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Intro To Commodity Trading

commodity_trading

This course is a broad overview and discussion of the salient subject areas that one will need to navigate to fully understand the commodity space.

  • Entering Orders
  • Common Mistakes
  • Rules and regulations
  • Markets and Exchanges
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Fundamental Analysis

fundamental_analysis

Students will be introduced to what makes each of the commodity sectors tick from an international economic standpoint.

  • Grains - corn, wheat, rice
  • Metals - gold, silver, copper
  • Energies - crude oil, gas
  • Softs - coffee, sugar, cocoa
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Technical
Analysis

technical_analysis

This course sets the record straight about what is a predictive indicator and what is a lagging indicator in the commodity markets.

  • Studies in Price
  • Volume & Open Interest
  • Technical Indicators
  • Markets in Backwardation
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Trading
Psychology

trading_psyc

This course discusses the successes and failures of some of the greatest traders and what the psychological issues were at the time.

  • Trading Systems Psychology
  • Types of Orders Psychology
  • Margin & Leverage Psychology
  • Self-Awareness
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Staggering Growth?

December 15 2009 | 4:02 pm PST

A question came in from a reader today, and I thought I’d answer it for everyone’s benefit.

hey mike

i was hoping to get your point of view on something. i’ve heard several times the phrase “small traders/accounts make the most money.” does this mean that if you have a small account (e.g. 10k or less) using a portfolio heat of 30%…you would use a portfolio of 6 futures betting 5% on each trade in lieu of using a 10 future portfolio betting 3%? is this how you would make money with a small account or am i missing the point entirely?

Great Question and thanks for writing.

Regarding “small traders/accounts make the most money” – I think it means that you can have $10,000 in equity, trade one crude oil contract for $9,500 in initial margin, and make $40,000 over the year on your equity. In this instance you will have made a few hundred percentage points, as well as tens of thousands of dollars.

When your account grows to the millions or tens of millions, there are markets that are a little more tricky to trade due to volume/liquidity constraints, so you can’t take gigantic positions b/c you might not be able to get out of them.

If you desire to run public money – for allocators like a CTA would – returns over 50% will raise more negative eyebrows than favorable ones…and that number might be high. It might be more like 30%. Friends and family will want you to run and gun for giant returns b/c they can afford a full loss of their capital. IMHO, you’ll want to show a slow and steady, positive slope to your equity curve: trade your model, not the emotional constitution of your clients.

Most importantly, if you can find a way to keep your drawdowns in the 10 – 15% range you’ll really be onto something. Allocators are more concerned with risk adjusted returns. Most large CTAs have drawdowns over 20%.

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