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Name:
Van Tharp, Ph.D.

Location:
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Welcome! I am Dr. Van K. Tharp. I am the founder and president of the Van Tharp Institute and am regarded as an international leader among professional trading coaches and consultants.


I have been helping others become the best trader or investor that they can be since 1982. I offer unique learning strategies, and my techniques for producing great traders are some of the most effective in the field. Over the years I have helped traders overcome problems in areas of system development and trading psychology, and success-related issues such as self-sabotage.


To learn more about me, my personal newsletters and my trading game – please visit me at the Van Tharp Institute at www.iitm.com.

I am also a regular contributor on the Trading Education website. For more of my insights, you can sign up for their free weekly trading newsletter at www.TradingEducation.com.

 

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Main | Expectancy is Next Key »

Starting out with the basics

I wanted to start this blog out with some fundamental psychology. But just to make sure everyone is on the same page, I found that I had to begin with some Tharp Fundamentals instead, because without them, you might not understand what I want to say about psychology. With that in mind, here they are:

You should never enter into a trade without knowing your worst case loss and having a stop to get your out at that point. I define this loss to be your worse case loss or your initial risk in the trade. And we can call it 1R for short. For example, you buy a stock at $20 and decide that if it drops 25% to $15, that you will be out. This a 1R risk for you is $5.

The second fundamental is that position sizing (how much) is the key to meeting your objectives in the market. Let's say that you decide to risk 1% of a $50,000 on each trade or $500. In the prior example, your risk per share was $5 and you want your total risk to be no more than $500. If you divided $5 risk per share into your total risk of $500, you would end up with a position size of 100 shares.

Since you are buying 100 shares of a $20 stock, your total investment is $2000, while your total risk is 25% of that (i.e., you have a 25% stop) or $500.

The third fundamental is that you should express all of your profits and losses in terms of your initial risk. I call these R-multiples. Thus, if your initial risk is $500 and you make $5000, then you have a 10R gain. If your initial risk is $500, and you have a $250 loss, then you have a 0.5R loss. Similarly, if you have an initial risk of $500, but you end up with a total loss of $1000, then you have a 2R loss.

Some of you might say, if your initial risk was $500, how could you end up with a $1000 loss. Well, that's easy, the stock gaps against you on bad news, or you make a stupid mistake, like not keeping your stop. But that's another topic.

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