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Commodity
Futures And Options Trading- Money
Management, Risk And Trading Logic, Part 3
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The concept of money
management and risk control holds even more critical where finance is
the lifeblood of the corporates as is banks
and small business. The investor may want to protect the assets and
hence buy business insurance.
This commercial insurance will ensure the safeguard of the capital
against any debt or any other
situation that may be financially challenging or even in case of an insurance fraud.
This kind of safety is more likely desirable in one’s personal life too
in the form of medical
insurance. A business owner may want to go for a protective plan in
the form of a debt solution
or a more customized consolidation package for any debts against a creditcard.
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Possibly the most important aspect to get right in trading is survival.
This is number one. Without surviving the bad times we are gone, with
no hope. Money management and risk may sound like boring subjects, but
read on to see how exciting they can be once you learn the concrete
reasons and logic for their use. You may never trade the same way again!
Commodity option buying can be rough for novices. Some see a TV pitch
about striking it rich in gold or heating oil. They load up their
entire account buying way out-of-the-money options, lose all of their
trading capital through premium erosion and then curse the market. They
don t consider to survive they must prepare for the inevitable string
of losses when trading at 10% accuracy. We need to survive long enough
to be around when that 10% option winner hits big. The other 90% will
be losers simply from the probability of the method used.
In this case, it means dividing our trading capital into at LEAST
twenty parts to be able to survive the string of losses that
probability will surely bring our way, over time. It s about survival
and knowing what type of commodity trading we are doing so that we can
adjust the money risked on each trade. If we are trading at 10%
accuracy, (option buying) and expecting to make money on the first 3-4
trades, it's pure arrogance.
Then there are some commodity option traders who will overload
themselves by buying large option positions and are willing to let them
erode away, taking a full 100% loss of the total account. They have no
plan to exit if the market does not act properly. Not a good idea.
Though, some buy a commodity option and use its full loss as a stop
loss in itself. That s acceptable ONLY if you do it with small
positions. But the sad thing is when these guys get a mere double in
the option price, they call that a big profit and grab it. Pure lunacy!
How can one be willing to lose their total investment and at the same
time take tiny gains while still trading at 10-20% accuracy? The
results are predictable. They consistently lose. Their excuse is the
analysis is bad, or the commodity markets are poor or they should have
gotten into another trade instead. You can point the math out to them,
but they do not get it. No matter what they do, the result will
continue to be the same unless money management changes are made. By
the way, one definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and
over while expecting different results. (grin)
The bottom line is that if your commodity trading method generates an
average of 20% (at best) accuracy by design, as option buying way
out-of-the-money often does, you had better be seeing your average
gains four times larger than your average losses. And, this is just to
break even not counting commissions, bid-offer spreads and slippage!
This means if you think a $2,000 loss is prudent, you had better be
averaging $8,000 gains to break even. Just to break even!
You must sit on your hands and let the profits run when buying options.
This is over the long-haul where things even out over time. In the
short term you may trade better or worse, but over time, probability
will put you where you spend the most time. With a $10,000 account, if
you're taking $2,000 profits and $2,000 losses when trading 20%
accurate, you will probably be out of the commodity option business in
less than ten trades. This may sound like fiction, but believe me, many
new traders do exactly this, thinking they will win in the end.
Part Four of Five Parts - Next!
There is substantial risk of loss trading futures and options and may
not be suitable for all types of investors. Only risk capital should be
used.
By: Thomas Cathey
Article Directory:
http://www.articledashboard.com
Thomas Cathey - 27-year
trading veteran heads the
managed futures division of Thomas Capital Management, LLC. View his
market forecast TimeLine Trading charts and get his complete 44+
lesson, "Thomas Commodity Trading Course - all free." www.thomascapitalmanagement.com/commodity/welcome.htm
Main site: www.ThomasCapitalManagement.com
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