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Let The Game Come to You

Wednesday, February 20, 2008 | Teeka Tiwari

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He steadies his sights, feeling the beads of perspiration slowly trickle down his spine. His breath quickens and he can feel the adrenaline coursing through his system. In hunting circles, this is known as the onset of “Buck Fever”. It’s just as prevalent in the world of trading, but can lead to vastly more disastrous results than a missed “kill”.

In trading, the phrase “jumping the gun” has far more meaning than you can imagine. None of us is immune to it. As professional traders, we eat what we kill. As such, combating “Buck Fever” is another hurdle we must overcome if we are to make our living from this business. You see, our biggest enemy is not the market, but rather our own human nature.

The herd mentality is deeply ingrained in us at a genetic level, and it affects EVERYONE. Even the smartest, mentally toughest person you know will, in times of extreme stress and peril, revert to some form of follower/herd mentality.

The best traders I know haven’t so much conquered this particular human peculiarity as they have created a strategy for dealing with it when it comes up. In psychiatry, this approach is called “cognitive behavioral therapy”.

Now I’m no shrink, but I do know that I have learned to recognize the telltale signs of my own “Buck Fever”, and have developed a strategy to talk myself out of making stupid decisions.

Recently, there was a stock I had been following very closely that I felt was primed for a major move. It already had a quick 15% move up, but looked to trade higher. When it was trading at $5 and change, I was looking for a move to $15; the 9-month $5 call options could be had for $105 per contract.

Now, when I get the opportunity to make 10x my money on an option play like this, I get excited. In fact, aside from my family and spiritual life, nothing gets me more passionate than successfully trading the market. The concept of buying a piece of paper at the right time and watching it appreciate in value based upon other people’s perception has always fascinated me.

Anyway, to get back to the trade. As anxious as I was to buy these options and position myself for what could be a major windfall, I was quick to bring myself back down to earth and examine the trade. I punched up the stock chart and started seeing the stochastic readings begin to fall off; my greed said “Forget it, buy now. Who cares? It’s a ten bagger! What’s a few pennies count?” At this point, warning sirens and red flags started going off in my brain; this is the signal that activates my cool professional detached self.

The first thing I do when this happens is to tell myself to relax, forget what I want to happen and FOCUS ON WHAT IS HAPPENING. What is the stock telling me now? Long story short, the stock was showing short term weakness. I had a chance to get into the trade at a better price (which is always a good thing!). So I backed off, I acted like a pro and ignored my baser instincts. Is this easy? No it’s not - it’s very difficult. That’s why the rewards from successful trading are so great. It’s also what separates professionals from amateurs.

As I ratcheted back my enthusiasm, like a patient hunter who sees the lion he wants to bag, I sat back. I sat back and let the game come to me.

For a while the stock just sat there… it even ticked up a bit, and my anxiety started to sharpen. Recognizing my rising anxiety, I reminded myself, “You’ve been here before. If it runs away from you, so be it. There will be another one.” I breathed deeply and calmed myself down.

And then it happened! The stock started to falter; the price slipped and then started to just slide. I knew it!

My patience and experience had paid off. As the stock price slid, so did the option prices, and boy did those options take a beating! They started the morning offered at $105 per contract; by the afternoon they were bid at $65 per contract! My patience allowed me to buy almost 50% more contracts with the same amount of money, increasing my potential gain dramatically! Was it worth the wait? You bet it was!

Every trader falls into the trap of overtrading or overpaying. It’s a hazard of the business. What I’ve found is that much of my own personal trading success has come from rebelling against my basic nature by buying when the world is selling, and selling when the world is buying.

This type of counterintuitive approach has generated millions in profits for my investors over the years. But it takes practice and patience to develop your own strategy, and remember: on any given day the market can make you look like a complete no-talent hack or a trading god!

So remember to position yourself in sectors with good long-term earnings visibility and long-term macro fundamentals driving the earnings picture. That way, if you’re off in your timing, then the fundamentals of the group will bail you out.



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“Let the Game Come to You.”

Teeka Tiwari
Chief Investment Officer
Point & Profit




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8 Comments

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

    Thank you for the great perspective. I have been in this situation many times.



    When stalking a trade in this manner how do you keep it in your sights while going about other business?



    Do you simply put it on a watchlist and check on it every day, or do you enter a limit order at a position where you know your risk would be minimal, or an alert at a point where you anticipate a reaction?



    I understand the intention of watchlists, and filtering down in priority, but in accual use I find that I add to my watchlists quicker than I manage them, and often lose trades, or miss entry signals. Mainly do to the amount of time I spend reading, studying, and researching, and the lack of attention to the process stalking the trade.



    I have found that if I open the trading process, even with a simulated position or a limit order, it requires me to manage that position and helps me to focus on the prospective trade. On the other hand registering e-mail alerts with my brokerage often brings positions into focus when I have forgotten about them.



    For me, these are big concerns. Perfecting the timing and not jumping the gun, and not losing track of prospective trades while waiting.
  2. dale (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    good one teeka

    with this business i have found that we have to more often than not remind ourselves of what we already know and this article does exactly that!!

    great reminder!
  3. Scott (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Teeka,

    Excellent article, and very important to hear this over and over. I read the tycoon articles in the fashion they come in, first to last, so i just read the one about NAK, and i was like wow, i better go and buy some long term call options on it, but i held back, well something else did, and then reading your article, which i think has been posted before, or something at least like it, makes me think WHOA, before you go and do that, you better check it out.



    I kind of wonder if your article was there to dissuade us from the NAK, lol.



    It sounds too good to be true, so when everyone else reads it, and it is up about 5% right now, anyway, and gapping last two days, but like he said, it could go 400%, i wonder how many people read his article, went out and bought, or read the new information that they put out.



    i guess i kind of have question, so would this be one not to get into since it is a tip, so to say, or everybodys doing it so it must be wrong. I just wonder if the "market makers" can manipulate(spelling?) it. THATS JUST MY FEAR OF THEY ARE GOING TO GET ME, OR IS IT JUST THAT HUMAN NATURE TALKING,



    i know that this is pretty rambli(ng), but if you do happen to read this, maybe in an article in the near future, you can address a stock like this that now everyone is on to for sure.



    scott
  4. Barbara (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    I like your priorities!!

    And, thanks for the article.
  5. charles (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Great service if I could afford it!
  6. Bobby D (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Thank you for your encouragement, Teeka. The anecdote about your trade hits home and it's a welcome reminded in this crazy time. I especially loved the comment, "on any given day the market can make you look like a complete no-talent hack or a trading god!"

    Haven't we all felt that way? LOL.
  7. Dean (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Timely article Teeka. I have been averaging down your trades from January. The options that were trading around $20 I bought lightly. I have been adding Goldman at around $9 over the last couple o days.



    Keep your head and average down folks! This is the buying opportunity of the decade... I daytrade the stock futures for a living and I can appreciate your philosophy because everthing can up in my trading and yet I can't seem to do better than 80% on a consistent basis.



    As Cramer would say: "Buy Buy Buy"!!!



    P.S. Please record the webinars for Point and Profit as well as Trend Rider cuz my trading entails the HS in the wee hours. I sign up for the webinars but I can't stay awake long enuff to attend.



    Tx.

    Dean C.
  8. Harry G (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Teeka, RIGHT ON!!! An excellant article as always. I have done the same thing. It takes a lot of know how to make the right trade, at the right time. I have been burned in the past, but that lesson paid off. Keep up the good work.



    Harry G.
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