spinning your wheels.
I posed this question to Ken: This section is critical. How will you know if your
system is working or not? What are your performance benchmarks? What are your
criteria for knowing that your system is not working? How will you make decisions
when these criteria are met? Will you scrap everything or just make position sizing
adjustments? All of these questions are critical to developing and operating a good
trading system.
How to Make Decisions Within the System: Heres what Ken said about this critical
topic:
If you dont work out how you will make decisions ahead of time, then
you will certainly have to sort it out at the time of the first difficult
decision. If you make decisions on the spot, with no guidelines, you have
two problems: 1) figuring out what to do and 2) how to do it. And these
problems must be faced under great stress and limited time. Its better to
calmly sort out the decision making process ahead of time so that the
decision mechanism is agreed to before hand.
In the Army, no plan usually survives the first contact with the enemy,
and so our goal in planning is to develop a range of alternatives that can
apply to a number of scenarios. Through rehearsal and analysis, we know
which strategy works best for a given set of conditions. The goal of
strategy development is to provide the decision maker with a menu of
choices which are robust enough to cover a wide range of contingencies.
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Notes
1. We have two newsletter back issues in which we interviewed Tom Basso for
those of you who would like to know more. Call 919-466-0043 for more
information.
2. William ONeil, How to Make Money In Stocks. New York: McGraw-Hill,
1987.
3. We have an audio program on business planning for traders where we take
you through the development of a business plan.
4. The workshop Ken is referring to is the, How to Develop a Winning Trading
System That Fits You workshop, which we offer once or twice each year.