Dude, that's exactly what I said - "outright have more capacity, but it's harder to find alpha"Ummm, I’d respectfully push back about alpha. A spread trade between two or more highly correlated instruments is about as close as you can get to pure portable alpha to my knowledge.
To be honest, people who have a strong call on the outright market beyond really short time frames are very hard to find.I have negligible experience in trading oil. However, I do have some experience at chart-reading. Looking at CL futures, October 2018 was an easy short trade. Those who shorted will enjoy the ride with little whipsaw. It was an easy trade.
I am surprised that great oil traders, such as this hedge fund manager Pierre Andurand, can lose so much in an easy trading month.
I have negligible experience in trading oil. However, I do have some experience at chart-reading. Looking at CL futures, October 2018 was an easy short trade. Those who shorted will enjoy the ride with little whipsaw. It was an easy trade.
I am surprised that great oil traders, such as this hedge fund manager Pierre Andurand, can lose so much in an easy trading month. I am not gloating at his losses as I'm sure he is savvier and smarter than me. He is the rich one, not me. What puzzles me is how can the best traders lose so much in a month which looks like an easy month to me? I don't think I'm alone. Any one of you can open up CL chart and can see that the short trade was an obvious and easy one to ride. CL is liquid and it should not be difficult to close position when a trader makes a mistake. It's not like the 2915 CHF debacle which gapped up in a single day. Hard to imagine that an experienced trader can lose 20% in a single month.
What did I miss? What mistakes could this top-notch oil trader make to lose so much in a good month?
https://www.wsj.com/articles/oil-hedge-fund-giant-hammered-in-crudes-slide-1542292021
Pierre Andurand, who runs one of the last big oil-focused hedge funds, took significant losses in October as petroleum prices cratered.
Pierre Andurand, who earlier in 2018 predicted oil could soon hit $100 a barrel, suffered the largest-ever monthly loss of his flagship fund in October. The $1 billion Andurand Commodities Fund lost 20.9% last month, taking the fund down more than 12% for the year, according to numbers sent to investors and reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.
As stated in the original opening post, I have negligible experience in trading oil. I did not profit from shorting CL. I am not skilful at all.Can we see your short OIL gains YTD?
I have negligible experience in trading oil. However, I do have some experience at chart-reading. Looking at CL futures, October 2018 was an easy short trade.
Risking real money changes everything.
In what way, mentally or other factors kick in?
1. Uncertainty. Take the run up in CL that the poster proclaimed was an “easy short”. From July until the first of October CL F19 ran from $46 up to $76 and change. Let’s say you took a short the second or third week in October - it was by no means apparent at that point that the market was going to fall off the face of a cliff. You would have been well within the previous few week’s established trading range and you would have been taking some heat as the market moved up and down during normal trading as ALL markets do. People were still talking about $100 oil. You would have had plenty of loathing and self-doubt as you watch your position mark up, mark down, mark up, mark down... Unfortunately - markets do not move in a straight line up or down. You are short in the face of an extended run-up... plenty of technical and fundamental reasons to doubt yourself at that point in time. But of course well after the fact late in November it all seemed so obvious !
2. Personal Risk Tolerance. This is where the emotions of a position marking against you really starts to take an emotional toll. Self doubt can lead to self sabotage. Emotions can destroy the best designed trading systems.
I'm not convinced by this. I was stopped out of my long on Brent on 23/10, when price plunged to close below the 50EMA and forced the average to turn downwards. Even without a fixed stop, I would have exited on these two features coinciding.
From the point when price and the 20EMA are below the 50 and the 50 is sloping downwards, that's a downtrend.
The earliest I would have got into this short with my current TA would have been 24/10 but more probably 30/10, 31/10 or 01/11. With a conventional stop-loss of 2ATR20, I don't think I would have been stopped out of that short even yet.