Trading
Methods
Investing
or Trading?
There
are three important differences between investing and trading. Overlooking
them can lead to confusion. A beginning trader, for example, may
use the terms interchangeably and misapply their rules with mixed
and unrepeatable results. Investing and trading become more effective
when their differences are clearly recognized. An investor's goal
is to take long term ownership of an instrument with a high level
of confidence that it will continually increase in value. A trader
buys and sells to capitalize on short term relative changes in value
with a somewhat lower level of confidence. Goals, time frame and
levels of confidence can be used to outline two completely different
sets of rules. This will not be an exhaustive discussion of those
rules but is intended to highlight some important practical implications
of their differences. Long term investing is discussed first followed
by short term trading.
My
mentor, Dr. Stephen Cooper, defines long term investing as buying
and holding an instrument for 5 years or more. The reason for this
seemingly narrow definition is that when one invests long term,
the idea is to "buy and hold" or "buy and forget".
In order to do this, it is necessary to take the emotions of greed
and fear out of the equation. Mutual funds are favored because of
they are professionally managed and they naturally diversify your
investment over dozens or even hundreds of stocks. This does not
mean just any mutual fund and it does not mean that one has to stay
with the same mutual fund for the entire time. But it does imply
that one stays within the investment class.
First,
the fund in question should have at least a 5 or 10 year track record
of proven annual gains. You should feel confident that the investment
is reasonably safe. You are not continually watching the markets
to take advantage of or to avoid short term ups and downs. You have
a plan.
Second,
performance of the instrument in question should be measured in
terms of a well defined benchmark. One such benchmark is the S&P
500 Index that is an average of the performance of 500 of the largest
and best performing stocks in the US markets. Looking back as far
as the 1930's, over any 5 year period the S&P 500 Index has
gained in price about 96% of the time. This is quite remarkable.
If one widens the window to 10 years, he finds that over any 10
year period the Index has gained in price 100% of the time. The
S&P500 Index has gained an average of 10.9% a year for the past
10 years. So the S&P500 Index is the benchmark.
If
one just invests in the S&P500 index, he can expect to earn,
on average, about 10.9% a year. There are many ways to enter this
kind of investment. One way is to buy the trading symbol SPY, which
is an Exchange Traded Fund that tracks the S&P500 and trades
just like a stock. Or, one can buy a mutual fund that tracks the
S&P500, such as the Vanguard S&P 500 Index Fund with a trading
symbol VFINX. There are others, as well. Yahoo.com has a mutual
fund screener that lists scores of mutual funds having annualized
returns in excess of 20% over the past 5 years. However, one should
try to find a screener that gives performance for the past 10 years
or more, if possible. To put this into perspective, 90% of the 10,000
or so mutual funds that exist do not perform as well as the S&P500
each year.
The
fact that 10.9% is average market performance for the past 10 years
is all the more remarkable when one considers that the average bank
deposit yield is less than 2%, 10 year Treasury yields are about
4.2% and 30 year Treasury yields are only 4.8%. Corporate bond yields
approximate those of the S&P500. There is a reason for this
disparity, though. Treasuries are considered the safest of all paper
investments, being backed by the United States Government. FDIC
regulated savings accounts are probably the next safest while stocks
and corporate bonds are considered a bit more risky. Savings accounts
are possibly the most liquid, followed by stocks and bonds.
To
help you calibrate the safety and liquidity question, the long bond
holders are comparing bond yields they now receive with next year's
anticipated stock yields. Consider that next year's anticipated
S&P500 yield is around 4.7% based on the reciprocal of its average
price to earnings ratio (P/E) of 21.2. Yet the 10 year annualized
return of the index has been 10.9%. Bond holders are prepared to
accept half the historical yield of stocks for added safety and
stability. In any given year, stocks may go either up or down. Bond
yields are not expected to fluctuate widely from one year to the
next, although they have been know to do so. It is as if bond holders
want to be free to invest short term, as well as, long term. Many
bond holders are thereby traders and not investors and accept a
lower yield for this flexibility. But if one has decided once and
for all that an investment is for the long term, high yield stock
mutual funds or the S&P500 Index, itself, seem the best way
to go. Using the simple compound interest formula, $10,000 invested
in the S&P500 index at 10.9% a year becomes $132,827.70 after
25 years. At 21%, the amount after 25 years is more than $1 million.
If in addition to averaging 21%, one adds just $100 a month, the
total amount after 25 years exceeds $1.8 million. Dr. C. rightly
believes that 90% of one's capital should be allocated over a several
such investments.
Now
that you've allocated 90% of your funds to long term investing,
that leaves you about 10% for trading. Short to intermediate term
trading is an area that most of us are more familiar with, probably
due to its popularity. Yet it is significantly more complex and
only about 12% of traders are successful. The time frame for trading
is less than 5 years and is more typically from a couple of minutes
to a couple of years. The typical probability of being right on
the direction of a trade approaches an average high of about 70%
when an appropriate trading system is used to less than about 30%
without a trading system.
Even
at the low end of the spectrum, you can avoid getting wiped out
by managing the size of your trades to less than about 4% of your
trading portfolio and limiting each loss to no more than 25% of
any given trade while letting your winners run until they decrease
by no more than 25% from their peak. These percentages can be increased
after there is evidence that the probability of choosing the correct
direction of a trade has improved.
Intermediate
term trading is based more on fundamental analysis which attempts
to assign a value to a company's stock based on its history of earnings,
assets, cash flow, sales and any number of objective measures in
relation to its current stock price. It may also include projections
of future earnings based on news of business agreements and changing
market conditions. Some refer to this as value investing. In any
case, the objective is to buy a company's stock at bargain prices
and wait for the market to realize its value and bid up the price
before selling. When the stock is fairly priced, the instrument
is sold unless one sees continuing growth in the value of the stock,
in which case he moves it over into the investment category.
Since
trading depends on the changing perceived value of a stock, your
trading time frame should be chosen based on how well you are able
detach yourself from the emotions of greed and fear. The better
one can remove emotions from trading, the shorter the time frame
he can successfully trade. On the other hand, when you feel surges
of emotion before, during or immediately after a trade, it's time
to step back and consider choosing your trades more carefully and
trading less frequently. One's ability to remove emotions from trading
takes a great deal of practice.
This
is not just a moral statement. An entire universe of what's called
technical analysis is based on the aggregate emotional behavior
of traders and forms the basis of short term trading. Technical
analysis is a study of price and volume patterns of a stock over
time. Pure technicians, as they are called, claim that all pertinent
news and valuations are imbedded into a stock's technical behavior.
A long list of technical indicators has evolved to describe the
emotional behavior of the stock market. Most technical indicators
are based on moving averages over a predefined time period. Indicator
time periods should be adjusted to fit the trading time frame. The
subject is far too large to do it justice in less than several volumes
of print. The lower level of confidence involved in trading is the
reason for the large number of indicators used.
While
long term investors may use only a single long term moving average
with confidence to track steadily increasing value, traders use
multiple indicators to deal with shorter time frames of oscillating
value and higher risk. To improve your results and make them more
repeatable, consider your expectations of changing value, your time
frame and your level of confidence in predicting the outcome. Then
you will know which set of rules to apply.
James
Andrews publishes the Wiser Trader Stocks and Options Newsletter.
Information on selected stock market trading systems, including
those of Dr Stephen Cooper, can be found at http://www.wisertrader.com/tradingsystems/stockandoptiontrading.html.
© 2004 Permission is granted to reproduce this article, as
long as, this paragraph is included intact.
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