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Trade Like a Dealer: (And Avoid Death by a
Thousand Stops)
by: Boris Schlossberg
Instead of hating dealers, traders should learn to trade like them. The
insights are worth the trouble.
A trader
stares intently at the three-minute chart of the E-mini S&P contract on his
computer and sees that prices are plummeting through the 20 period moving
average. Instantly he sells several lots, anticipating a sharp move down.
But suddenly, price action pauses, stabilizes and then quickly turns around,
running back up beyond his entry point. He gets stopped out for a loss.
Unfazed, he focuses on his screen once more and now sees that price has
pierced the 20 EMA to the upside. His momentum indicators have turned
bullish, and now he buys. At first, price follows his direction, turning his
floating profit-and-loss statement green – but well short of his target
price. The price hesitates again, halts for one more bar and then plunges
below his entry and right into his second stop loss of the day. Dazed, he
watches silently as it rallies once more and now takes out the daily high
without him.
What is this, you wonder. Day trading by Inspector Clousseau?
Hardly. This trader displayed enormous discipline and control. He adhered to
his plan. He used proper money management techniques, and he even followed
classic risk/reward ratios. In short, he did everything by the book. Yet
most likely he will wind up just another victim of the market – destroyed
not by the typical impulsive burn-out trades of most amateurs, but by the
death of a thousand little stop-loss cuts.
Why do most traders lose money even when they follow all the proper rules? –
Because markets rarely offer a smooth trend. Instead, they usually thrust
and retrace frequently, spooking traders out of what eventually turn out to
be profitable positions. As a result, traders are beaten by maddening runs
of constant stop outs. According to famous trading coach David Landry, a
series of small stops often can add up to be bigger a loss than a large
stop.
Why does this happen? Markets are a zero-sum game. For every winner, there
must be a loser. Winners’ profits come from the losers. The sooner retail
traders understand that reality, the better are their chances of becoming
profitable traders.
And on the opposite side of most of retail transactions are professional
traders known as dealers. One of the main reasons prices tend to back and
fill in almost all financial instruments is because when customers are
buying, dealers are selling and vice versa. Dealers make their profits from
the small retraces in price by quickly unloading their newly acquired
inventory. If that sounds like more like a scene from a chaotic Middle
Eastern bazaar than some highly sophisticated, finely engineered process –
it is. That’s why those with instincts of a pushcart vendor often become
much better traders than Ivy League graduates with degrees in quantitative
finance.
Don’t Hate the Dealer
Whether trading stocks, options, futures or forex, I’ve never heard a kind
word from retail traders about dealers. They cheat, they steal, and they
make markets wide enough to drive a Mack truck through. They back away from
their quotes when markets get wild. And on and on and on. All true, but
immaterial.
In recent years, two factors have made markets fairer and more efficient for
retail traders – competition and computerization. Presently, all major
financial markets are fully electronic with strict price and time-stamp
rules that provide traders with auditable results and lightning-fast
execution. Often traders have the opportunity to join the dealers in buying
on the bid and selling on the ask, thus completely leveling the playing
field. In short, why be mad at the dealers for your own bad decisions?
Dealers, after all, offer a necessary market service – liquidity. Don’t
think so? Just try to get rid of a 100,000-share position after market hours
if some adverse news hits the stock. Volatility takes on a whole new meaning
when 33 percent of your position value disappears in less than a minute on
what often is only a mildly bad piece of news.
Instead of hating dealers, traders should learn to trade like them. Unlike
regular retail traders, dealers usually follow two maxims: Always be fading,
and never trust the first price. The fact that dealers usually are on the
opposite side of price action really should come as no surprise when one
realizes that 80 percent of the time markets are range-bound – and,
therefore, retrace the original move. During the 20 percent of the time when
markets do trend, dealers often sustain losses. Tom Baldwin was a former
meatpacker who started with a $25,000 grubstake and became one of the
largest market makers in the Chicago Board of Trade’s Treasury bond pit,
often turning over $1 billion of inventory per day. In an interview with
Jack Schwager he said the following, “Because I’m a market maker, I take the
other side of the trend. So if the market goes one way for 50 ticks, I can
guarantee you I’m going the wrong way, and at some point it is going to be a
loss.”
Typically when dealers incur trend risk, they chalk it up to cost of doing
business. However, on some occasions the one-way moves are so severe and so
relentless that dealers can go bankrupt. Witness the example of several NYSE
specialist firms that continued to make markets during the 1987 stock market
crash and sustained unrecoverable losses.

Scaling
in – Not Averaging Down
Although fading the trend may not be the rule most retail traders wish to
follow, it is the dealers’ second trick that can be of tremendous help to
retail speculators. In his very informative book, The Market Makers Edge,
Josh Lukeman writes, “Successful market makers have controlled the ego-based
need to be absolutely correct. Because markets are constantly in motion, it
is almost impossible to be exactly right on (in your entries).” Such a
probative approach to the markets is at the heart of most successful
professional trading. Dealers know full well that their first foray into the
trade is often wrong. They rarely commit the full position amount on the
first try.
One of the key differences between professionals and amateurs is that
professionals scale into trades while amateurs average down. This statement
may seem like clever wordplay, but it’s not. Let’s assume that both the
professional and the amateur decide to risk two percent of their capital
account on a particular trade. The professional knows full well that he will
not be able to hit the exact entry point on his first attempt. Therefore, he
may allocate only 0.3% of his capital to the first entry, 0.6% on the second
and 1.2% to the third – and stop himself out at -2.7% away from original
entry price (-2% risk).
On the other hand, the amateur will plow in with a full two-percent
position, and then when the trade goes against him, he may decide to “double
down again” and then average in yet a third time. At this point, the amateur
has committed six percent of his capital to the trade, and if the trade
continues to move against him, he will throw in his towel with a massive
-12% loss (sum of -6%,-4% and -2% losses). Five disasters like that and the
amateur loses 60 percent of his account. In a zero-sum game, he has just
moved much closer to zero.
Over-Leverage and Diversification
This example serves to illustrate one of the greatest pieces of trading
advice ever given. When asked by Jack Schwager what is the one act most
traders must do to become successful, Bruce Kovner – perhaps the greatest
hedge fund manager ever and a man who has beaten the markets for more than
30 years and to whom other hedge fund managers entrust their savings –
simply said,” Undertrade, undertrade, undertrade.” Prodded further by
Schwager, he explained, “Whatever you think your position ought to be, cut
it at least in half. My experience with novice traders is that they trade
three to five times too big. They are taking five- to ten-percent risks on a
trade when they should be risking one- to two-percent.”
Unfortunately, this is the advice most retail traders roundly ignore. It’s
not exciting to trade for pennies and nickels – far more glamorous to try to
make $1,000 a day. Yet that is the likeliest path to ruin. After having
watched thousands of accounts trade, I can unequivocally say that the
biggest reason for the failure of most retail traders is not lack of
knowledge, nor is it the inability to understand the nuances of the market
or poor technical analysis skills. The number one reason is over-leverage.
Imagine you are driving down a typical suburban street in your subdivision
at the normal 25 mph. Now imagine that the speed of the car suddenly
accelerates to 250 mph. What are the chances that you will make it to the
end of the block unharmed, especially if your neighbor is driving towards
you from the other direction? That’s leverage. Professionals fully recognize
its power and do not risk more than they control – and then they diversify
their risk by not betting everything on one single price.
As investors, we are always taught that diversification is crucial to
success in the market. Yet when it comes to trading, most speculators
practice the “all-in approach.” Harry Markowitz, who in the 1950s was the
first man to apply systematical statistical analysis to the market,
demonstrated mathematically how the average of highly risky securities
actually generates a smaller standard deviation (and therefore, smaller
risk) than a uniform portfolio of presumably safe stocks. The math behind
his discovery is beyond the scope of this article, but suffice it to say
that this seeming enigma applies to diversification of price action as well.
Getting a blended price often is less risky than plowing all at once into
the trade.
Applying Dealing Methods to Trend
While scaling may be appealing to many retail traders, trading against the
trend probably will not appeal to most. So here is an example, and please
note that it is only a suggestion and by no means a trading setup. Every
trader must discover his own edge in the market – there is no such thing as
easy money.
Having dispensed with disclaimers, let’s examine one common strategy many
retail traders like to follow – the break-out trade. Using dealing
methodology, here is an approach to possibly make the trade less risky. As
shown in Figure 1, the trader can scale into the trade three times. By
diversifying his position, he does not even need to have price exceed his
initial entry point to record a profitable trade! If, however, he is correct
in anticipating the direction, he still can capture the move with a partial
entry. Consequently, by modifying the risk, the retail speculator can
improve his approach and truly begin trading like a dealer.
Copyright © 2005 SFO Magazine All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.
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