Notes for Chat with Traders, Episode 212

Added on by C. Maoxian.

Episode 212 … Kristjan Kullamägi (76:09)

  • Swede in his early thirties

  • Started investing 2010

  • Started trading 2011

  • Full time from the beginning

  • Focused 100% on trading, dropped out of college, didn't finish degree

  • Worked as a security guard part time while studying ("mall cop")

  • Started with $5,000

  • Doubled his paper trading account in two weeks in May 2011 and was sure he'd get rich by that fall

  • Lost it all

  • Saved money for six months, tried again and again

  • Blew up three or four times in first couple of years

  • Blew up with $3,000 or $4,000 accounts several times

  • Horrible experience to lose three years of savings when he was 21 years old

  • But every time he blew up, he'd learn something new

  • Started day trading but had no method, just went all-in on every trade

  • Never bothered with Swedish market, no action, traded US market from the get-go

  • Became profitable in 2013, two years after started trading

  • Big moves take weeks and months and years to play out

  • It's hard to catch a 50% to 100% move while day trading

  • Learned about swing trading, gravitated to it

  • In day trading, you're fighting near your entry all the time

  • In swing trading, the stock can quickly move above your stop and stay above it for a very long time

  • Realized swing trading more scale-able than day trading

  • Liquidity and slippage a major problem when day trading microcaps and small caps, it's not scale-able

  • Took a couple years to go from 95% day trading to 95% swing trading, wasn't overnight

  • Control your risk through position sizing in swing trading

  • Day trading more hazardous than swing trading, he believes

  • Made his first million day trading, but everything after that has been swing trading

  • In his first few years while losing money he was constantly depressed, "scarred for life"

  • Felt unreal when he first started making money

  • Realized if he could find patterns for swing trading like he had for day trading, he could scale up

  • Day trading is a lot of effort, he was getting tired of sitting in front of computer from open to close

  • He says he's a lazy person, doesn't want to work too hard

  • Got swing setup ideas from stockbee and read William O'Neill's How To Make Money in Stocks in 2015

  • Went through every single stock in US market and found all stocks that conformed to the pattern

  • Just a breakout setup and variations of the setup he'd stumbled upon

  • Built database by taking screenshots and saving them in Evernote of what the setup looks like

  • It's all about pattern recognition, but he also looks at fundamentals

  • Look for a breakout on the daily time frame

  • Stocks move like stairsteps

  • Leg higher, sideways, volatility contracts, range gets tighter, next leg higher, volatility contracts, range gets tighter, next leg higher, etc.

  • Uses 10 and 20 day moving averages to trail a stop

  • stockbee taught him that stocks move in momentum bursts

  • The stronger the stocks, the better ... mid caps, large caps

  • By strong he doesn't mean microcap pumps that move 100% in a day

  • Look at the perfect stair step patterns in Tesla or Nio

  • You want to be in the fast moving stocks

  • Wants to hold stocks for as long as possible

  • Sells 20-25% of position into first burst of the move, then it becomes "stress-free," no large loss possible

  • When his account was smaller he did trade small caps and mid caps but now he's forced to trade large caps

  • $150 million average daily dollar volume is now the cutoff for scans, two years ago his cutoff was $20 million

  • Scans for biggest movers (strongest 2%) over the 1-, 3-, 6-, 12-, and 18-month time frames

  • Wants a list of the strongest, most liquid stocks

  • Looking for linearity, how orderly is the pullback following the burst higher

  • After a burst, stocks pull back to 10 and 20 day moving averages, how do they act there?

  • If you trade random setups, your results are going to be random

  • Look for the relative strength winners, the stocks that hold up the best when the broad market declines

  • Leading stocks are the stocks that go up the most and are the most liquid

  • Leading stock don't go down when the broad market goes down

  • You need an uptrending broad market for this method to work

  • Fundamentals drive stocks at the end of the day -- big earnings and revenue growth

  • If you know the story behind the stock, and understand the fundamentals, it gives you more conviction

  • He enters everything at once, very aggressive, responsible for many "big wicks"

  • He scales out, sells some into strength and trails the rest using the 10 or 20 day moving average

  • He buys above the opening range high, first one minute, first five minute, or first sixty minute candle

  • Always uses the low of the respective one minute, five minute, or sixty minute candle low for his initial stop [edit: or the low of day, whichever is lower]

  • His win rate last year was 35% (2020), year before was 25% (2019)

  • You have to get used to getting stopped out a lot using this method

  • He often buys, gets stopped out, then buys once again minutes later

  • He stops out without hesitation

  • Once the ten day moving average catches up to his initial stop, then he begins trailing using the ten day

  • He ignores intraday violations of the moving average, he only gets out on a close below the moving average

  • In addition to his trailing stop, he has a hard "crash" stop in place [my term for it]

  • He doesn't add to winning positions

  • Treats adds to an existing trade as a new trade

  • Strong stocks should hold up well during broad market declines

  • Understanding trend and sentiment of the broad market are important

  • Every time he gets 30 positions on, it marks a top (a proprietary indicator, he laughs)

  • Swing trading is a low effort affair once you learn what to look for

  • Doesn't know his average win versus average loss, doesn't sweat the small stuff

  • It's all about small losses and big winners

  • Most of his money comes from a few big winners ... maybe 20% of his trades are home runs, the rest break even

  • He's addicted to trading, controlling himself is difficult, tends to over trade

  • Many times he'll think something can't go higher and he just sells it, violating his trailing stop rule

  • Every time he overrides or outsmarts his rules about trailing a stop, he screws himself, but he keeps doing it

  • He has no problem taking a loss, this is not something he struggles with

  • His position sizes and percentage risk never change, it's all relative to his account size

  • He uses margin "quite a bit" ... but you have to "deserve the risk"

  • He was reckless in the beginning, went "all-in" all the time, doesn't do that now

  • People focus on the wrong things, lots of indicators instead of the price, just focus on price

  • People mistakenly focus on other people's opinions

  • Tune it all out, tune everyone out, just focus on the market and what the leading stocks are doing

  • Go back and look at thousands of examples of the setups you trade, study what the broad market was doing then

  • People master their setup but they haven't been able to scale their trading, still trading the same size for ten years

  • Your size and risk should double as your account doubles

  • Talking about points or dollar profits is meaningless, think in percentage risk and return instead

  • He read all the Dan Zanger letters going back as far as he could back, studied obsessively in 2015

  • His life hasn't changed much since he has made tens of millions of dollars

  • Now he plays video games on his days off, doesn't study much anymore

  • Politely and humbly thanks the host, Aaron, for the invitation to the show

  • Twitter: @Qullamaggie

  • Blog: Charts and Stories

  • Twitch: Qullamaggie

  • YouTube: Qullamaggie