Today’s Trading Lesson From TradingMarkets
Editor’s Note:
Each night we feature a different lesson from
TM University. I hope you enjoy and profit from these.
E-mail me if you have
any questions.
Brice
Trading Blunders Of The Best Traders And What They Learned From Them
By Brice Wightman
No matter how long you’ve been
involved in the market,
the potential is always there for a big trading mistake — that big blunder
which, at a minimum will keep you awake at night, or worse, psychologically
sabotage your trading, or even destroy you financially.
Fortunately, the chances of
making this type of disastrous trading error tends to become more unlikely as
you gain experience. This is not to say, however, that you’ll never experience
some hairy moments in the market.
Even the best of us have been
through it. The key is can you recover from it?
I
asked our Tradingmarkets contributors about trading blunders they’ve witnessed
and been involved in over the years. Some mistakes you’ll relate to, some you’ve
made yourself, and others almost completely unfathomable.
Lewis Borsellino
“The Thursday after Black
Monday, 1987, the Shearson broker was giving an order to sell 2500 S&P contracts
and pre-market he opened the market 50.00 points lower. What happened was that
the phone clerk put the order in twice, so instead of selling 2500 contracts,
they sold 5000. They had to get out of 2500 of them, and by the time they got
out, it was a $60 million error. Guess who’s order it was? George Soros’.
(For a more detailed account of
this trade, and many more, read Lewis Borsellino’s
“The Day Trader: From the Pit to the PC.â€
Â
Carolyn Boroden
“When I first started about 10
years ago, I was scalping E-mini Treasury bonds on the Mid-Am. I scalped good
money out of it using four-tick stops, and gave it all back, and then some, in
one trade because I didn’t use a stop. I just remember it so well, because I was
so blown away by it that I walked home from work that day severely depressed. I
had my first-ever margin call. I was emotionally destroyed. I just remember how
awful I felt. This is when I didn’t have a clue as to methodology. I’ve never
entered a trade without using a stop since!
“
Jeff Cooper
“The summer of 1987, takeover
deals were prevalent. I remember I owned calls on Foster-Wheeler. There were
takeover rumors on the stock, and I thought there was a takeout. The Friday
before the crash was an expiration, and the calls were going out worthless. I
exercised at the close so I could own the stock; I owned the stock over the
weekend. Nobody thought the market was going to crash on Monday; I actually
thought there was a chance that it could be bought out over the weekend. The
stock, like every stock, collapsed Monday morning. I held onto the stock until
it rallied on Tuesday, but I still lost money. On top of the options, I lost
more by exercising and getting involved in the stock because I didn’t want to
miss out on the coming takeover deal.
“I also had Dayton-Hudson
options. The options ran up to a point where I was interested in selling them.
It had gotten close to $10 and I was long at 1 – 1 1/2, and I was long quite a
few. The position was worth close to $74,000 at the time —