Way of the turtle
Different Types of Markets
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Way of the turtle the secret methods of legendary traders PDFDrive
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- Speculator-driven markets.
- Aggregated derivative markets.
Different Types of Markets
There is another reason you might choose to exclude certain mar- kets from your trading. Although I don’t believe that one should exclude certain markets because they have not been as profitable as others when tested in a simulation, I do believe that there are some fundamental differences between certain classes of markets that warrant the exclusion of an entire class from trading with a par- ticular class of systems. Some traders believe that various individual markets are differ- ent and should be treated as such. I think the reality is more com- plicated. I believe that there are actually three classes of markets that behave distinctly differently but that within those classes the 216 • Way of the Turtle differences between markets are attributable largely to random events. The major classes of markets are as follows: 1. Fundamentals-driven markets. These are markets such as currencies and interest rates in which the trading is not the primary force behind the movement; larger macroeconomic events and forces drive the price. As time goes on this seems to be less and less true, but I would argue that the Federal Reserve or a country-specific equivalent and a country’s monetary policy still influence prices more than do speculators in the currency and interest rate markets. These markets have the greatest liquidity with the cleanest trends and are the easiest for trend followers to trade. 2. Speculator-driven markets. These are markets such as stocks and futures such as coffee, gold, silver, and crude oil in which speculators influence the markets more than governments or large hedgers do. The prices are perception-driven. These markets are harder for trend followers to trade. 3. Aggregated derivative markets. These are markets in which the driving force is speculation, but that speculation is diluted because the traded instruments are derivative of other markets that are themselves aggregations of individual component stocks. A good example is the e-mini S&P futures contract. It moves up and down, but its range is constrained by the underlying S&P 500 index. The S&P index in turn moves only indirectly because of speculators. Since an index aggregates the purely speculative moves of many stocks, there is an averaging out and a dilution of Bulletproof Systems • 217 momentum. These markets are the hardest ones for trend followers to trade. My proposition is this: Markets in any of these classes trade the same way. You should trade them or not according to liquidity and class only. As a Turtle I decided not to trade class 3 at all, whereas many of the Turtles chose to trade that class of markets. I felt our systems were not good for derivative aggregated markets. It is not that you can’t trade them, just that they just cannot be traded as well with a medium-term breakout trend-following system like the one we traded; so, I never traded the S&P as a Turtle. Markets in each of the classes behave similarly. Although you certainly will see periods, perhaps years or decades, of differences, you will find that over the long run this is simply the reflection of trader memory and the relative rarity and random nature of under- lying fundamental causes for large trends. Download 0.94 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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