VEGAS TRADES GOLD IMAGE

VEGAS TRADES GOLD IMAGE
Showing posts with label lumber futures. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lumber futures. Show all posts

Monday, November 28, 2011

INFORMATION THEORY & TRADING: YOUR GUIDE TO WEALTH


                                   When Information Goes Bad

Markets are about information. We get bombarded every business day with millions of bits of information; almost all of it is useless. If you watch CNBC or Bloomberg every day looking for that tidbit of info that is going to make you money, then you are the chump at the poker table.

                         Bert Schools vegas on Information Theory
                         “Hey kid, follow me.”

When I had let it be known to the head huckster, aka the branch manager, that I wasn’t going to be doing stocks any longer, and that commodities were my future, he moved my desk over next to Bert. I’m in the fortress city!!

At the time, I knew that Bert was extremely bullish on lumber prices, but what I didn’t know was that he and his managed accounts were long about 700 contracts of lumber futures that he had accumulated over the previous 7 or 8 days.

When I came into the office that day, things were already buzzing. He pulled me aside and said, “Watch and learn today kid.” I knew this was code for shut up, and keep your eyes and ears open.

Lumber opened limit up. At this point, Bert and the boys were up about $5 million. Somebody yells across the bullpen at Bert, and he raises his hand to stop, as if to say, “Ain’t got time now, go away.”

There are about 10 people around our desks, not moving or saying anything. Bert is staring at his quote machine intently. He screams for the order clerk to come to his desk. She gets there to hear him say to her, “Sell 100 FOK [fill entire order or kill it] at limit up, when I tell you to.” She fills out the order ticket and starts to walk away. Bert stops her and says, “Get an order ticket ready to sell 700 at the market.” She fills that one out also and walks away.

I’m sitting there stunned. Stuff is limit up man, what are you doing, I’m saying to myself? Prices obviously got a long way to go on the upside before this move is over.

Half an hour goes by; then an hour. Bert looks like a statute standing at his desk, eyes intently staring, first at the commodities tape, then at his quote machine. Suddenly he shouts to the commodities clerk, “Put the FOK order in!” She yells back about 10 seconds later, “OK, it’s in!”

About 20 seconds later she yells back to him, “ENTIRE ORDER NOT FILLED, IT’S KILLED!”

                   ATTENTION LUMBER PIT TRADERS:
                   IF YOU DON’T KNOW BERT, YOU SOON WILL

Bert immediately runs from his desk to the commodities clerk’s order desk, yelling as he goes, “SELL 700 AT THE MARKET NOW! NOW! GO, DO IT NOW!”

I see this, and I’m about to wet myself. I’m looking at him and the commodities tape; back and forth. Lumber stays limit up and then starts to back off about $2 maybe $ 1.50 and then goes back up to limit up. Bert sees this and starts to giggle. He knows.

Bert goes back to his desk, sits down, and asks me to get him a cup of coffee. “Sure man, anything you want.” He’s relaxed now. About 10 minutes later he gets his fills from the floor, and adding up everything, he and his buds are up about $5.1 million.

ONE HOUR LATER, LUMBER IS LOCKED LIMIT DOWN!!

I still can’t adequately describe, all these succeeding years later, the emotions that ran through me watching this unfold on that day. I remember asking him how he knew, and what his response was. “Conference room, tomorrow morning 8:00 AM. Explain what I did and why I did it. You got the rest of the day to figure it out. Isn’t that hard really. Gotta go now. Don’t be late!” He then walks out of the office.

I sit there the rest of the day, and into the night. When I get home I can’t sleep. I’m putting the pieces together, retracing things that I saw and heard. Slowly, over the hours I get it.

I get in the next morning, and Bert is sitting there waiting for me and he says, “So, what ya got for me?”

“Bert, how many more FOK orders were you willing to put in if that first one had gotten filled all at limit up?”

Bert smiles, takes a couple of seconds and then responds, “You got it kid. Now, let’s go trade the day.”

Bert knew the limit up opening was exhaustion. He used the first FOK order as bait. He wanted to see if it was filled. By not getting it filled, he knew the limit up was weak. This info told him he had to act fast to be the first to start selling before everybody else figured it out. That first break off of limit up was his order. When it went back up, he knew from that first FOK that got killed that it would not last long at the limit up price. Essentially, those fills were the last ones to the party and were now going to be trapped at the highs.

Welcome to the PhD. Program in trading.
INFORMATION THEORY = ACTION + INFORMATION +MORE ACTION = MONEY IN THE BANK. Class dismissed.

                              It's All Coded In For You To Profit

“The Vegas BFSG Algorithm” has 8 specific pieces of information theory coded into it IN REAL TIME. Is it infallible? Of course not; absolutely nothing is. The edge is in the probability distribution of being at or near the high or low of the move and therefore getting good prices and fills and booking profits. I don’t care about buying the low and selling the high. What I care about is when I’m long it goes up AND I GET OUT NEAR THE END OF THE MOVE, and when I am short it goes down AND I GET OUT NEAR THE END OF THE MOVE. Period. End. Of. Story.

Today’s Price Action

We entered today’s trading action in “buy mode” from the algorithm. At 1:15 AM [Chicago time] we got a buy signal at around 1707. A couple of hours later we got a confirmation sell at 1716. Net gain for the day of $ 9.00 / oz.

Ka-Ching!

As a side note, there was a fantastic move in US crude oil today and the algo picked it up perfectly. To those of you trading crude, congrats!

Have a good day everybody,
-vegas

Thursday, November 17, 2011

TODAY IS “BERT’ DAY



Today is the anniversary, of the death, of my mentor Bert.

[“A moment of silence as we trade a 100 lot of January lumber futures in his honor.”]

                            Odds Are You Got Schooled By Bert

I was a clueless skull full of mush, peddling AT&T stock to widows, from my perch inside the branch office of a giant Midwestern brokerage house. We were all suit drones, selling whatever the house wanted to push that particular day.

While we all wore 3 piece suits to work, one guy over in the corner came to work [whenever he wanted] in jeans and polo shirt, and told the branch manager what he was going to do that day. “Whoaaaaa I thought”.

A few weeks later I introduced myself to him and asked if there was some day we could grab coffee or lunch. “Sure kid, I’ll let ya know, OK?” I left it at that.

About 2 months later, he yells out my name across the broker bullpen, and says “..come on over here!” A Star Trek transporter beam couldn’t have gotten me there any faster.

We ate lunch on a day when we got our bi-weekly paychecks. He looks at me from across the table and says, seeing the envelope sticking out of my suit pocket, “How much you takin’ home today?” He looks at my check, showing no emotion.

Then I see his. [Note: This is 1977 we are talking about]

My brain freezes because I can’t compute numbers like this.

“Pay to the Order of … $70,000.01”

This is my response to Bert: “Seriously, who do I kill? We aren’t leaving here until you tell me how to do this!!”

Bert was the consummate professional commodity trader. Every day, he slung multiple 100 lots of lumber and pork bellies from his desk for his managed accounts. He schooled more locals on the floor than an English teacher at the high school.

When I would screw up an order or interpret a chart wrong, and go complaining to Bert, he would sternly look at me and say something along the lines of: “OK, you got 2 options; cry about it and whine or learn something from it and then don’t repeat it. What’s it gonna be?”

I want the world to know what a great man you were and the understanding, kindness, and generosity you showed me when I was an idiot. My life is infinitely richer because of you. I will always be eternally grateful to you for the guidance and advice you unselfishly gave me. I hope, in my life, I can be 10% the man you were.

                       In A World Full Of Kittens There Was Bert

 I miss you, my old friend, and I pray someday we have a chance to meet again and talk trading. May God bless you.

Today’s Action & Wrap Up

                      HMMMMMM !! Cod liver Oil For Everybody

If you were trading today, without some kind of a trading plan, it was like getting cod liver oil from Grandma. “Boy that tastes good!”

Did I mention yesterday the algorithm says be short?

               Fade The Vegas BFSG Algorithm & This Will Happen

For you bottom-pickers out there [and you know who you are], when are you gonna learn it isn’t a good idea to fade the algorithm?

If you started your trading day very early, you had a sell signal around 2:00 AM [Chicago time] and should be short from about 1763. If like me, you were sleeping for a few more hours, then we got the next sell signal at 5:40 AM [Chicago time] at 1757.

Later, we got a confirmation bottom at 1745. I discuss this confirmation bottom in the Vegas BFSG Algorithm manual. Net gain on the day of $ 12 / oz.

Ka-Ching.

The fact that gold has moved markedly lower since means nothing; an opportunity cost. Learn it, love it, then live it.


Today at 11:35 AM [Chicago time], XAUUSD hit a low of 1710.40 bid. The Vegas BFSG Algorithm predictive exhaustion low, if it was to happen, was 1710.508 !!

If for some reason you had stayed short, you would have been able to cover at the low of the day.

No need for “skeptic cat”. Download the algorithm at the link and see for yourself.

Have a nice day everyone.

 -vegas

P.S. You are always in my thoughts and prayers Bert. Always.