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Managing Risk

Wednesday, February 13, 2008 | Teeka Tiwari

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I’ve had a lot of new readers of the Tycoon Report contact me wanting to know how much they should be putting into a trade. This is a great question, and I wrote an article several months ago about this exact topic.  I want to share it with you newcomers to the Tycoon Report.

There are sometimes in life when you do everything you’re supposed to do, but things still don’t work out.

Frustrating isn’t it?

Because of its very nature, this can happen quite often in the stock market.

Personalizing these moments is probably the absolute worst thing a trader can do. There is nothing personal about the stock market. It doesn’t care where you went to school, who you know or what religion you follow. It’s the only area in life where you are graded on your success or failure virtually every minute of every day.

That’s a lot of pressure for the uninitiated - and newer investors have an especially hard time adjusting to some of the uglier realities of investing in the stock market.

This is where good risk management comes into play. If you’re betting the ranch on every trade, then you’ve got a right to be anxious and nervous! The first lesson of stock speculation is good capital management. That means knowing exactly how much you are willing to allocate to stock speculation.

The second part is figuring out how much you want to risk on each individual trade. Remember, most pros are wrong more often than they are right. What separates the pros from the amateurs is good money management. Pros don’t bet it all on one idea and hope it works out. They spread their investments around, let their winners run and have a very clearly defined set of limits on how much of their capital they are willing to lose on one given trade.

Most professional money managers won’t risk more than 2% to 5% of their total capital on a single trade, and 5% is really pushing it. In my experience, the majority top out at around 3.5%.

So what does this mean to you?

Let’s say you have a $100,000 portfolio.  Does it mean that you invest no more than $5,000 into any one idea? (Assuming that you are using the 5% max loss rate.)

Yes and no. Let me explain: If you’re buying stocks, then what you would do is simply figure out what your stop loss is on the stock trade. (A stop loss on a stock is a point where if the stock hits it, it tells you that you were wrong and you should bail. Stop loss is also referred to as "stop order" or "stop-market order”.)

This is where stock charts can come in very handy. The charts clearly show support levels for most stocks, and you can simply place your stop loss point below the support level. Once you know how low you are prepared to let the stock go, you can figure out how much to invest.

Here’s an example using our hypothetical $100,000 portfolio. The shares of ABC Company are trading at $20, and the chart shows support at $18.50. You decide that $18 is a good stop loss point. If you're using a max loss of 5% on a $100,000 portfolio, that’s $5,000 per trade that you are willing to risk. To figure out how many shares you can buy, you would simply divide the amount you’re willing to risk ($5,000) by the amount of points between your purchase price ($20) and your stop loss point ($18). The difference is 2 points, so $5,000 divided by 2 equals 2,500.

This shows us that we can buy 2,500 shares at $20 with an $18 stop loss for a theoretical maximum risk of $5,000.

Why do I say theoretical? Because stocks can gap down and trade through stop loss points. The stop loss is not a guarantee; in a fast market a stock may gap down significantly before your order ever gets processed.

So what’s a trader to do?

This is where options come into play. Most new traders make the mistake of buying options the same way they buy stocks. That is, if they normally buy $10,000 worth of stocks at a time, they then go ahead and buy $10,000 worth of options at a time.

DO NOT DO THAT. YOU WILL GO BROKE!!

The way to buy options is to use the same methodology as before, except instead of tying up $50,000 (2,500 shares at $20), you simply take the risk capital portion of that investment (the $5,000 that you were prepared to actually risk) and use only that amount to buy the options. The amount you commit to the option essentially becomes your “stop loss”.

In whippy markets, stop loss points can be very easily triggered, and then the stock can turn right around and break out to the upside!

Options give you huge staying power that direct equity ownership cannot. You have the peace of mind knowing that your maximum loss can be no greater than the $5,000. No matter what the stock does on the downside, you are protected. On the upside, you have huge leverage because of the very nature of options.

Remember, Options give you options.

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Teeka Tiwari
Chief Investment Officer
ETF Master Trader


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5 Comments

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  1. christopher (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    thanks for the infomation.
  2. John M (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Re: O H question on stop loss on an option. I use the stock as the guide. In Teeka's example, the stock has support at $18.5, and you would put a stop loss on the stock at 18. Use the same rationale for the option, because if the stock breaks support and falls to 18, you probably don't want to hang on to a long call. It's also worth noting that the option loss will be a higher percentage. For example, with the stock at $20, a Broadcom Aug 20 Call could be bought for $3.60. If the stock price fell to $18, the option would go to $2.37 for a 35% loss. That's why you only put your risk money into the option, not the whole $50k as noted in the article. With options, you should expect the occasional 35% loss as well as the 100% gain. Just hope you have enough of the latter to be successful.
  3. John M (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    I understand the concept of risking no more than 5%. However, in this example, you've just dumped half of your portfolio into one stock. Is that smart? I don't think so. I would have a minimum of 5 positions for a tad of diversification.
  4. walter (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    As a new investor I have read alot of comments on stock versus options investing, but never really got it. Thank you for the most concise statement of the difference. I think I got it now.
  5. O H (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Teeka:

    Is it reasonable to put a stop loss to an option?

    If so, please give us reasonable calculation to manege the risk of buying an option.

    If not, please give us the rationale.

    Thanks for your help,

    Oswaldo
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