Keeping Records -- By: Bill Kraft
Copyright 2009, Makin' Hay, Inc., All Rights Reserved
 Bill Kraft Editor |
One often neglected part of trading is record keeping. Active
traders probably know that the IRS requires us to file a Schedule D-1
with our tax returns detailing both short term and long term capital
gains and losses and including the date acquired, the date sold, the
cost or other basis, the sales price and the gain or loss. When I
began trading many years ago, I was unaware of the need for this
schedule and wound up spending several days going through
confirmations of literally hundreds of option trades to fulfill the
requirement. Now, of course, things are easier and we have programs
like Excel and services like Gainskeeper that can take a great deal of
the drudge work out of the process.
Putting aside the important implications of record keeping for
tax returns, I also believe it is critically important and incredibly
helpful to keep careful records of our own relating to our trades. I
have become a serious believer in the value of some form of
comprehensive trading journal or diary. The journal can be kept in
many different forms such as notes made within a charting program, in
a brokerage account site where available, or on individual pages
devoted to specific trades. How it is done is a matter of personal
preference, but whether it is done should not be an issue.
Amazingly I have witnessed some traders who had great difficulty
going through sloppy records just trying to ascertain what positions
they held. Little wonder that they were not successful. If we are
going to become better traders, we must be attentive to what we are
doing, have a plan and follow it. How can we analyze our mistakes and
avoid repeating them if we don't have some way to evaluate what we
have done and are doing?
In addition to recording what we are trading, before we even
enter the trade, I think it is helpful to set out the reason for that
entry into a position, the reason we are choosing a particular
strategy (e.g. why are we buying the stock as opposed to buying a call
or selling a naked put),the size of the position, how we assess the
reward to risk at entry, and our exit strategy. At the conclusion of
the trade, it seems equally important to record how we did. Did we
follow our original exit strategy, for example, and if not, why not.
Did we cut losses as intended? Did we let profits run? What gain or
loss did we experience and how did that fit in our money management
plan? In some fashion, we may even want to give the trade a grade
like those we got in school.
Does all that seem like a lot of work? It really isn't,
particularly if we take a step back and realize that trading and
investing is a business unto itself even if we are not doing it full
time. It is our money we are talking about here and I, at least,
believe it is worth the effort to pay attention to what we are doing
with it.
I am primarily a technical trader and use the discipline
provided by things like moving averages, trend lines, MACD crossovers
and the like so I use the chart as the underpinning for my own
journal. When I enter a trade, I make a copy of the chart as it
exists at the time of my entry and note on the chart what I did, why I
did it, and my exit strategy. I then place that page in a 3 ring
binder so it is facing like the left-hand page of a book. When the
trade has been completed, I make a copy of the chart at that time and
note on the copy how it closed and the profit or loss realized. I then
put that page as a right-hand page in the 3 ring binder and review the
two pages side by side to see how well I followed my plan and how well
it worked and so I can grade myself. In this fashion, it is fairly
easy to see mistakes so that I can attempt to avoid them in the future.
Good Trading!
Bill Kraft
Success Trading Group -- by the Success Trading Group Team
Our Success Trading service delivers quality trading ideas for the elite investor that has the financial wherewithal and market nimbleness to profit on small moves in a stock's price. Become a member and you will be provided with email and/or PDA alerts intended to provide you with the opportunity to make many, many profitable trades.
Trade Quality
Stocks Over and Over Again
Over 320 winning trades and only 9 losses!
Register Now
and Get $50 off our Normal Website Rate
Option Trader -- by Bill Kraft
Our Option Trading Service is for conservative traders that understand leverage principles and enjoy the challenge of options trading. We focus on powerful option trading strategies that place volatility and momentum in your favor. And we pride ourselves on always minimizing our losses!
The Option Trader service utilizes standard trading in Puts and Calls as well as strategies using Leaps, Straddles, Credit Spreads, Calendar Spreads, and Naked Puts. But no matter how sophisticated a strategy may be, we ALWAYS know our downside potential on every trade.
Here's a look at a trade Bill is currently working on:
Green Mountain Coffee Roasters Inc. (GMCR)
GMCR recently announced decent earnings and prognosticated
positively for the coming year. I am looking at a possible bull put
credit spread for March or even, perhaps, an iron condor selling the
45 calls and the 40 puts and buying the 50 calls and 35 puts as the
protective legs. It looks as though the condor could bring in a credit
of $1.80 to $1.90 which would set up a possible return on risk in the
60% range if the stock would stay between the two short legs until
March expiration.
Good Trading!
Bill Kraft
Try our Option Trader Real-Time Alert Service
and Get $50 off our Normal Website Rate!
Achieve returns with us like
16.48% return in 5 days!
Trend Trader -- by Bill Kraft
Trend trading as we try to practice it is a form of momentum trading. We prefer to try to capture profit out of the middle of the trend rather than try to catch reversal at bottoms and tops.
Here's a look at a trade Bill is currently working on:
IAC/InterActiveCorp. (IACI)
Trend Trader closed another winner with IACI on Friday.
The trade brought in 2.7% before commission in just a week. If the
stock could break the nearby resistance, it looks as though it might
be able to run another $1.50 to $2, but it has to break that
resistance first.
Good Trading!
Bill Kraft
Try our Trend Trader Real-Time Alert Service
and Get $50 off our Normal Website Rate!
$10 Trader -- by Bill Kraft
We really enjoy trading stocks that are $10 and under. Often they provide the chance to enjoy high percentage gains and, of course, at worst, the risk is limited to what we paid for the stock.
Here's a look at a trade Bill is currently working on:
Darling International Inc. (DAR)
This one has been trending up since December and now is
dealing with a support/resistance in the $5 range. The short term
price support and the uptrend line are converging so it may offer an
opportunity for what looks like an entry in the near term.
Good Trading!
Bill Kraft
Try our Under $10 Trader Real-Time Alert Service!
Dividend Investor -- by the Dividend Investor Team
Our Dividend Investor service focuses solely on the "best of the best" dividend paying stocks. We attempt to buy these stocks for their powerful dividend producing income; and we will also buy these with a purpose to make capital gains as the stock increases in value. Our Dividend Investor service is a perfect fit for an IRA account.
Register Now
and Get $50 off our Normal Website Rate