Monthly Archives: December 2013

Investment in Equity (Part 19)

Here is a variation of the system explained in the preceding chapter.

Here, there will be two separate graphs. One can be called the selling track and the other can be called the buying track. The selling track will be a graph of just four levels. The topmost level will be the last touched high or top. In the buying track too, there will be four levels. The bottommost level will be the last touched low or bottom.

Tatasteel recently touched a high of Rs. 431.95. Suppose we are holding 90 shares of Tatasteel. We will prepare the graph as follows:

HIGH  431.95

-1         417.50            -30

-2         403.10            -30

-3         388.70            -30

If the price falls from Rs. 431.95 to Rs. 417.50, we will sell 30 shares (one third of our holdings) at that level. If the price continues to fall and descends to Rs. 403.10, we shall sell another 30 shares at that level. If the price falls further, and touches Rs. 388.70, we shall sell the remaining 30 shares also.

The first selling stage of Rs. 417.50 is 3.33% below the high of Rs. 431.95. The second stage is 6.66% below the high of Rs. 431.95. The third selling stage is 9.99% below the high of Rs. 431.95.

We shall now prepare a buying track.

Tatasteel recently touched a low of Rs. 406. Let us take Rs. 406 as the base for the buying track.

+3        446.60            +30

+2        433.10            +30

+1        419.60            +30

LOW   406.00

Let us imagine that after touching the low of Rs. 406, the price rises and hits Rs. 419.60. If this happens, we shall buy 30 shares at that level. If the price rises further and hits Rs. 433.10, we shall buy another 30 shares. If the price continues to rise and hits Rs. 446.60, we shall buy another 30 shares at that level.

The first buying level of Rs. 419.60 is 3.33% above the low of Rs. 406. The second buying level of Rs. 433.10 is 6.66% above the low of Rs. 406. The third buying level of Rs. 446.60 is 9.99% above the low of Rs. 406.

Every selling will be done using the selling track while every buying will be done using the buying track.

The basic principles behind the system are listed below:

1)         All the buyings will get made within the first 10% of (above) the last formed low or bottom.

2)         All the sellings will get made within the first 10% of (below) the last formed top.

The buyings need be made only if we do not have any holdings in the scrip. When we do not hold any shares of the scrip, we shall buy it in three stages as indicated above. Once the three buyings are made in the above mentioned manner, we should not make any further buyings.

When we are holding enough shares of the scrip for three doses of selling, we shall sell those shares away, in three stages as shown above, if and when price falls;  all our holdings should get sold away by the time the price falls 10% from the high.

If we hold the scrip, the high should be kept updated all the time. When the price rises above the high or top, the high in our graph should be updated to that extent. When the high changes, the three selling levels also should change to the same extent. This will become easier if we use an Excel sheet (in a computer). If we are not using a computer, we can use a calculator and find out the modified levels. It should be borne in mind that if price crashes more than 10% from the last formed high, all our holdings in the scrip should have, by then, been sold away. We should not hold the scrip if it has crashed 10% from its last formed high.

In the same way, if the price has risen 10% from the last formed bottom, we must have bought as many shares of it as possible, with the funds available to us for that scrip.

If we are not holding any share of the scrip, and if the price falls below the last formed bottom, we must update the low or bottom in our graph also accordingly. Whenever the low is modified, the three buying levels too should be modified to that extent.

If we are using an excel sheet (that is, if we are using a computer), modification of the three levels can be made automatic by using formulae which link the three levels to the respective base price. Whenever the base price (high or low) changes, the three levels will also automatically change.

It must be remembered here that every order, whether a selling order or a buying order, should be stoploss order. Every sell order should be a stoploss sell order; every buy order should be a stoploss buy order. When the price is at the top, three stoploss selling orders, corresponding to the three lower levels should be entered, provided we are holding shares. When the price is at the bottom, three stoploss buying orders, corresponding to the three buying levels should be entered, provided we are yet to create the three long positions.

Advantages of the system

The system will help us to buy the scrip within the first 10% rise from its bottom. Likewise, it will help us to exit the scrip within the first 10% fall from its top.

Another advantage is, when the bottom or high changes favourably, the corresponding advantage becomes available to us through the automatic modification of the related three levels. In other words, this system is likely to generate more profits than the one explained in the preceding chapter.

Disadvantages of the system

This involves more work load. Every time the top rises or bottom falls, the three levels linked to it will have to be changed. If we are handling several scrips at a time, we will need a computer to keep the levels of all the scrips promptly updated.

Risk of Loss

It is quite possible that the price rises 10% from the last formed bottom, and then descends the whole 10%. In this case, each of the three long positions will result in loss. The total loss, excluding brokerage, will be equal to 10% of the funds used for buying the shares. If this happens, there is no other way than to calmly bear the loss. The risk doesn’t end there. Such losses can repeat themselves in stock market. Whenever losses occur while following the system, suffer them, but make sure that you take all the profits which the system would occasionally generate. Over the long term, you will be the gainer, if you follow the system by calmly suffering its losses and earning its profits.

Comparison

In comparison with the single position system, the above described multiple position system has one great advantage. It is the lower per-deal risk of loss. In the single position system of, say, 5% trigger, the risk of loss will be 5% of the total capital invested in the shares. In the three position-system, the risk of loss will be just 3.33% of the capital invested in that position. The following illustration will make this clear:

1

Single Position system with 5% trigger
Total capital

10000

Risk of loss in one deal – percentage

5%

Risk of loss in one deal – amount

500

2

Three position system with 3.33% trigger
Total capital

10000

No. of positions

3

Capital in each position

3333.33

Risk of loss in the deal – percentage

3.33%

Risk of loss in the deal – amount

110.99

Total risk of loss in all the three deals

332.97

As you can see from the above given figures, the risk of loss in the single positioned system is 5% while the risk of loss per deal in the three positioned system is just 1.11% of the total capital.

Since the risk of loss in the single positioned system is much higher, its profits too are likely to be much higher. Conversely, since the risk of loss in the three positioned system is much less in every deal, the system’s potential for profits also is likely to be less. The more the risk, the more the profit, the less the risk, the less the profit. Which of these two is the best?

Some people take larger risks, while some others play it safe. We will choose whichever system we are comfortable with. We can arrive at a decision only by following both the systems. We can use both the systems at the same time. Divide the capital into two, and allot each part to each system. Then, after knowing each system very well, we can follow the one with which we feel comfortable, and discard the other.

In the 5% single positioned system, the coverage is 5%. Compared to this, the coverage is 10% in the three positioned 3.33% system. Generally, the longer the coverage, the longer the distance one gets to travel in the graph. To put it simply, it is easier for the price to fall 5% than 10%. As a result, the 5% single positioned system is likely to get reversed (leading to loss) more often than the three positioned 3.33% system which has a greater coverage of 10%.

(This series ends with this chapter.)

Investment in Equity Part 1
Investment in Equity Part 2
Investment in Equity Part 3
Investment in Equity Part 4
Investment in Equity Part 5
Investment in Equity Part 6
Investment in Equity Part 7
Investment in Equity Part 8
Investment in Equity Part 9
Investment in Equity Part 10
Investment in Equity Part 11
Investment in Equity Part 12
Investment in Equity Part 13
Investment in Equity Part 14
Investment in Equity Part 15
Investment in Equity Part 16
Investment in Equity Part 17
Investment in Equity Part 18
Investment in Equity Part 19

Investment in Equity (Part 18)

All the previous chapters had focused on a trading system in which only one position was envisaged. In that system, the entire capital gets utilized for buying shares for creating one single long position. One single long position means one single long position in one scrip. There can be one position each in more than one scrips. For example, you can have one position each in a number of scrips at the same time; example: Reliance, Tata Steel, Tata Motors, ITC, ICICI Bank, and so on. To make it clearer, while one position each can be created in a number of scrips, there will be only one position in any given scrip.

One of the discouraging factors of this system is the risk of loss which can amount up to the scale employed. When 5% is the scale employed, the risk of loss in any single deal can be as high as 5% of capital employed in that deal. The actual risk may be even more when brokerage is also reckoned. The 5% loss can become massive when the capital allocated to each scrip is large. It is here a multiple positions system becomes relevant.

Before I proceed to introduce the multiple position system, I must caution here that the risk of loss is very much there even in the multiple position system. But, its relative advantage is that the risk gets almost equally divided among the multiple positions so that the risk of loss in any one deal may not be massive. It also has to be mentioned that while the risk of loss in the multiple position system is lesser than the single position system, the prospects of profitability and growth, too, will be lesser than the single position system. It can be said that when the risk of loss is lower, the profits too will be, correspondingly, lower. However, despite the lower profit and growth prospects, the multiple position system will definitely find favour with many traders for the main reason of lower per deal risk of loss.

I shall now explain the multiple position system, with the help of the following graph:

The above given graph was drawn from the actual figures of Reliance Capital. The graph uses a scale of 3.33%. It means that the gap between any two consecutive levels is 3.33% of the lower of the two. For example, let us take the levels of 281 and 291. 3.33% of 281 is 9.35. When this is added to 281, we get 290.35. For the ease of trading, we round fractions upward. Thus the level next to 281 is 291.

Let us imagine that we shall have three positions at a gap of 3.33%. Three positions at a gap of 3.33% will add up 9.99% or roughly 10%.

In the above shown graph, the price movement starts at Rs. 301. The price first falls from Rs. 301 to Rs. 291 and then to Rs. 281. During this fall, we will not do anything; we will just wait for the price to start rising. Without forcing us to wait any longer, the price starts to climb. First it rises from Rs. 281 to Rs. 291 and then to Rs. 301. Even thereafter, it goes on climbing.

Here, a bottom was formed at Rs. 281. When price forms a bottom and then rises, we are to buy. When the price rises one division i.e., 3.33% from the last formed bottom of Rs. 281 (as shown in the graph) to Rs. 291, we shall make one purchase at Rs. 291 and create our first long position.

The price then rises one more division, from Rs. 291 to Rs. 301. We had decided to create a series of three long positions. So, we will make another purchase at Rs. 301. Thus a second long position gets created.

The price does not stop at Rs. 301; it continues to rise and hits Rs. 312. We buy again and create the third long position.

Thus, we have created three long positions, at Rs. 291, Rs. 301 and Rs. 312 respectively. Since our decision was to create a series of three long positions, we will not make a fourth long position even if the price climbs another one or several divisions. Therefore, even though the price rises further to Rs. 323, Rs. 334, Rs. 346 and to Rs. 358, we will not do anything other than to keep holding on to the three long positions which we created at Rs. 291, Rs. 301 and Rs. 312.

Let us pursue the price movement again. After touching the level of Rs. 358, price falls one division to Rs. 346. Thus a high was formed at Rs. 358.

Whether it is a single position trading system or a multiple position trading system, the basic principle of our trading system remains the same: it tells us to buy when the price starts rising, and to sell when price starts falling. In the single position trading system, we used to create one single long position whenever the price rose 5% after forming a bottom, and we used to sell the position away whenever the price fell 5% from a top. Here, in the multiple position system, instead of just one long position, we create a series of long positions at the first three levels above a bottom, and we sell them away, one by one, at the first three levels below a top.

So, when the price falls from the top formed at Rs. 358 to Rs. 346, we will sell away one of our three long positions at that level, i.e., at Rs. 346. We will continue to hold the remaining two long positions.

In short, when we were holding three long positions, the price climbed down one division; this forced us to sell away one of our three long positions. If the price continues to fall two more divisions, we would sell away both the remaining long positions.

But, the price did not fall any further. Instead, it climbed back from Rs. 346 to Rs. 358. A bottom was thus formed at Rs. 346. Since we are holding only two long positions and since we had decided to have three long positions, we will fulfill the target by making another purchase at Rs. 358. Thus we make a purchase at Rs. 358 and create a third long position. Now, our quota of three long positions has been met again.

The price rises to Rs. 370. When it does, we do not do anything. We just wait. Here comes the next action: the price falls from Rs. 370 to Rs. 358. It continues its fall and hits Rs. 346.

A top has been formed at Rs. 370. When the price falls from this top to Rs. 358, we have to sell away one of our three long positions. Thus we sell one long position away at Rs. 358.

When the price falls to Rs. 346, we will sell away one of the remaining two long positions. After this sale, we will, still, be holding one long position.

The price now rises from Rs. 346 to 358, forming a bottom at Rs. 346. Since we are holding just one long position, and we can (and have to) create two more long positions, we will now make a purchase at Rs. 358. Thus we will be having two long positions.

The price rises further to Rs. 370. Since we are having two long positions only, we will make another purchase, at Rs. 370, to fill the quota of three long positions. Thus we will be having three long positions.

The price continues to rise. It passes through Rs. 383, Rs. 396, Rs. 410, Rs. 424, Rs. 439, Rs. 454, Rs. 470, Rs. 486, Rs. 503, Rs. 520 to hit Rs. 538. All this while, we will not be doing anything. We shall be clutching to our three long positions and watching the price movement.

After hitting a high of Rs. 538, the price falls one division to Rs. 520. Whenever price falls from a high, our theory asks us to sell. So we sell one of our three long positions at Rs. 520. We will now be having two long positions only.

The price rises from Rs. 520 to Rs. 538. Since we are having two long positions only, and we can (and have to) buy one more long position, we shall make a purchase at Rs. 538. When this purchase is made, we will again have three long positions.

The price rises from Rs. 538 to Rs. 556. From there, it falls three divisions continuously. First it falls to Rs. 538; here we sell one of our three long positions. Then the price falls further to Rs. 520, and here we sell another long position. Only one more long position is remaining with us now. The price now falls to Rs. 503 and we sell away the remaining one long position too.

Thus all the three long positions are sold away and we are back to the zero holding position.

The price now rises from Rs. 503 to Rs. 520. We shall now start a fresh series of buyings. But meanwhile, we shall try to assess the profits we have earned and the losses we have sustained in the first series of deals.

Here we follow the first-in first out method. The first purchase was at Rs. 291 and the first sale was at Rs. 346. We earned a profit in that deal. The gross profit in that deal was Rs. 55. Let us imagine that half percent of the purchase and sale has to be paid as brokerage. At this rate the brokerage on Rs. 291 will come to Rs. 1.50 (rounded upward for the sake of convenience), and the brokerage on Rs. 346 will come to Rs. 1.70. The total brokerage will be Rs. 3.20. We shall deduct Rs. 3.20 from the gross profit of Rs. 55. The net profit from the deal will thus be Rs. 51.80.

In order to make the whole thing easy, all the deals and the net profit or net loss from each of them have been calculated and listed in the following table:

e following table:

The maximum fund requirement, at a time, is computed in the following table:

As can be seen from the above given table, the maximum funds needed for this series of deals was Rs. 958. In other words, a maximum capital of Rs. 958 had to be made readily available throughout this series of deals.

Let us now calculate the return on capital employed:

Capital employed        Rs. 958.00

Net Profit earned        Rs. 596.90

Net Profit as a percentage of the capital employed:  62.3%

I will not dare to claim that every series of deals will return this kind of, rosy, results. There can be several series of deals which end up in loss. The net returns or net loss over a period of time will depend on the price movement in that period. Price movement is the main factor which will decide your profits and losses.

But, though within that frame work, the multiple position system has a few advantages. The foremost among them is the lower per-deal risk of loss. As you can see from the above given illustrations, the maximum risk of loss from any one deal is 3.33% only. Had we been following a single position trading system of a corresponding scale (which in this case is 10%), we would have been undertaking a 10% risk of loss in every deal. Losing 10% of our capital in one single deal will be a proposition which we need to think twice, or thrice, before accepting.

In comparison with the single position system, the multiple positions system has higher per deal profitability prospects. In the multiple positions system with three positions, only if the price falls three consecutive levels, the whole long positions will get closed. If we decide to have five (instead of three) multiple positions, the long positions will not get fully squared up unless the price falls five consecutive divisions. A series of 10 multiple positions will require a continuous ten division fall for the whole long positions to get closed. When the number of positions in the series is more, the survival prospects of the long positions will also be more. In other words, the long positions will have a better safety if the number of positions in the series is greater.

We can express the same idea differently: over a long period, the profit earned per deal in a multiple positions system will be greater than the profit earned per deal in a single position system. To stretch it further, the per-deal profit earned in a 10-position trading system is, over a long period, likely to be greater than the per-deal profit earned in a 5-position trading system or in a 3-position trading system. Over a long period, the net profit per deal will keep climbing at a greater pace in a multiple position trading system.

This advantage can, at the same time, be a disadvantage too. When you follow a 10 position trading system, though your per-deal profit is likely to be greater, and climbing at a faster pace, the overall net profit amount is likely to be much smaller than the single position trading system explained in the preceding chapters. The reason has been mentioned already: when the risk is greater, the profits are greater; when the risk is lower, the profits too will be lower.

Despite this disadvantage, more traders are likely to favour this multiple position trading system, as I have already indicated. Personally, I too favour this system over the single position trading system; the reasons are two: lower per deal risk of loss and greater per deal profit prospects.

But, I have a very firm advice: Take your time choosing the system which suits you the best. But, having chosen your favourite trading system, adhere to it, come what may, and never switch systems. Switching systems can cause disaster.

The multiple position trading system has a feature which, perhaps, you might have noticed already: the long positions keep climbing when price climbs. Or, the long positions keep following the price whenever price is rising. This makes sure that the profit the trader earns is market-wide. In stock market, the market-wide profit is the maximum one can aspire for.

Very few readers are likely to find this series of writings interesting let alone useful. This series is aimed at traders who frequent stock market trading halls. Many traders may be regular in their visits to trading halls, and I doubt whether a visit to blogsites such as this would interest them. However, I fervently hope that traders would somehow visit blogsites and happen to come across these chapters. In case a trader happens to or takes pains to read these chapters, and make his or her trading more systematic (that is, minimize per deal risk of loss and maximize per deal profits) I will feel rewarded. I am anxious too, to learn from regular stock market traders what they actually think about this series of chapters, and whether they find them useful.

(Yet to be concluded)

Investment in Equity Part 1
Investment in Equity Part 2
Investment in Equity Part 3
Investment in Equity Part 4
Investment in Equity Part 5
Investment in Equity Part 6
Investment in Equity Part 7
Investment in Equity Part 8
Investment in Equity Part 9
Investment in Equity Part 10
Investment in Equity Part 11
Investment in Equity Part 12
Investment in Equity Part 13
Investment in Equity Part 14
Investment in Equity Part 15
Investment in Equity Part 16
Investment in Equity Part 17
Investment in Equity Part 18
Investment in Equity Part 19