Sydney, Australia
Tokyo, Japan
Vancouver, BC, Canada
Dallas, Texas
Ft. Lauderdale, Florida
Which means I'll be visiting each of these people for 3-5 days in these places to help them trade.
And coming soon:
Fiji
Buenos Aires
Macedonia
Baltimore, Maryland
Do you live near any of the above locations? I am going to do meet-and-greet receptions in each of these places, and a weeklong seminar in Vancouver, South Florida, and Australia. More details are coming soon, and I hope to meet you in person.
If you don't know what any of this is about, just jump on over to Harry Banes' Web site.
That's a big development for the largest retail FX dealer in the world. The tactic of buying and selling the same currency at the same time (that's hedging in retail FX) has become more and more popular. I hear about more people doing it every day. I am not sure it will ever be a part of anything that I do, but it's interesting to me that more dealers are offering it.
I was thinking about the ability of a trader to bend with, or comply with, what the market wants, instead of swimming against the current, so to speak. Then I found this link on Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stress-strain_curve
A stress-strain curve measures the amount of energy a material can absorb before rupturing. It makes me wonder if there could be a stress-strain curve drawn for traders -- the amount of pressure that a trader could withstand before rupturing.
And here's another link that I hardly understand at all, but sort of brings up similar thoughts:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Young_modulus
The Young Modulus is a method for measuring the load under which a particular material will buckle under compression. Could there be a Young Modulus to forecast the pressure at which a trader will collapse? I am positive that you are wondering what kind of crack I've been smoking, but I'm serious here. Don't you know a trader who has buckled under the pressure of a losing trade, after fighting the market and arguing about the fact that the trade "should have worked out"? Don't you know a trader who regularly says things like "look what the market did after I finally closed the trade at a huge loss -- it turned around and did exactly what I thought it would do."
These comments tell us a lot about a trader immediately. We can say about these individuals that they are willing to withstand enormous amounts of negative pressure but they refuse to give into it until they rupture their account. We could call the measure of their stiffness, or inflexibility, the Trader Modulus.
I have been re-thinking lately about how dangerous inflexibility, as personality trait, can be for traders. The market does not reward us for going against the grain. I'm not talking about trading with the trend, which is an oft-quoted maxim that has little or no meaning without context. Instead of talking about trading with the trend, I believe it's more valuable to talk about (as Dave Murphy intelligently puts it) getting in sync with the market?
This isn't the last I am going to say about the subject.