April 2000
Trading Tip: Scrolling Charts
by Howard Arrington
I find it useful to keep my open positions in one trading account. When
that account is displayed, I click the right mouse button to display the pop-up
menu for the trading account and select the bottom menu item to display a
chart. Then I click on the menu Chart | Auto Scroll. Ensign
Windows will cycle through the symbols on the trading account and display a
chart for each in the open chart window. The duration of time that each
chart is displayed before moving on to the next symbol is set as a Scroll Speed
parameter on the SetUp | Charts form. I like 2 or 3 seconds as the scroll
speed.
The auto scroll mode can be stopped by unchecking menu Chart | Auto Scroll,
or by simply closing the open chart window. After starting the auto
scroll feature, I sit back and keep tabs on all my open positions by
watching their charts scroll through the open chart window. I find I
prefer this method of watching my charts over having lots of tiny charts
arranged in rows and columns on my display.
Tip: The Chart | Auto Scroll feature can also use the symbol list
from a custom quote page. Just display a custom quote page instead of a
trading account. Tip: All charts will display using the same time frame as the current
chart. So, if you display a daily chart, the scroll feature will display
daily charts for all symbols in the trading account (or portfolio page).
You can change to a different time frame by using the time buttons on the times
panel, or press a key on the 10-keypad. Chart time frames are
assigned to the keys on the 10-keypad on the SetUp | Charts form shown below on
the Keyboard tab.
Study Insight: Chart Markers
by Howard Arrington
Markers can be placed on charts to mark bars or formations. A common
use is to indicate where a trade was entered or exited. To place a marker on a chart, click the
Arrow button on the Draw Tools panel.
The cursor will change to a pencil while in draw mode.
Move the pencil to the location for the marker, and click the left mouse
button. A default marker will appear on the chart. You can now click
the right mouse button to display a properties form to change the marker shape
or the text that appears adjacent to the marker.
Markers can be drawn in a huge variety of shapes. Use the drop down
Marker list to select a marker shape. Optionally, various words like 'Long', 'Short' and 'Out' can be displayed
with the marker either above or below, on the left or the right side of the
marker.
Tip: Select the marker that you use most frequently, and then check the
'Use as Default' box on the properties form. Your choice will display as
the default when a new marker is placed on a chart. My default is the word
'Long' with the Large Target on the Right of the text. I find that this
marker is an excellent visual indication of where a trade was entered
. The preview
window shows how the marker will look on the chart. The example shows
custom text positioned below the marker made up of four differently colored
dots.
Markers can be repositioned by clicking the left mouse button down on the
marker, and dragging the object to a new position. The pencil is displayed
when a marker is reselected. When a marker is selected, you can
click the right mouse button to display its properties form.
Tip: A marker can be placed quite easily on the chart with the
mouse. This price can be manually edited to place the marker
exactly on a price, instead of just close to a specific price.
Click on the color square on the properties form to change the color of the
marker. A new color is selected from the color dialog form that is
displayed.
The chart objects list is displayed by clicking the chart objects button,
which is the rightmost button on the top row. The list
shows all studies and draw tools that are present on the chart. An item
can be selected by clicking on its name in the list, and then clicking the
button to show its Properties form, or clicking the button to Remove this object
from the chart. Clicking the All button will remove all objects from
the chart.
Tip: Double clicking on an item in the chart objects list will display
the properties form.
Trader Profile: Rick Ackerman
ES: Give a brief history of your trading background and experience.
RA: I was an options market maker and member of the Pacific Stock
Exchange for about twelve years and have traded stocks, options and commodities
off-the-floor for about seven years as a retail customer. I have also
written "The Striking Price" for Barron's on an occasional basis.
ES: Describe a typical trading day for you.
RA: My agenda is established the night before, when I analyze stocks
and futures for purposes of writing my daily newsletter. On the commodity
side, I've traded mostly S&Ps in the past but am starting to focus more on
equity options. Usually I aim for just one or two trades during the day,
based on the strategies I've sent out to my subscribers. I am not glued to
the screen and prefer the kind of trades that allow for a relaxed
approach. Although I've found that it is possible to make more money by
following the tick charts and the one-minute bars, it is too nerve-wracking for
me.
ES: What kind of equipment and office set-up do you have for trading?
RA: I have 2 desktop PCs, a Mac and a Dell laptop. I follow the
markets real-time on a vintage 486 PC, and I write and publish the newsletter on
a PC.
ES: What software do you use to help make trading decisions, and why?
RA: As a market technician, my bag of tricks and analytical skills have
grown around the capabilities of Ensign, which I've been using for about six
years. Ensign has plenty of bells and whistles, but without overpowering
the user. It is straightforward, nicely intuitive and very easy to
use. There are some tools that I have found very helpful that may be
unique to Ensign, such as the stochastic crossover "predictor."
Howard Arrington took the trouble to program it into Ensign Windows when I raved
about the Vista version.
ES: What markets do you like to trade?
RA: I like the put and call markets, since options are my area of
greatest expertise. They also provide a very effective and efficient means
of leveraging the kind of strategies I use.
ES: How often do you trade?
RA: When tracking the S&Ps, two or three times a day; with options,
maybe once a day on average. I will soon be trading in a partnership with
a hedge fund and will probably maintain the same relaxed pace. It's not
how often one trades that matters, but how consistently one is able to
profit. The most compelling reason to trade more frequently is that one
will tend to trade smaller patterns with less dollar risk. That suits me
well, since I'm most comfortable hitting lots of singles and doubles rather than
swinging for the fences.
ES: What are some of your favorite technical studies and trading tools?
RA: I try to keep it as simple as possible: stochastic, Fibonacci
Levels and, occasionally, candlesticks. If they fail to yield actionable
signals, I will sometimes use Market Profile.
ES: What chart time frames do you like to use, and why?
RA: Although my technical methods can be applied to any vehicle in any
time frame, I've grown most comfortable with the 15-minute chart. It
generates signals that are congruent with the base-hits strategy I favor, and
with my conservative approach to managing risk.
ES: Are you a system trader, or do you use a lot of personal discretion
in your trading?
RA: I'm about 75% mechanical, 25% intuitive. The intuitive part
is being able to answer the question, "How will the floor traders try to
bamboozle me this time?"
ES: Do you use a profit taking or trailing stop technique?
RA: A multi-contract or multi-share entry is essential, since it allows
one to take profits early on, as well as to eliminate the likelihood of
loss. Once you take profits on a position, you enter a psychological
comfort zone that permits you to make correct decisions much more easily and
consistently.
With respect to stops, I apply them rigorously. "Shrinking
trailing stops" are a tool intrinsic to good risk management. If you
buy a stock at 60 in anticipation of a move to 70, how wide should your trailing
stop be when the stock reaches, say, 67? The answer is: no wider than 1
1/2 points, assuming you want a risk:reward ratio no worse than 1:2 the whole
way up.
In practice, stocks hit my targets about 85% of the time, but I rarely tell
my subscribers to use buy-and-hold strategies. It's not possible if you
are trying to control the risk for the duration of the trade, as you should.
ES: What kind of system do you use to control losses?
RA: I try to enter positions against the trend. If you trade with
it you'll be in bad company, traveling with the herd. It is axiomatic
that, the more obvious the trend, the more violent the avoidance maneuvers a
stock or futures contract will take to shake loose the majority who look for --
and act upon -- the obvious. I strongly prefer shorting rally spikes or
buying at the bottom of pullbacks -- especially when my inflection points are
nowhere near obvious trend lines or support-and-resistance zones. When I
put out an S&P recommendation in my newsletter, the stop is rarely wider
than half a point (i.e., $125 of risk). If I'm right about the inflection
point, I can lower the stop to break-even right away, take profits on a piece of
the position, then hold the rest, without risk or fear, for a shot at bigger
gains.
ES: What was one of your best trades or experiences?
RA: I spotted the profit motive of a pill tamperer when I was trading
in SmithKline options, eventually receiving a $200,000 reward for bringing his
timely purchase of put options to the attention of the FBI. More recently,
I had a 35-point rally in Microsoft pegged in the newsletter. December 110
calls purchased for $6 were cashed out for as much as $1,400 apiece.
ES: What was one of your worst trading mistakes?
RA: Failing to cover -- for $25 apiece! -- hundreds of Cray Research
puts that I was short on Friday, October 16, 1987. At one point on the
following Monday they were going for around $3,500 apiece, not that you could
have bought any there.
ES: What advice would you give to a new trader?
RA: 1. Be patient, for there is no quick road to riches. While
you are learning, the supply of trading opportunities is not going to dry up.
2. Before you begin to trade, choose a technical system, any system, and
master it. Start by using it to calibrate your minute observations of
specific stocks and commodities over a period of 6-12 months. The system
itself -- be it Gann angles, Elliott Wave, or whatever -- is less important than
your ability to understand how trading vehicles move relative to what the system
might predict.
ES: What suggestions would you give for choosing a broker?
RA: Ask a half-dozen traders for recommendations, then use trial and
error. "Low commissions" should be number two on your list,
behind "good executions." For equity options, use only brokers
who understand, and who can handle, "contingency" orders. There
are not many of them around.
ES: What do you think separates very successful traders from the rest
of the pack?
RA: The ability to learn from mistakes (and successes), and to keep
emotions from taking over. If you succeed at the first, you will gain the
confidence it takes to master the second.
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