Four Basic Responsibilities
by Jay West
All of us have bad days in the market. That’s a fact.
No one ever wins all the time. What goes around comes
around. I think it is critically important to determine
what happened when you do poorly. It’s always easy to see
what you did right when you have a good day. So what is it
when you do poorly? Either you don’t feel well, felt
lethargic and not “with the program”, or there are times you
just can’t put your finger on what is wrong. It is
important to be as objective as possible in determining what
went wrong. This is not a witch hunt. It’s an attempt to
discover the errors you committed and install fixes for
those errors with procedures and processes that will allow
you to be successful.
So how do you do that? First, never beat yourself up.
You are not a dummy etc. Allow no negative self talk.
That’s hard to do when things are going badly. The first
thing you should do is stop trading real money as soon as
you feel “out of control”. Traders are bull headed animals
usually and we are all trying to demonstrate discipline and
that we are “with the system” and will follow it
implicitly. That philosophy sometimes manifests itself as
bull headedness where you are losing trades and just will
not stop trading and “following the system”. You aren’t
actually following the system because you are losing
trades. You are “out of control” when you lose two or three
successive trades and can’t seem to figure out why,
immediately stop, take a break, a walk around the block, or
at a minimum go to paper trades and take the heat off your
back. Try to determine what it is that you are doing
incorrectly. Be objective, not personal. Consider yourself
an “expediter of the system”. You are an extension of the
system. Your only function is to run the system correctly.
Make it a game. Not a personal life or death mission.
Determine if there is something that is distracting you or
limiting your ability to do that. Also look at the
methodology. Are you really following the trading plan and
the system’s signals? Be brutally honest in this regard.
You cannot work with lies and deceptions to yourself.
A trader has four basic missions/responsibilities in
trading. First is to develop a good sound trading plan and
relegate it to writing. Make it easily understandable, as
simple as possible, and such that it can be applied
ruthlessly on a consistent basis. In that plan, be sure you
have clear, concise, and relevant entry and exit criteria.
What makes a valid entry signal and exit signal? Exactly
what are you looking for? If you have four indicators, are
you looking for three of the four to be firing for the
signal to be valid? Or do you want the stochastic to be
turning over from the top or bottom of its range and coming
through the 20% or 80% line, thus taking trades only when
the stochastic is coming from an extreme condition? Or take
only trades when the Moving Average is in your favor.
That’s all up to you and how your system is designed. The
main thing is to have it all down in writing and be able to
consistently follow it when trading.
Second, realize that your job as a trader/operator of the
system is to recognize the signal that may be occurring and
then validate the signal (does the signal meet your entry
criteria as set forth in your trading plan?). It is not
your job to evaluate whether the signal will be successful
or not. Your only job at that time is to validate the
signal. Is it a valid signal in accordance with your
trading plan criteria for entry/exit and whether or not the
entry fits your risk/reward ratio are the only things with
which you should be concerned.
Third, you are to execute the entry/exit in a timely
manner. Let’s say that last part again, “in a timely
manner”. That is critical. You must have the faith, trust,
and confidence to execute the signal that your system
generates on time. Late/hesitant entries are what kill a
lot of traders. Late = lose in most instances. Early
doesn’t guarantee success but it sure slants the odds in
your favor. If you chase trades, you are like the dog that
used to chase cars. Notice I said “who used to chase
cars”? I think you can see my point.
The fourth and last mission of the trader is to manage
the trade in accordance with his/her trading plan. Stay in
the trade until your system tells you to exit. Do not cut
winners on pure emotional decisions. The name of the game
is to run winners and cut losers. The trader who can
control his/her losses is the one who will win the war. You
can lose many battles but you must run winners and cut
losers to win the war. It is therefore of some importance
to develop and exit strategy that can be consistently
applied. That’s how you lock in profits and stay ahead of
the power curve. Have specific reasons to exit trades and
follow them. If you get out of a trade, there should be a
concrete reason. Look for significant places on the chart
where an exit might occur. Support and resistance lines,
recent pivot points, yesterday’s high or low, etc. These
are places where things can happen on the chart. When these
areas are approached have a plan about how to exit. Maybe a
fast stochastic hooking or an Ergodic that is hooking along
with the simultaneous building of a down bar. Just have
something that you look for when you near the important
areas on the chart. Consistency in exits is a big key to
success. Once you have an exit system perfected, do it the
same way every time.
When the day is over and you do your homework (what I
call an “After Action Review) and look at the day in
hindsight (highly recommended) you will usually find that
the system made money. If you lost money, the bottom line
is you lost money, and that is the criteria of success or
failure in trading whether we like it or not. If you have a
good system, that consistently makes money, and you apply
your systems, methods, and procedures correctly, you should
also make money. If you are successful in your playbacks
(always replay each day), but unsuccessful in the real time
environment then I suggest you evaluate your trading
psychology. The real time, real money pressure is changing
the way you trade. Read Mark Douglas’ books The
Disciplined Trader and Trading in the Zone.
Commit the principles found there into your memory and your
actions. You have to believe the things Mark talks about to
implement them. Reading them is not enough. You have to
internalize them. That is a step that is essential to
getting over the psychological hump. If you don’t live it
you can’t do it. I also strongly recommend you review the
article written by Judy MacKeigan in the
January 2004 Trading Tips newsletter.
I hope this helps with your trading.
Trading Tip:
Inverse Fisher Transform
by Howard Arrington
Every time someone publishes an article about the
benefits of a tool or study, a buzz of excitement is created
in the investment community. Many traders are eager to
have access to the study, hopeful that it will make a
favorable difference in their trading performance. Just
such a buzz was created by John Ehlers' article 'The Inverse
Fisher Transform' published in the May 2004 issue of
Technical Analysis of Stocks and Commodities magazine.
This trading tip will give a little more insight into the
inverse Fisher transform as applied to the Relative Strength
Index.
The inverse Fisher transform is :
y = ( Exp(2 * x) - 1 ) / ( Exp(2 * x) + 1
)
where x is a value from the original study, and
y is the transformed value to be plotted. The
following is a plot of the inverse Fisher transform.
The transform creates boundaries on the
result so that it is in the range from -1 to 1. Input
values larger than 2 generate a result that is nearly 1, and
input values less than -2 generate a result that is nearly
-1. This boundary characteristic can be put to good use
when the Relative Strength Index is the input.
As seen in the plot of the transform, the
input data needs to be in the range of approximately -5 to
5. The RSI study data is in the range of 0 to 100, but this
can be converted to a range of -5 to 5 using the following
formula:
x = 0.1 * ( RSI value -50 )
The following table illustrates the
conversion of RSI data to the output of the inverse Fisher
transform:
RSI value |
x Input |
y Output |
Normalized |
100 |
5 |
1.000 |
100 |
90 |
4 |
0.999 |
99.9 |
80 |
3 |
0.995 |
99.8 |
70 |
2 |
0.964 |
98.2 |
65 |
1.5 |
0.905 |
95.3 |
60 |
1 |
0.762 |
88.1 |
55 |
.5 |
0.462 |
73.1 |
50 |
0 |
0.000 |
50 |
45 |
-0.5 |
-0.462 |
26.9 |
40 |
-1 |
-0.762 |
11.9 |
35 |
-1.5 |
-0.905 |
4.7 |
30 |
-2 |
-0.964 |
1.8 |
20 |
-3 |
-0.995 |
0.2 |
10 |
-4 |
-0.999 |
0.1 |
0 |
-5 |
-1.000 |
0 |
The output of the inverse Fisher transform
was normalized back to the range of 0 to 100 using this
formula. Normalized data is then easier to compare with
the original RSI input data.
Normalized = 50 * ( y +1 )
The table illustrates how original RSI values would be
plotted when the inverse Fisher transform is performed on
the data. RSI values above 60 will be squeezed into the top
12 percent of the range and RSI values below 40 will be
squeezed into the bottom 12 percent of the range. The
transform is causing the RSI transition from below 40 to
above 60 to be plotted as a sharper swing from very low
levels to very high levels. Here is a comparison plot of
an RSI in red and its inverse Fisher transform in blue.
The next technique that is typically
performed is to do the transform on an average of the RSI
instead of the raw RSI values. Since the input will be
smoother, the resulting plot of the transform is also
smoother. The following plot shows the original RSI, but
the transform is being performed on a 9 period exponentially
smoothed RSI.
Averaging the input data has created a
smoother transform plot. The turning points are still
sharply peaked with a rapid transition from one extreme to
the other. The chart shows the last 2 hours of the trading
day for April 23rd, 2004. This is an example of a sideways
market with a narrow range, which is very difficult to
trade.
Now, lets investigate the RSI and its
inverse Fisher transform in a trending market. The chart
is still for April 23rd, 2004, but shows a period of time
earlier in the day.
In this example, the inverse Fisher
transform of the averaged RSI is showing smooth swings.
Let's see if we can identify some trading signals from this
plot of the inverse Fisher transform. Though there are an
infinite number of possibilities, lets incorporate one of
the characteristics of the Fisher transform. Remember it
will make a rapid transition from one extreme to the
other. Thus the crossing of the midpoint or 50% level will
typically be a crisp crossing, as is demonstrated in the
example shown above.
For the investigation, lets work with the
following rules to define the buy, sell and exit signals.
Buy - When the Fisher crosses 50
going up.
Sell - When the Fisher crosses 50 going down.
Exit Longs - When the Fisher is above 80 and
crosses below 80.
Exit Shorts - When the Fisher is below 20 and
crosses above 20.
These rules are simple enough. The
following plot shows where the signals would occur.
The chart shows a 7 point move over a 3 hour
period. And the hope is that the sharper swings from the
inverse Fisher transform will help us profitably pocket a
good chunk of that move. Here are the results of the 5
trades from our trading signals defined above and marked on
the chart with thick purple lines.
Trade |
Points |
1 |
+ 0.25 |
2 |
- 1.00 |
3 |
+ 0.75 |
4 |
0 |
5 |
+ 2.25 |
Unfortunately, the results are not as
favorable as the initial impression had been. For the
trading results, the execution price used was the Close of
the bar that gives the signal. No commission is factored
into the results. After 5 trades over a 3 hour period, in a
fairly typical trend in the ES market, 2 small winners pay
for 1 small loser. One trade was a wash. And the 5th trade
represents the total profit for our exercise. The Net for
the 5 trades is + 2.25 points, before commissions and
slippage are factored in.
A quick examination of the signals in the
choppy market shown in the 2nd chart result in 13 losing
trades in a row, and no winners. The 13 losses are all
small, but they do add up and the fact there are 13 trades
without a winner is painful.
In summary, our trading rules seemed so
promising and the rapid transition of the Fisher plot from
one extreme to the other seemed so clear and useful. Yet,
in a typical trending market our system had marginal results
and in a choppy market the results were pathetically
painful. Some may argue the fault with our trading system
was in the selection of the rules, that our entries are too
late, or that our exits were either too soon or too late or
based on the wrong criteria altogether. Research on
variations of the ideas presented in this article should
generate better system results.
Finding a trading system based on the
inverse Fisher transform of an averaged RSI was not the
intent of the article. John Ehlers article in Stocks and
Commodities started out with this thesis, "How often have
you been indecisive about entering or exiting a trade?
Here's one way to get a clear indication." While the
inverse Fisher transform may indeed make the signal clearer,
it does NOTHING to make the signal better. Pointing out
that fact is the purpose of writing this Trading Tip
article. A signal that is late, or wrong, is still going to
make for a bad trade.
Fisher's article stated that "using the
inverse Fisher transform [will] alter the probability
distribution function of your indicators." I guess I
misread what that meant upon first reading. I had hoped it
meant that it would improve on the probability of success in
using a study for a trade signal. Now that I have gone
through the exercise of programming the Fisher transform
into Ensign Windows for the RSI study, and experimented with
this study to write this article, I think it is safer to
make no claim that using a Fisher transform is going to
improve study signals.
The Fisher transform is basically just
stretching the middle of the RSI plot outward. Compressing
the top 40% of the RSI chart into a 12% band at the top, and
compressing the bottom 40% of the RSI chart into a 12% band
at the bottom, is the essence of what is happening. This
effect is shown by the values in the table for the RSI and
its normalized transform.
In this article we used 80% and 20% as
trigger levels for the transform signals. These transform
levels are achieved when the RSI input is around 57% and
43%. Whether you use the inverse Fisher transform levels
of 80% and 20%, or the original RSI input levels of 57% and
43%, it is the same signal trigger! The Fisher transform
does nothing to change the quality or probability of the
signal or the success of your system rules. Success in
designing a trading system that incorporates the inverse
Fisher transform of an averaged RSI will have to factor in
the characteristics that have been pointed out in this
Trading Tip article.
When an article is published, sometimes our
desire for finding a 'holier grail' lets our expectations
get carried away. We want to attribute sacredness to a new
study that we do not yet understand, and proceed with blind
hope that somehow yet another mathematical massage of the
underlying price data will give us that elusive trading
advantage. Having the inverse Fisher transform in your
trading tool arsenal is not going to magically change your
trading success. It is just another level of mathematical
crunching of the price data, but one worthy of additional
research. |