Trader Steve | Nov 19, 2014 06:46AM ET
Last night I had the pleasure of a conversation with a trader about his performance and where he needed to improve. His trading story to date mirrored my own early days - starting off on day trading on very short timeframes before moving to the daily timeframe, along with trying to adhere to the principle of following trends - cutting profits and letting profits run.
He doesn't have a problem in taking small losses. He also only risks a very small percentage of equity on each trade. He has never blown up an account. In those respects he is ahead of 90% of traders out there. He has been trading for a few years now, yet he is only about breakeven in his overall performance.
This trader is very close to making the breakthrough to overall profitability, but there is one element missing - the inability to let his profitable trades run.
This is quite a common occurence, particularly with people who want to follow a trend following approach.
After discussing this, it became apparent there was an element of fear about seeing open profits evaporate and disappear, or worse still turn into losses.
He then went on to say that, occasionally, he did make a decent profit, normally as a result of being unable to been in front on his PC and watch the markets!
For some people, letting profits run is a major battle - they may lack the patience to let the winning trades play themselves out. They are so anxious to bank a profit that, at the first sign of a price consolidation or minor pullback, they try and be 'smart' and time the exact top of the move. They may be right once in a while, but doing that soon gets annoying when a few days later the stock is powering up to new highs and beyond.
There are a number of things you can try to do to help you let profits run:
With a trend following approach, as the win rate is typically below 50%, you need those big winners to cover all the small losses made and generate the overall profit. Therefore, to generate the overall positive expectancy to make it worth your while, having the ability to let those profits run is a key element to achieving success.
If you are familiar with the story of Richard Dennis and the Turtle Traders, then you may recall that the group went through this on their very first trade in Heating Oil. Of those traders, only Curtis Faith didn't try and second guess what has going to happen, and kept his full position open. As a result, he was the only one to make a significant profit on that trade, and the group got a very early taste of how psychology plays a major part in trading.
Once a trend follower is in a trade, there is usually only one price level that he needs to worry about - where his trailing stop should be placed. If you are in as long trade, then the market can move around as much as it wants providing it doesn't violate that stop level. You can't control it, so why worry about it?
There are only three instances where you may want to consider cutting profits short:
As was seen in this case study, this element is often the last building block required before someone gains true confidence and belief in a trend following approach. I am sure the trader I spoke to last night will also achieve this.
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