About Me

Name:
Van Tharp, Ph.D.

Location:
North Carolina

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Hobbies:
Spiritual studies, stamp and art collecting, movies, music and dancing.


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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May 2008 Archives

May 27, 2008

Systems Compatible to my Current Living Situation

Q: I have been studying the commodities markets for mostly my own edification for over 8 years with a brief attempt at trading a few contracts three years ago before realizing I needed more formal training if I wanted to trade successfully. To make a long story short, after reading approx. 20 books, purchasing a software program (“Mechanica”), end-of-day data feed and taking one on-line course prior to yours, I am getting ready to start testing a system of mine with a paper trading account through an on-line broker. My question – I have saved up 20k with which to trade. I tend to gravitate toward short term trend following, mechanical systems. From what I can gather from the recent course, most trend following strategies are not very compatible with an account less than 100k. I am not opposed to day trading strategies (i.e. swing trading, etc) but I currently work all day and need to make my decisions early in the morning (I live on the west coast) or evening. Do you have any recommendations for me with regards to types of systems I can test that might be more compatible with my current living situation?

A: You need to think about your risk and at first make sure that your risk is no more than 1% per position, perhaps ½% when you start trading. There are some futures contracts that you can probably trade with $20,000 but it depends upon where your system says to put your stops.

Let’s say you trade a corn contract and that corn is currently trading at $6.00. Your 5000 bushels of corn will cost you $30K which you can easily do on margin with a $20K account. But where is your stop. Let’s say it is 10 cents away at $5.90. Your risk is 10 cents time 5000 bushels or $500.00. You’d be risking 2.5% on your one corn contract. Thus, you can’t even trade corn unless you want to use a 2-3 cent stop and your system probably isn’t that tight.

So what you are looking at is finding instruments that you can trade where you risk is no more than $200 per position. You could buy a $20 stock with a stop $5 away. That would give you $5 risk per share. And if don’t want more than $200 in total risk, then you could simply purchase 40 shares. That’s how you would decide what you can trade and your position sizing.

1) Determine what you system says your stop would be.
2) Knowing that your risk should not be more than 1% of your account or $200, divide your risk per unit into 200 and see what you position sizing is.
3) If you can do that amount, then you can trade that instrument.

May 12, 2008

The Percent Volatility Method

Q: I have read and re-read (as you suggest) your book "Trade your way to financial freedom". It think it is great material, it is such a mind-opener.

However, I would like to clarify one point that it is yet not clear enough to me. It is about the Percent Volatility Method. If I use such Position Sizing Technique, then the Stop Loss is set by this position sizing method, I mean, the strategy must have a Stop Loss that is equal, for instance, to the 20-day SMA of ATR. If that is the stop loss, then the model is the same as the % of my equity.

I am getting confused. Let;s say that, prior to Position Sizing, my strategy has a Stop Loss that is 20-day SMA of ATR. Thus, the % of my equity and % volatility method are just the same. And if my strategy has no stop loss (let´ts say), if I use the Percent Volatility Method, it will be the method that will calculate the Stop Loss and place it 1ATR below the entry price.

A: Position sizing and the initial stop are two entirely different issues. The stop is NEVER set by the position sizing.
However, if the stop is 1 ATR, then percent risk and percent volatility are the same.


May 05, 2008

Safe Strategies

Q: Safe Strategies talks about bear mutual funds but recommends not to use the leveraged funds - why should one not use the leveraged funds and presumably can one use ETFs instead of a bear mutual fund?

A: That strategy specifically controlled the maximum exposure that you would have and the amount of risk you would have. If you used a leverage fund, then all the metrics no longer work and the risk is quite large.

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