How Strangers Made $175 Million With This - YouTube

Channel: TRADING RUSH

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I would say the one magic wish most traders would like to be granted, would be to be able
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to see into the future.
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In the last 7 months, I was able to make more than 64% profit through the stock market.
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That's beating the stock market index by 3 times.
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I wish I could say this profit was made by looking into the future, but it was not.
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It was made by using 3 strategies and following a few simple rules.
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If I can make money in trading, anyone can if taught properly.
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That is pretty much what the Chicago trader Richard Dennis, who had turned 5000 dollars
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into 100 million dollars, said in the 1980s.
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His partner William Eckhardt, disagreed and believed either you鈥檙e born with trading
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skills or you鈥檙e not.
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In 1983, this debate led to an interesting real-life social experiment, in which they
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recruited a group of random people for two trading classes.
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Dennis and Eckhardt were going to share their proprietary trading con颅cepts with these
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random people to see if anyone can make good money in trading.
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They called this group the "Turtle Traders".
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The word "Turtle" was the nickname Dennis used for his students inspired by a turtle-breeding
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farm he had visited in Singapore.
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"We are going to grow traders just like they grow turtles in Singapore", he said.
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Once Dennis and Eckhardt had shared their proprietary trading concepts, Turtle Traders
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were only allowed to trade for Richard Dennis and were not allowed to trade futures for
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themselves or others.
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Each student received 1 million to trade.
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If the student made money, they received 15% of the profit, while Mr. Dennis got 85%.
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Learning from a multi-millionaire and trading with his money?
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It was like winning a lottery.
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However, when the two weeks class started, one of the first topics the Turtle Traders
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were taught was not about the money-making strategy, it was about Managing Risk.
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You see, Dennis understood probabilities and used calculated risks to his advantage.
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The strategies Turtle Traders were going to learn were high-risk strategies.
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There was no buying low and selling high, it was a high-risk high reward.
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So it was important for the traders to understand risk management more than anything else.
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Turtle Traders were also taught to disassociate the dollars from trading.
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If the amount lost in dollars is less, people don't worry that much.
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But if the amount lost in dollars is high, then emotions kick in, and bad decisions are
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made.
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Turtle Traders were taught to consider losses in percentages and not in amounts of money.
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If you have 10,000 dollars and lose 200, it's not a big deal, it's only 2% of the total
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account.
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If you have 10 million dollars and lose 200,000, it's still not a big deal since it's only
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2% of the total account.
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Dennis and Eckhardt wanted their students to see trading as a probability game.
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They wanted to make it very clear that if you break the Risk Limit and don't protect
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the capital, the probabilities will soon catch up.
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Dennis since his early twenties believed that looking at the news for stock tips was not
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a good idea.
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If acting on the news was the real key to success in trading, everyone would be rich.
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He wanted Turtle Traders to make their decisions by looking at the price directly.
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In Dennis's early floor trading days, he made money by trading seasonal spreads.
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In simple words, Dennis would make money by holding long and short futures positions simultaneously.
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Turtle Traders on the other hand were trained to be trend-following traders.
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This shift in strategy was mainly influenced by Richard Donchian, who was a well-known
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trend trader with a positive record from the 1950s to the 1970s.
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After losing money in the market crash of 1929, Richard Donchian started studying Technical
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Analysis.
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He then developed his own rule-based technical system which became known as "Trend Following".
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The rule was pretty simple: When the price breaks above the high of the previous two
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weeks, you close your short position and buy.
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When the price breaks below the low of the previous two weeks, you close your long position
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and sell short.
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Later, Richard Donchian wrote many articles on securities and futures trading and became
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known as "the Father of Trend Following".
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He also developed the popular Donchian Channel Indicator, and its trading strategy was one
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of the best strategies we have ever tested 100 times on the Trading Rush Channel.
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It ranks 2nd from the top on the TR Score chart.
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You see, Trend Trading was good for Turtle Traders because Trading the Trend is not about
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forecasting the direction of the price move, it's more about riding the price move.
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Trend traders don't even expect to be right every time.
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However, they still make money in the long run by taking trades in the direction where
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the price is already heading.
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Turtles were also trained to keep things simple, but Dennis and Eckhardt knew there will be
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mistakes and missed entries.
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If turtle traders made mistakes on regular basis, their probability of losing money,
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in the long run, will be high.
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So one of the main concepts Turtles were taught was to know their edge in the market.
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See, trading is a zero-sum game.
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You either have to win more times than the other person to be profitable, or need winning
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trades many multiple times larger than the losing trades.
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If you win more trades, you can risk more on a single trade and still have a good probability
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of making money in the long run.
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But if you book bigger profits, you can't risk more amounts on a single trade.
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That's because bigger profits will result in a lower win rate, and a lower win rate
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will result in more losing trades in a row.
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If you risk more on a single trade and have a big losing streak, you will blow up the
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account.
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Since Turtle Traders were going to book bigger profits than the loss, they were told not
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to use more than 2% of the total account on a single trade.
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Furthermore, if they lose 10% of the account, then they had to make their trading decisions
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based on the new account size.
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For example, if the Turtle Trader was supposed to risk 2% of the 10000 dollar account, but
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the trader lost 10%, they now have to risk 2 percent of 9000 dollars.
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Turtle Traders were trained to trade "breakouts".
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The idea was to catch the start of a strong trend and stay in that trend for as long as
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possible.
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For example, if the price gives a 30-day breakout in the upward direction, or in other words,
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if the price makes a move higher than the highest price of the previous 30 days, the
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Turtle Traders would buy.
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To exit a long position, Turtles had to wait for a breakout in the opposite direction.
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For example, price breaking below the 15 days low.
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If the price gives a 30-day breakout in the downward direction, or in other words, if
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the price makes a move lower than the lowest price of the previous 30 days, the Turtle
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Traders would go short.
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To exit a short position, Turtles had to wait for a long breakout.
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For example, price breaking above the previous 15 days high.
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In both of these entry methods, the Turtle Traders were instructed to risk 2% of the
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total account per trade.
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If the account size was 1 million, then the position size was calculated in a way that
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when the stop-loss gets hit, the loss would be only 20000 dollars, which is 2%.
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The exact Turtle Trading Strategy is now protected by copyright laws, but basically, it was a
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breakout strategy that tried to take a position at the start of a new trend, no more complex
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than the strategies most traders use today.
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Turtles were made very clear that if two traders with the same account size were facing the
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same situation in the market, they both should take the same optimal course of action.
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They both should place the same trade.
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If the Turtles couldn't follow the mentioned rules, they were out of the experiment.
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Basically, Eckhardt and Dennis wanted their students to understand that they are not special
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and definitely not smarter than the market.
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They did not want Turtles to make decisions because they felt smart or lucky.
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Since Turtles were told to exit trades when there was a breakout in the opposite direction,
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they had to watch 10 to 50 percent of their unrealized profit disappear before the exit
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signal appeared.
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This made sticking to the rules challenging for some.
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But those who followed the rules remained in the experiment and made huge profits in
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the long run.
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In the next 5 years, the Turtle Traders with the Breakout Strategy ended up making more
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than 175 million dollars in total.
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Several Turtle Traders after the experiment have gone on to have professional careers
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in trading.
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But it wasn't just about the breakout strategy, was it?
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Richard Dennis and Turtle Traders showed that with the right mindset, with proper rules,
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proper money management, anyone can be profitable in trading.
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And that's exactly how I made more than 64% profit in the last 7 months.
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I didn't use the Breakout Strategy like Turtle Traders because we have tested way better
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strategies 100 times on the Trading Rush Channel.
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I used the MACD strategy that got the highest win rate, the Volume Weighted Average Price
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strategy, and took trades near strong support and resistance areas with pretty much the
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same trading concepts taught by Richard Dennis to Turtle Traders:
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1.
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Trade with the trend!
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We don't want to predict the reversal of the price movement, we want to take trades in
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the direction where the price is already heading.
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2.
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We want to book more profits than the loss.
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We want to capture bigger profits when we are right about the direction and book smaller
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losses when we are wrong.
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3.
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We want to know our edge in the market.
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Trading is a probability game.
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We want to know how many times we can lose in a row, so we can manage risk and not blow
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up the account.
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Remember, one of the first things Turtle Traders were taught was Risk Management.
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4.
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And most importantly, we want to use the KISS principle as much as possible.
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KISS, an acronym for "Keep It Simple, Stupid", is a design principle noted by the U.S. Navy
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in 1960.
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The KISS principle states that most systems work best if they are kept simple rather than
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made complicated.
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That's all!
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Get Trade Alerts, see how I take high probability trades with the current best strategies by
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supporting Trading Rush on Patreon.
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Thanks for Watching!