2018 Incident Report (Part 6)
Posted by Mark on June 5, 2020 at 07:51 | Last modified: May 13, 2020 13:17I’ve been getting more organized this year by converting incomplete drafts into finished blog posts. Today I conclude a July 2019 draft reviewing my 2018 trading performance.
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When I’m not making money it feels terrible: no doubt about that. I feel like a failure, like I should go back to work pharmacy, etc. I want a better way although I should not look to throw the baby out with the bathwater. If the worst I ever do in a year is lose 5 – 10% then on the whole I’m going to be a star and I have to remember that.
Perhaps never do I feel more on-edge than when I am out of the market with uncertainty over when to get back in. The volatility train does not arrive often and when it does it usually makes for a short stay. I hate to be on the sidelines when the train leaves the station, which is why I am so quick to jump back in after making a large exit.
I need a better way. I need to backtest something with a sufficiently large sample size in which I can believe. Otherwise, I will feel like this is mere gambling.
A couple other thoughts for exit strategy include:
- Close partial positions when I am down one month’s usual income
- Start selling the call side when down one month’s usual income to better hedge against downturns (but how will that fare in rising markets?).
- Switch to a symmetric, BWB, or verticals instead of NPs. On this point, I could go back to the idea of selling $0.30 on a $5 spread to make 6% per month or 72% per year. If I allocate only 20% of the portfolio then that is 14.4% per year with no possibility of losing more than 20% in a month. That’s still not a great deal risk/reward ratio, though.
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Here’s one more batch of random thoughts:
> Part of my problem this year had to do with anchoring and greed.
> I started the year making good money in Jan. I then lost much
> more (quickly) in Feb. From the time that I got back in
> (slowly), I worked several months to catch up through Oct when
> I was up ~10%. I knew it wouldn’t be my usual good year (or
> maybe I was just comparing to +36% last year) so I was
> patient… and then probably dead-set on holding longer and
> hoping the market would stay up—until it didn’t. I had a
> decent idea to get out if my YTD gains evaporated (first chance
> to get out when market went into backwardation was Oct
> when I was still up 4 – 5%). I was then too eager to start
> getting back in at first glance of normalcy. After a couple
> days of contango, I re-entered and then lost more. Sporadic
> trades thereafter lost as well. By the time I truly called
> it a year on Dec 20, I was down close to 10% (of my initial
> 2018 equity value; this would be more than 10% of my initial
> 2017 equity value on which the +36% is calculated).
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> Going forward, I must work on developing rules and sticking
> with them no matter what. Sticking to the plan must be
> everything. One way or another, I’m going to be
> frustrated when the market goes against me. I might as well
> be frustrated knowing that I at least followed my rules
> because the alternative to following rules is to hope.
> If all I have is hope and I lose more because of it—which
> has happened with every major loss I have suffered to
> date—then I’m going to feel even worse and kicking myself
> back to the drawing board like I am right now.