TIP086: PART II – JACK SCHWAGER & STOCK MARKET WIZARDS

W/ JACK SCHWAGER

21 April 2016

This is the second episode of a two-part interview that Preston and Stig have with best-selling author Jack Schwager. Jack is perhaps best known for his interviews with billionaires including Ray Dalio, Stanley Druckenmiller, and many others. He is currently the co-portfolio manager for the ADM Investor Services Diversified Strategies Fund, a portfolio of futures and FX managed account.

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IN THIS EPISODE, YOU’LL LEARN:

  • Why you should always decide what your exit criteria is before you get into a security.
  • How to use fundamentals in trading.
  • How to optimally measure the performance of your portfolio.
  • Why traders in particular might want to use daily data to evaluate their strategy.

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TRANSCRIPT

Disclaimer: The transcript that follows has been generated using artificial intelligence. We strive to be as accurate as possible, but minor errors and slightly off timestamps may be present due to platform differences.

Intro  00:05

Broadcasting from Bel Air, Maryland, this is The Investor’s Podcast. They’ll read the books and summarize the lessons. They’ll test the waters and tell you when it’s cold. They’ll give you actionable investing strategies. Your hosts, Preston Pysh and Stig Brodersen!

Preston Pysh  00:28

Hey, how’s everybody doing out there? This is Preston Pysh. I’m your host for The Investor’s Podcast. And as usual, I’m accompanied by my co-host Stig Brodersen out in Denmark.

Stig Brodersen  00:37

In this episode, we continue our discussion with the best-selling author of the “Hedge Fund Market Wizards” series, Jack Schwager. I’ll kick it off with the first question. So one of the critique that value investors often have about traders is that how can they use fundamentals because they might be *in a day trader so they might do as you say, like 500 trades a day? I also know that when you are a trader, you can look at real fundamentals that might change within a day or within an hour and still make rational trading decisions. So could you please provide some examples of how traders use fundamentals?

Jack Schwager  01:13

Sure, well, and I put this in some of the trading books that I read for myself, not just the books. I’ve interviewed people when it comes to the Market Wizard books as well. And that is that applying fundamentals to trading, I mean, let me back up here for one second. I’ll just throw this out on the side because it’s just a good example. Then I’ll go to the other point, but to make the distinction.

So from my own perspective, not everybody, but for the most part, if I’m trading and I trade *inaudible depending on how busy I am or what else I’m doing. Sometimes I’m trading sometimes or not. In the last few months, I’ve been trading or whatever. But when I trade, I put on a position. I’ll put a stop in. I’ll put it where I was long or when I trade futures based, my *trade is in futures. If I go long or short, whatever it is, when I entered a trade, I put in a stop which should define my approximate worst loss. And I don’t have to think about it anymore.

It’s one of the things I got out of the books and it goes back to your other question of what I get out of books. One of the big things I got was from Bruce Kovner who said always decide where you’re getting out before you get in at this point was because that’s when you have objectivity. And that’s great advice and so I do it myself.  So I always put in the order is a *inaudible, at a limit or market to get in and attached to it is a good call cancel stop. And it is paired. It’s part of the same trade. So that’s *free trade. Okay, that’s one approach.

02:35

But there are then the things which I might consider an investment. So here’s an example. Some months ago… Oh, actually, maybe it was probably last year. Sometime late last year. I had gone through the stock market and I was like thinking, “Well, maybe write down some levels of some stocks were just put an order as to where I think there would be big support, where if they went down there I’d buy them.” And I look at markets, which are sectors which are out of favor because everything rotates and when you’re best opportunities, conference sectors are completely out of favor.

Well, China is slowing down or you can always find your reasons. I don’t care what the reasons were, but like *inaudible that whole, all the metals, oils, everything was like going down. So for energies and metals and for some of those ETFs. I like big numbers and *inaudible is converted very low numbers. And they got hit. It might have been between 14 and 12. And I picked them for technical reasons. I think if it gets down there, I don’t get… I mean, I went back in 2008. In 2008, I had gotten that low. Whatever. So I thought if it goes down there, I’ll hold it. It’s an ETF. It’s multiple equities. I don’t care if it goes to zero. I mean, I do care but I think it’s not going to go to zero. I’ll hold it for years. So let’s make it at least. That’s an example of investment.

03:57

So for me *inaudible, the metal CETF goes from 50 to 12, it’s going to have a value of value. I’ll just hold on to it that type of thing. So that’s an example of an investment trade. So that’s, I have no stop on that, you know, I don’t want to buy the 12, that gets put a stop. But that’s not the point. I’m not worried about it. So that’s the mentality of investment is you’re buying something when you figure it has intrinsic value. And it’s very, very low relative to its potential long term range, and you buy it, and you hold it until things change. That’s from a trading standpoint. It’s the opposite. You want to have your risk-neutral.

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