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Friday, January 16, 2009

The Truth About the Commodity Markets

In order to be a successful trader, you must understand the true
realities of the markets. You must learn how the professionals make
money and what is possible. Most traders come into commodity
trading, lose a substantial portion of their capital and then leave
trading without ever having a correct perception of what good
trading is all about.
For many years college professors have argued that the markets
are both random and highly efficient. If this were true, it would be
impossible to gain an edge on other investors by having superior
knowledge or a superior approach.
Professional traders, who make their living trading rather than
studying the markets from afar, have always laughed at these ivory
tower theories. A good example is George Soros, who has made
billions of dollars from trading and is perhaps the greatest trader of
all time. Here is how he responds to these ivory tower academics:
"The [random walk] theory is manifestly false--I have disproved it by
consistently outperforming the averages over a period of twelve
years. Institutions may be well advised to invest in index funds
rather than making specific investment decisions, but the reason is
to be found in their substandard performance, not in the
impossibility of outperforming the averages."
Mathematicians have conclusively shown the financial markets to be
what are called non-linear, dynamic systems. Chaos theory is the
mathematics of analyzing such non-linear, dynamic systems. The
commodity markets are chaotic systems. Such systems can
produce random-looking results that are not truly random. Chaos
research has proved that the markets are not efficient, and they are
not forecastable. Commodity market price movement is highly
random with a small trend component.
Most beginning traders assume that the way to make money is to
learn how to predict where market prices are going next. As chaos
theory suggests, the truth is that the markets are not predictable
except in the most general way.

In his book, Methods of a Wall Street Master, famous trader Vic
Sperandeo, whose nickname is "Trader Vic," warns: "Many people
make the mistake of thinking that market behavior is truly
predictable. Nonsense. Trading in the markets is an odds game,
and the object is always keep the odds in your favor."
Luckily, as Trader Vic suggests, successful trading does not require
effective prediction mechanisms. Good trading involves following
trends in a time frame where you can be profitable.
The trend is your edge. If you follow trends with proper risk
management methods and good market selection, you will make
money in the long run. Good market selection refers to trading in
good trending markets generally rather than selecting a particular
situation likely to result in an immediate trend.
There are three related hurdles for traders. The first is finding a
trading method that actually has a statistical edge. Second is
following it with consistency. Third is consistently following the
method long enough for the edge to manifest itself on the bottom
line.
This statistical edge is what separates speculating from gambling. In
fact, effective trading is actually like the gambling casino rather than
the gambling customer. Professional trader Peter Brandt explains
successful trading in just this way: "A successful commodity trading
program must be based on the simple premise that no one really
knows what the markets are going to do. We can guess, but we
don't know. The best a commodity trader can hope for is an
approach which provides a slight edge. Like a gambling casino, the
trader must earn his profits by exploiting that edge over an extended
series of trades. But on any given trade, like an individual casino
bet, the edge is pretty meaningless."
Unsuccessful and frustrated commodity traders want to believe
there is an order to the markets. They think prices move in
systematic ways that are highly disguised. They hope they can
somehow acquire the "secret" to the price system that will give them
an advantage. They think successful trading will result from highly
effective methods of predicting future price direction. These deluded
souls have been falling for crackpot methods and systems since the
markets started trading.
Prolific futures trading author Jake Bernstein describes how these
desperate traders are victimized: "Futures trading is ultimately very
simple. Any attempt to make trading complex is a smokescreen. Yet

for self-serving reasons an army of greed-motivated promoters try to
make things complicated. Too many market professionals consider
it their mission in life to obfuscate. Why? Because in so doing they
give the appearance that their efforts are scholarly and important.
They create a need for more information, and then they fill it!"
Books on how to trade commodities are famous for showing a few
well-chosen examples where a described prediction method
previously worked. They never show what would have happened if
you had applied the method religiously for many years in numerous
markets. Those who have tested these methods have found that in
the long run almost all of them don't work. Be wary of any trading
method unless you see a detailed demonstration showing that it has
worked for at least five to ten years in a variety of different markets
using exactly the same rules.
The job of the person who wants to trade commodities rationally and
prudently is to ignore the promises of those promoting pie-in-the-sky
prediction mechanisms and concentrate on finding and
implementing a proven, integrated methodology that follows market
trends.

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