|
How did wealth accumulation come about? Simple. It came about from testing many of life's opportunities in a horizontal plane and when success started in one of the boxes on that horizontal plane, the person whose goal it was to achieve wealth shifted from a horizontal plane to a vertical plane. On paper it looked like this:
It is if you succeed that should cause surprise. You should expect to fail in your various business activities, for more likely than not you will. Failure is the rule, success is the exception. The reason so few business oriented people accumulate wealth is not because they have failed at a given activity, but because they do not have the time, capital, or endurance to push on until the winner comes. They simply give up and assume they are failures. They are not failures, they are in fact simply proving that success is difficult and that when one looks at opportunities along a horizontal line, failure is quite common. But it is hard to convince someone who has worked 5 years in a grocery store, 5 years in a hardware store, 7 years in shoes, 3 years here and 4 years there and 5 years another place that success may come. 29 years of one's life is a lot of time, a lot of money, and a lot of effort. Success may in fact never come to that person. That person may never hit "his 7-11 bonanza" and may struggle on from one opportunity on the horizontal plane to another and another and another and finally simply quit. He may well judge his life a failure, but it is not. It is simply stated by saying that this person never hit (or didn't recognize) a winner within the boxes on that person's horizontal opportunity frame. He wasn't a failure, he simply just never hit a winner (or didn't recognize it when he did). WHAT DOES THIS ALL HAVE TO DO WITH MAKING A FORTUNE AND THE COMMODITY FUTURES MARKETS? A great deal! Commodity trading is business shoved into a short time span, nothing else. It is 50 years shoved into 1 year. It is 25 years shoved into 6 months. It is 6 months shoved into 24 hours. It is opportunity on a horizontal plane shoved before us as traders day after day after day........it is an entrepreneur's dream. It is life without having to wait 50 years to find out if you have the ability to accumulate capital when you have hold of a winner.
What does the grocery business, a gas station, being an attorney, involved in real estate, owning land where oil might exist, having a cattle ranch, owning a car dealership, a stationery store, a mail order business, a candy shop or a wheat ranch have to do with the commodities of cattle, corn, yen, ginnie mae, gold, hogs, pork bellies, cotton, soybeans, sugar and wheat? Everything. The games are identical. The object of each (from a financial point of view only) is (a) living income (b) wealth accumulation. The people involved in real estate or owning a cattle ranch are identical with the people having 5 contracts of cotton and 3 contracts of sugar. Both wish to earn a regular sum of money and also to accumulate money beyond needs. We in the commodity futures trade are not doing anything which any other person who is seeking those goals is not doing. We are business people just like all the others are business people. NOW, STOP AND THINK OF OUR ADVANTAGES IN TERMS OF WEALTH ACCUMULATION. Question (1)
Question (2)
Now, assume the businessman is involved in the first line, but he has to select a reasonable list from that 11, say he picks a grocery store, gas station, cattle ranch, car dealer and stationery store. That is 5 from the 11. The chances are that those 5 will occupy him for his entire life. He will have no more time or money left if he does not accumulate money from one of the five selected. He has five chances, it will require the major portion of his life to succeed, so he had better select his five well. Maybe a candy shop, which was not selected, is the business which can be taken from a horizontal to a vertical emphasis. Maybe the business person selected 5, stopped before the candy store, and never got to 6. He never made his fortune because he ran out of time and money before the candy store idea ever came to him. He worked all his life on a horizontal plane and never got to see how skillful he was at making money from a vertical plane. Never had the chance. BUT THE COMMODITY TRADER is not limited by time. He may be limited by money, but not by time. We have all the time in the world to work on vertical skills. Our excuse for failure will not be that we never got a market which gave us a vertical opportunity. If we fail to accumulate capital it will be because we did not learn how to squeeze capital out of vertical opportunities. Take the list we started with.............And start with this requirement:
Here are the positions you have:
------------------------------------$200 Loss Line-------------------------- You will stay with all your positions until they cross the $200 loss line. Whether it be 3 hours, 3 days, 3 weeks, or 3 months, you will stay with the position until the $200 loss line is crossed. All on a horizontal plane, all having an equal chance (if your ability of picking winners and losers was equal) of crossing that line. And what happens on this horizontal plane? Within one month, you have a loss in 7 of the 11 commodities. You have a $1400 loss and are out of 63% of your positions. You are a loser already in nearly 2/3 of the positions you took. What has really happened? What has really happened is not that you are a loser at all. You have merely experienced an economic fact of life that most business opportunities do not provide financial rewards. Failure is the rule, success the exception. You have not failed, you have succeeded, succeeded in proving that failure is the rule, for you 63% of the time you have lost $200 of your capital. What else has happened? In one month you have been involved in 11 different financial opportunities. 11 in one month. Remember our business person who had to limit his total list to 5 because there was not enough time in that person's life to experience more than 5. You, as a commodity investor, have already progressed through 11 different financial opportunities in a month's time. 7 of the markets have provided losses. You have a 63% loss ratio. But this loss ratio should not disguise from you the fact that you have lived through more markets than a businessman can live through in a lifetime. The opportunities you have experienced exceed the average horizontal opportunities of an average businessman during an entire lifetime. Think about that for a while. The opportunities you have experienced exceed the average horizontal opportunities of an average businessman during an entire lifetime. Now there is something else..... You, unlike the 5 business businessman, have an opportunity to test your skills at accumulating capital through vertical application. What happened to the 4 markets (the 37% of your positions) which did not result in a $200 loss? They are still around. You have been kicked out of 7 of your 11, but 4 are still around and earning a profit. Lets take a look at them.
Unlike the businessman who would not experience 11 opportunities in a lifetime of business and who might never experience vertical success, in a month's time as an investor you have experienced 11 opportunities, have failed in 7, but have success in 4. You have 4 opportunities to work with vertical application within a single month while the businessman never had 1 chance during an entire life. It is sad, but it is very true. Very very true. As a commodity investor you will have more business opportunities in a single month than the average business person has in a lifetime and your skills in working with winners will be tested while the average businessman's may never be tested due to a lack of opportunity. It is sad from the businessman's point of view but this is a true statement. Wealth accumulation then is nothing more than your ability to work with winners. You don't have to worry about accumulating wealth from losers, for few have that ability. Your wealth accumulation will come solely from your ability to work with winners--------and in our example you have 4 chances to work with winners in a single month. If you don't accumulate wealth it will not be because you have not been given the opportunity (assuming you have sufficient capital to trade more than one market). It will be because you did not develop sufficient skills and patience to wring money from the winners you will be given. You won't have to worry about never having a chance to work with vertical procedures, for you will have plenty of chances. And the more you work with such, the greater your skills will become in making such markets give you the money you deserve for surviving and becoming skillful at your trade.
Well our commodity trader of one month has some winners too. Winners in the Japanese Yen, Live Hogs, Pork Bellies, and Soybeans. Four winners (Ray Kroc only had one) and each can help our commodity trader accumulate wealth. Not one chance......but four. And not in a lifetime, but in a single month.
In the spring of 1999, sugar futures declined below five cents a pound. One day sugar will rise to higher levels. When that happens, those who bought at the lower levels will have an opportunity for profit. If sugar does not rise in price in 1999 or in 2000, other markets surely will and those who make wise buying and selling decisions in those other markets will have an opportunity to profit in them. Big money is made in commodity markets the same way it is made in any other business venture, it is made by testing many products-investments-opportunities and cutting losses short on those which are unsuccessful and maximizing profits on those which are successful. It is taking horizontal opportunities and turning the winners into vertical successes. It is that simple. And just as there are maxims and rules for life, there are maxims and rules for successful commodity trading on a vertical scale which, when applied with some discipline, will yield success more often than not. Let's look at a few, we have discussed them before,
There are many others, but they are elsewhere in the back issues of the newsletter and so there is no need to repeat them. The important consideration which one should reflect on is that as commodity traders we have many advantages which an ordinary businessman does not have. Both in the opportunities for trading and also in the time span in which success can come. We will have more opportunities for failure (and we will fail many times which will keep us humble) but we will also have more opportunities for success ( and many will succeed, time and time again). We must learn to view opportunities horizontally and not be afraid if we lose now and then. But when we have a winner, we must learn to trade on a vertical scale, maximizing our efforts, time, and capital to earn the money which a winner delivers to those who accurately ride with her. Not long ago I had a discussion with a friend who works for IBM and who has just gotten involved in commodity trading. He knew me from several years ago when he sold me a typewriter and so, after suffering a loss in the soybean market, he came by to discuss trading. He said that he and two of his friends had split an investment in soybeans, 3 or 4 contracts. This was the only position they had. They bought soybeans with the trend, rode it down against the trend, hated to take a loss, held on, rode it back up with the trend, were about even, it came back down again and they suffered a loss. Probably around $3,000 in total, I would guess, though I didn't ask the precise amount. My own response to this person was as follows. The first mistake you made was to assume that your soybean position had any importance at all. It did not. It had no more importance than the first five cards you might have been dealt in a poker game. You no more had to win with that position in soybeans (to be successful long term) than you have to win with the first hand in poker you are given. That position was totally immaterial in your overall success and abilities to succeed. By watching that position the three of you were attaching more importance to it than it deserved. By forming any conclusions from your loss, you are giving it significance it does not deserve. It is nothing in your trading program. Absolutely nothing. It matters not. What you have to do is not succeed on the first contract you buy or sell. You have to succeed over a series. That is what is important. If you cannot succeed over a series you will not accumulate money. If you cannot succeed over a single position, that means nothing. Absolutely nothing. You would be far far better off rather than taking 4 contracts in soybeans to have 1 in cotton, l in sugar, and 1 in wheat and soybeans. Then you will not attach more importance to your soybean position than you will to any of the others. If you lose $200 in soybeans, so what, you may make $1000 in sugar. You will not draw conclusions based on a single commodity which the 3 of you watch day in and day out. Would the 3 of you stand behind a single poker hand (the first one dealt that evening) and all bet on it and draw conclusions as to how good a poker player you are because you lost?.... It makes no sense to see a commodity position as an entity any more than it makes to see a poker hand separate from the end results when the chips are finally counted. TO WIN YOU SIMPLY MUST HAVE THIS ABILITY
HORIZONTAL TO VERTICAL........how money is accumulated.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Home
:: News
:: Research
:: About Bruce
Gould
:: Quotes
& Charts
:: Free
Online Book
:: Link
To Us
:: Online
Store
:: Advertise
:: Contact
Us
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Copyright © 1999-2005 Bruce Gould, All Rights Reserved • Privacy
Policy • Terms
Of Use
Always remember that stock, options, and futures trading may involve substantial risks and that past performance is no guarantee of future performance.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||


