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TTU35: The Advantages of Being a Systematic Trader ft. Chris Cruden of Insch Capital Management – 1of2
29th September 2014 • Top Traders Unplugged • Niels Kaastrup-Larsen
00:00:00 01:10:03

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Our next guest was a British Army Officer and moved to South Africa before finding a career in the financial markets. He is now the CEO of his Managed Futures firm and has worked with some of the industry’s most influential companies and people, including Dean Witter and AHL. The story of his career’s beginnings and the lessons he used to become a systematic trend follower are unique and insightful. You’re sure to learn a lot from this episode.

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In This Episode, You’ll Learn:

  • How Chris came to work with Dean Witter, one of the leading players in the industry back in the 1980’s & 90’s.
  • About his days working for AHL in the early 90’s.
  • How his career started off as a British Army officer.
  • His time in Africa after leaving the army –  finding himself in Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe).
  • About his first job at Syfrets Trust bank in South Africa as a Gold analyst.
  • How he came to do business with Dean Witter Reynolds and after a few years why they hired him.
  • After the 1988 crash he found himself back in London and joined AHL.
  • In 1993 he went back to New York joined with Robert M Tamiso, a mentor to him.
  • Why he looked for a market that was not overcrowded and easily spooked, which was the inter-bank foreign exchange market.
  • What AHL was doing in the beginning of the company.
  • Why he started trading currencies early on.
  • How Bob Tamiso was successful and the way he carried himself that made him successful.
  • Why Bob Tamiso’s best advice was to always “show up”.
  • About Chris’ golf playing and his ties to Scotland.
  • His routine at work and why being a systematic trader makes him boring and bad at marketing, but helps him sleep at night knowing they are going to “show up” the next day.
  • About Chris’ goal with his work and why he is happy with the size of his firm and why growth is not the prime focus.
  • How he has such low staff turnover and why he likes to work with young people who have never worked anywhere else in the financial world.
  • What matters when discussing a firm’s track record and how his programs are setup.
  • The building blocks of their trading program and how the money they’ve made has historically come mainly from interest rate differentials.
  • What the environment has been like for a currency program in the last 5 years.
  • Why he believes the current intervention by The Fed is not so substantially different that his model won’t be able to see good returns in the future
  • How he designed his program and what its objective is.
  • What currencies he trades and how he trades them.
  • Why volatility has been so low but why he sees that it is coming back and why it’s a good thing for his models.

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Resources & Links Mentioned in this Episode:

Follow Niels on Twitter, LinkedIn, YouTube or via the TTU website.

IT’s TRUE ? – most CIO’s read 50+ books each year – get your FREE copy of the Ultimate Guide to the Best Investment Books ever written here.

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Learn more about the Trend Barometer here.

Send your questions to info@toptradersunplugged.com

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Copyright © 2024 – CMC AG – All Rights Reserved

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1. eBooks that cover key topics that you need to know about

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Transcripts

Niels

h as Dean Witter, back in the:

Niels

Chris, thank you so much for being with us today. I really appreciate you taking the time.

Chris

My pleasure.

Niels

rms that only takes you up to:

Chris

Well, delicately put that I've been in the business a long time that's very polite. Actually I started off as a British Army officer. I went to Sandhurst. I was commissioned into the Golden Islanders, as a platoon commander, and when I left the British army, I went to what was then Rhodesia. If you were to follow a career path of such as I had as a very young man set out, is what they euphemistically call a contract officer. But the worst possible thing happened, and that is that peace was declared. So I found myself in a country renamed Zimbabwe and I found myself in South Africa without a job, but with a regimental tie. So I knocked on the door of a bank that was called Syfrets Trust, now part of Nedbank, and they gave me a job as a gold analyst. A Scottish gent there, called Mr. McTaggart, and I said to him, "well that's very kind of you," and he said, "not at all for a young Scottish boy like yourself, we're happy to do it," and I said, "but I don't know anything about gold," and he said, "well, the only thing you need to know about gold is the price it sells on the market, the price that it costs to get it out of the ground and the difference between the two numbers, can you do that?" I said, "yes," and he said, "now you are a gold analyst." Syfrets used to do much of its business with Dean Witter Reynolds.

hese days. After the crash in:

Niels

Tell me, just before we jump here, let's go back to the time when you joined AHL. I'm curious here...because we know today that AHL became so important, you could say in the European history of managed futures. At that time what did you and the founders of AHL, what did they know about what was happening in the States at that time and the managed futures industry, because of course this is kind of about the same time as the Turtle project finishes, yet there doesn't seem to be a lot of knowledge, initially as far as I understand the story, of what the AHL founders were doing initially and what was happening in Chicago at the same time.

Chris

In those days we basically traded London markets, I think 7 to 12 markets when I first joined, so what we would describe as pretty much relatively speaking nosebleed leverage. We modeled ourselves very much on MINT. MINT were the heroes for us, and we did believe as well added more and more markets, getting more and more diversification, and became more, and more systematized, ala MINT, then we would replicate some of their success and that turned out to be true.

Niels

OK, interesting. So, anyway I was interrupting you, but please continue with your story and what happened following your introduction with Tamiso.

Chris

an Witter in the early to mid-:

Niels

What happened at the time at AHL when you started working with Tamiso that meant that you were focusing on currencies early on?

Chris

As I mentioned, the belief was that was shared by Bob Tamiso and myself was that the game was becoming too crowded and so we looked for another game that was not crowded and that was currencies, entirely bi-directional. Tamiso did say at the time the great thing about the currency markets is that they're so big that we can't screw them up. Whereas, if you look at the history of managed futures, when it bursts its way into a new market such as LME, which is basically producers and consumers with a very small speculative interest, when the credit and credit funds discover that, they tend to upset the balance of it and it becomes a less reliable market from our point of view. Not necessarily from the participants point of view, but from our point of view, where the speculative part becomes too big. It becomes sort of out of equilibrium.

Niels

mber back in the day, you say:

Chris

I think it's true now, with hedge funds, you have to ask how many hedge fund managers does the world need and could we get by with fewer. My guess is we probably could. I don't know, it's not a subject you brought up, but I would point out at Tamiso we were very successful in terms of returns, asset raising, it was a very, very successful program. At that time, at no time did we have price feed in the office, and when signals were generated, 7AM New York time, Carol, the lady in the office, would then call Pru who were our main broker at that time, in London and speak to somebody called Sid and ask him for the mid-range prices. Sid would give us the mid-range prices and then the trades would be done, and he'd fax back the fills and basically we were done for the day. So when you have that sort of memory of how these things can be done and be so successful, when I hear conversations later on in life about high frequency trading and technology, and nanosecond trading systems, and this, that, and the other, it makes me feel either extremely old, or extremely sensible that we never got involved in that sort of thing where the margins for success apparently are defined as being very, very, small indeed.

Niels

I think it's an interesting subject, and maybe I can tap into your memory a little bit on that before we move on. You say that Tamiso was very successful at the time. Can you put words as to why, what made you so successful? What did you do differently, or what did you do just generally that people were attracted to?

Chris

I think in our way we had a, I'm tempted to say aura, some other people would say arrogance, about us that due to the leadership of Bob Tamiso, we were driven very much by quality of life and Bob was a very successful and balanced individual, it always seemed to me, and I would contrast him with some of the frantic, almost foaming at the mouth gabbiness of some managers that I meet now. I guess that came out in the way that we presented ourselves. As I say, some people saw it as a positive vibe, using a modern term, but other people saw it as arrogance, but we were happy with what we did and how we did it. We didn't have any aspiration to take an awful lot more clients on, or an awful lot more money on, and remember in those days because the internet didn't exist, there was an infrastructure limit to the amount of accounts or, in those days, bank desks that we could actually trade through and at one time we were dealing with 12, 14 or so. In this day and age, of course, it's no problem at all, but back then it was. Bob, specifically, was very clear on who he did want to do business with and who he did not want to do business with. I suppose to some extent we at Insch, today, we still have that certain view. Insch doesn't have any marketing and never really has had any marketing. If you ask what our biggest single failure is, I would say, my biggest single failure is that we are hopeless at marketing. That dates back to the Tamiso days where we weren't a marketing operation. We're a manager of money, not a management of people.

Niels

You talk about Bob Tamiso as a great mentor, and I think mentors have been very important for certain managers. When I did my conversation with Jerry Parker and he obviously talks about his experience through the Turtle program and the mentorship that he had early on from Richard Dennis, what was the most important thing that Bob Tamiso taught you?

Chris

To show up - always show up. You win by showing up, because most people are unable to meet that minimum requirement for whatever reason. One of which might be they were over geared simply have to leave the table. Showing up is very important. Bob's best friend was and is Larry Hite from Market Wizards One, and Larry Hite was very often in our office in New York. Larry Hite was also a truly great individual, but entirely systematic. These are not people who didn't represent their greatness by pretending that they knew tomorrow's prices.

Niels

I seem to remember that there were some joint ventures being formed, maybe even with Hite's group and MAN, so tell me about what happened when you, after a few years with Tamiso?

Chris

elocated it to Switzerland in:

Niels

Of course running Insch is a big part of your life today, I'm sure. But I'm just curious before we dive too deeply into other more business related things, what else do you spend your time doing?

Chris

On the ledger side, I like to play golf, and I like my cars, and I travel quite a lot to the UK and around the UK, but mostly Scotland. I have a close tie to Scotland. From a business point of view, I spend most of my time getting in the way of the research department, and generally annoy people here in the office. Not so long ago I had a medical issue and it both gratified me and depressed me to see that I wasn't missed at all and that the business ran perfectly well, and some would argue with a lot of positive evidence that it ran a lot better without me. Being systematic traders, the reality is we are going to do what the system says we are going to do. There's a good and bad about that. The good thing is we don't have to worry terribly much. We can sleep perfectly well at night. The bad thing is it doesn't make us terribly interesting people. The world, if you watch CNBC or something like that, they have the talking heads there, sort of pin-striped suited soothsayers and that sort of thing who are intimating either subtly or not subtly that they have some insight into tomorrow's prices. We, of course, have no insight into tomorrow's prices. So there's a limit to how much we can entice people with what we can intimate. Basically, it is what it is. I did mention earlier that we're not terribly good at marketing, and now you're hearing a perfectly worked example of it. We will follow the system with discipline and patience and low leverage and, to go back to Bob Tamiso, this will enable us to show up again tomorrow.

Niels

Yeah, obviously we have many specific topics that I want to touch base on. I'd like to, if I can, in an elegant way phrase a more broad question to begin with, and that is when you decide to seek mastery in a particular craft, like building a successful asset management business, you can almost call it a quest that you embark on, and for some people this quest is to bring purpose in their life, for example. But your quest over so many years, what do you think has been the aim or the goal that you have been seeking in that long career?

Chris

first moved to Switzerland in:

Niels

This to me is obviously what's quite interesting, because as you like to point out, and obviously I've seen your numbers, so I do agree with you they look great. This is what's interesting because to me, and it's partly why I do what I do with these podcasts and that is to shed light on people where, or at least to encourage investors to maybe find the courage to go and think a little bit outside the norm and to take a chance, so to speak, on a manager who's not mainstream and not top 10 in size and let's help each other to get away from the fact that now-a-days most allocations are based on size rather than maybe skill or something else. That's just sort of my own motivation, but I agree with you.

The first thing that I wanted to ask about, and in a sense maybe it ties a little bit back to what you just said about organizations and some organizations have become very institutional and have become very good at that. What about yourself? What have you focused on in building your organization and what does it look like today?

Chris

In Lugano here we have eight people. We have three on research; we have my partner Jeff Baker who's been enormously helpful and influential in the building of the business, not only on the trading side, but on the business side; Purnur Schneider, who is an extraordinarily clever young lady and Head of Research; Filip Babic who's just joined us. In London we have Rivaldi, who started off as a...I think his Masters is in Aeronautical Engineering, or some such thing, from Oklahoma, so I guess he's about as close as we have to a real rocket scientist. I like young people. I like young people who've never worked anywhere else. I don't want anybody turning to me and saying yes, but this is the way we used to do it at Merrill, because I'm not interested in how you used to do it at Merrill. The young people have good ideas. I like people who manage themselves. As I mentioned we need managers of money, not managers of people. If I noticed that your grandmother has died three times and you need to go to a funeral three times in a year than that's probably going to attract my attention, but otherwise I let people get on with what they want to do. The Army term would be delegation is the key to command, and I think that that is probably true. And there's other clichés: my door is always open and this other nonsense. We've had two people leave us in the last seven years, both of them involuntarily. It was to do with they had to return to their home country. They had completed their studies and visa situation here in Switzerland, and we've had one person that I really didn't ask to leave, but it became obvious that they should leave, as is often the case, and so our turnover is extremely low and I think people are happy here. I must say we probably ruin them from working for anybody else because we are not hierarchical in any sense.

Niels

Why do you need two offices, Chris?

Chris

When I go to London, I need somewhere to go because it rains and sometimes I need to be indoors. We have a very, very good young man called Rivaldi Kwan in London, who worked for us here, in Switzerland, and because he is Indonesian he was not permitted to stay here, and I didn't want to lose him, so it does no harm for us to have a representative office in London and I couldn't find anybody better at all than to ask Rivaldi to operate it, and that's what he does.

Niels

The next thing that I want to talk about I call it track record. But what I really mean by that is, obviously your program has been running for quite awhile, and with managers, especially in the systematic space, programs, models, approaches, risk management, and whatever it might be changes over time. Before we dive into the strategy, maybe, just from a pure track record point of view, if someone asked you how should I read your track record, what should I focus on, has there been some major changes, upgrades, innovations, whatever we call it that I should be aware of? Because in my personal experience I think people often look at track records and think that they should expect the same going forward and I would caution about that because as we all know, people, programs, change and so to some extent I would almost argue that it's better, if you can get it, to look at a managers backtested version of the current configuration to see what the program is really doing today, but that's very hard information to get hold of. So that's why I'm interested in the whole track record issue just to bring light to that. How should investors look at your track record if they asked you?

Chris

a couple of Swiss crosses in:

Niels

Yeah, at a maximum.

Chris

But basically there is some equivalency in how you can compare those things. As an investor you have to look at literally a macro view for this particular asset class what was doable - what is reasonably doable, what was a reasonable expectation? If you look at the stock market, for example, it's doubled over the last X number of years. Well, that's reasonable. Now if your manager has done twice as well as that, I guess you'd say, looking backwards, not forwards, but backwards that's pretty good. If he'd done half as well as that, you'd have said actually that's not too good, is it? In our business what has been reasonable from currencies over the last four or five years has not been a particularly exciting number. But that doesn't mean it won't be because you invest for tomorrow, not for yesterday. Something else that you mentioned earlier I think, in our business, that is to say the hedge fund, if that is what we are; managed futures business, if that's what we are; there's a lot of groupyism. Investors like to be seen to be with the new hot-handed guy, so people crash to earth pretty quickly in this business occasionally, and take the investors with them and we've seen that time, after time, after time. We call that the faster gunslinger syndrome. If I tell you, for example, last year we were up 20%. You'd say 20%! I met a guy last month; he was up 20% just that month! And you'd say, well, OK but I don't know how many times I've been pushed out of the way by a faster gunslinger, turned the corner and there he is face down in the street. Guess what, there's another faster gunslinger coming up again. There's always one, but they tend not to have very long careers.

Niels

So looking at the program today, and as you mentioned, is it fair if we're going to try and visualize it that for the four things that you mentioned that that is what a currency program can do, that as long as you know roughly, would you say that those four, and I'm asking out of ignorance here, are those four categories you mentioned: the carry, momentum, volatility, and purchasing power are they individually able to produce the same level of return but a different times, of course?

Chris

Yes, yes. What I would say is that over time by far and away the most successful of the four has been the interest rate differential carry trade, next would be the breakout and then probably various times volatility. There's a danger here for investors because currency managers that have done well over the last couple of years you can almost say, well you've done well but you haven't done it on a carry trade basis, have you? And you probably haven't done it on a breakout or momentum type basis either, so you're doing something else, what's left? So you're doing some sort of volatility trade. OK, that's fine, but is that going to be the environment that is going to present itself tomorrow? A lot of managers, they do continually change their system, and that's fine. They do it for two reasons, one because they think that they're going to improve returns by changing their system, and secondly, more dangerously, it's because they sense that this new approach is the approach that, from a marketing point of view, is more likely to attract fresh assets. So you'll see people describe themselves as vol traders, why, because they read in the Wall Street Journal that people are writing checks to vol traders. Are they really? I don't know.

Niels

It's kind of like when the CTAs start calling themselves hedge funds because nobody likes CTAs.

Chris

That's right, that's right, you see as you heard me say just now, I don't know if we're a hedge fund, I don't know if we're a CTA. As a currency manager, we have always been basically the red headed step child of both industries. We don't trade futures; therefore, we don't manage futures I suppose. Hedge fund, there's a bit of a misnomer anyway because there's nothing to hedge. So you tell me, to me it's a label that really doesn't matter but I suppose for allocators you've got to tick boxes, put you on one form as opposed to another form it's important, but not to me.

Niels

You mentioned the work environment just before, and I think that's an important thing I'd like to dive into a little bit before we move on to the strategy itself and how you go about it, but I think it is important for investors to understand in which environment should then expect a strategy to work, and as you clearly mentioned, for your strategy, over the last couple of years, carry would have been very difficult to work with due to what the central banks have been doing, but try and explain to me what the environment has actually been like for a currency program in the last say 5 years from when we really have had intervention, if we can use that word, from authorities, because we know that traditional trend following has been difficult, but how do you then put it into perspective of say your strategy in one area of the diversified universe, how do you see the environment and how its changed and what might change it again?

Chris

eriod previously, I would say:

Niels

ack to previous times and say:

Chris

Although the tools that they're using now are new, I don't think anyone would think that what they're doing is sustainable. They cannot continue to do it, and indeed, if you look at the Fed, they're not. They're cutting back on QE and this, that, and the other. Currency markets are different to most markets, or to any other market I can say because they are completely bi-directional, which makes them ideal markets for the popular press phrase would be currency wars, or competitive devaluations, or confederate rate rises, or whatever it is. Because of the tools that have been used, not in spite of them, but because of the tools that have been used, I can easily see that not only will the environment looking forward will become more favorable, it will become very much more favorable and very quickly. I just don't know when that very quickly will start. It may well have already started. I don't know.

Niels

Just for the benefit of the listeners here, why do you say that it's going to be even more favorable? What is it in that statement that you feel that the markets, and say the currency markets, which obviously is your expertise, what is it about them that... It's kind of a cycle, isn't it that if you stretch the rubber band too much then you are going to have an even bigger move when it comes back. Is that what you see in currencies, that they can do whatever they want for a period of time, but once they let go things are going to be even better, and we're going to have above normal returns for a period of time? Now we've had sub returns for awhile.

Chris

as they were way back in the:

Niels

I want to go and talk about the program itself, Kintillo, and would like you to describe how you've structured it and so on, and so forth, but before we go there, I wanted to ask you if there is a particular objective with the program. Now obviously one objective could be just to say well, we want to make money every year, but there could also be other objectives, for example there could be a certain period of time where you want to make money or be more certain that you make money. Is there any objective in your design of the program that you've tried to achieve?

Chris

The answer to that is no. The system is, in fact, designed to produce absolute returns, so after many, many years we've been able to do that, and from that we've been able to make a number of observations. For example, it has a very strong positive benefit to an equity portfolio. Our positive months seem to happen at a time when the equity markets have negative months, and on it goes. So the benefit of including our particular program, I assume other similar programs in a portfolio that is otherwise predominated by equities is quite pronounced. It wasn't designed to do that; it just has.

Niels

Why do you think that is, because it's not a natural conclusion I would have drawn if you just trade one asset class, that that would have a particular correlation to another asset class in particular when we're dealing with currencies as you said every time we have a currency pair we're dealing with two different countries, so to speak, and their economies, it would have been easier for me to assume if you were trading equities themselves and you just have some models that would react very quickly when markets started to fall. Why do you think your correlation has been as it is?

Chris

I really don't have a direct answer to that. I really don't know. What I've just said is an observation, it wasn't created to do that, it just has, and it's a very stark benefit it has to an equity portfolio. I would say that one of the reasons might be is that currency markets are, first and foremost, markets of capital flow, so I guess if people are selling stocks they're putting it in a currency and people are buying new businesses or selling businesses or investing or divesting on a sort of a much larger scale than simply buying widget PLC or something like that. Perhaps that's got something to do with it, but in any event, whatever the reason, it is a pronounced fact.

Niels

You mentioned that you were trading sort of the G7 currencies and you're obviously pairing them up, but the currency markets have kind of changed in the last 20 years, certainly with the introduction of the Euro and other things. How has liquidity (I'm just curious) how have you observed liquidity in the foreign exchange markets in recent times. People talk about equity volumes being at the lowest level for many, many years, and so on, and so forth, but what does the interbank market of currencies look like now-a-days?

Chris

We only trade the majors, so we don't trade any of the emerging or submerging currencies. We just basically trade the main currencies crossed against each other. So it's 7 times 7/21. As I mentioned, we trade 16 of those, and we trade very infrequently relatively speaking. Our winning trades are held on an average for about 16 or 18 days or so and our losing trades are help for 6 days on average, and that's been the case over the full period of the track record. So, liquidity and transparency are amongst the most important attributes that any market can have. In fact I remember at Dean Witter, 100 years ago, I think there was a list of 7 characteristics that a market must have in order to become considered investable, but I forgotten what 4 of them were, but the first three were liquidity, transparency...well, now I've forgotten what the third one is. But the point is that the currency markets are blessed with liquidity and transparency to a far, far, far greater degree than equity of fixed income markets.

Niels

Do you trade futures or do you trade the interbank market? The reason I ask is that with the recent crisis, we know that banks became much more suspicious of each other, let's put it that way, and maybe didn't trust large lines in dealing in facilities with each other. How did you experience that, or what were your experiences with this?

Chris

We just trade spot, so for our business it couldn't be more simple and straight forward, although I suppose you could say it's a derivative business because it's a pretty child proof derivative business compared to some, so we haven't experienced any issues at all in that regard.

Niels

Tell me about, if you would, can you take me through the program, the structure, the sort of overall look and feel of it and how you divide it into different types of models and their functions?

Chris

OK. I mentioned the four types...forget volatility and forget purchasing power, in the main most currency programs like ours are made up of interest rate differential and momentum breakout. Ours is about 70/30 favoring interest rate differential. It is a matrix. One of the things that I think we probably do that is slightly different is that we don't regard the crosses as currencies per se. If I say to you, for example, dollar/yen you're immediately going to start thinking about Japanese exports and economics and all of this, that, and the other. Well, of course the computers don't see that, they just see a row of numbers that have or have not changing relationships with each other in terms of volatilities, or correlations, or whatever. So what we have is 16 rows of numbers, and we try not to think about...the computers do not think about them in terms of being countries, if you will. They're just rows of numbers. When we put on a trade and our system is entirely probability based. The reason that it's based on probability is because we are not predictive in any sense. We have no idea what tomorrow’s prices are going to be. I wish we did. If we did we wouldn't be having this conversation, but we don't, and so at the time of instigation all trades are risk equivalent and the reason they are risk equivalent is precisely as I said, if we knew that this trade was better than that trade we wouldn't make that trade, we'd just make twice as many of this trade, but we don't know. So all trades are risk equivalent at time of instigation. What will take us out of a trade is an increase in volatility, but if on the upside and on the down side, high volatility tends to terminate a trend, low volatility tends to initiate a trend generally speaking. So that's the way our system works.

.:

Niels

Is it the same models that trade all 16 crosses?

Chris

Interesting enough, the Tamiso program was unbelievably enough. In those days, we traded forwards, and we traded 28 different crosses with one algorithm. It was a one size fits all algorithm - unbelievable. That's what we did. Kintillo is a lot more sophisticated. Each of the 16 crosses has its own algorithm. People these days get terribly excited about the word algorithm and think you're a really clever chap because you have an algorithm, but an algorithm is simply a set of rules. If you have a set of rules you either follow them, in which case you have a set of rules or you never follow them in which case you don't have a set of rules. We do follow our rules. So we make no representation to anybody other than we will follow the rules that we've set out.

Niels

So is that to be understood, that there's kind of one model - a set of rules becomes a model, so there's just one model for each currency pair.

Chris

That's right, well the model itself is made up of different component parts, but it's like anything else, it's like a machine or a car, the more moving parts you have the greater the probability, that word again probability, of breakdown. So you can... I think in our industry generally there's a sort of love affair with perceived cleverness, which is not unrequited, but it's certainly not terribly helpful I think, we are in love with cleverness when simplicity should be found to be more attractive in my view.

Niels

No, no, I completely agree, but tell me, what could be the difference between two models then? In a sense that once you start deviating away from trading one model across all markets you always have the nudging question about optimization and so on and so forth. What would be the difference if you should visualize it between the algorithm you use for one currency cross and the next one?

Chris

The parameters would be set differently, so for example the parameter for the majors, what defines volatility for one cross would be different to another cross and that's a source that builds to the risk equivalency of the price streams, if you follow me.

Niels

So the principle, in a sense, is the same. Meaning that you're looking for some kind of breakout as the main methodology?

Chris

Absolutely, absolutely. They are remarkably simple. I think people would be either surprised or appalled at how simple the rules actually are. They're encoded in computer speak, because it's more efficient for us to do this, but certainly with Kintyre, the Tamiso program, you can literally write it out and work it out by hand if you had the interest and the time. Kintillo is slightly more complex than that, but not much. You come into a point where, and I speak on a lot of panels and meet a lot of people and they tell me how terribly clever their system is, and to which I always say, well could you write it down on a single sheet of paper for me because I'm not terribly bright. Well no, you don't understand. Well, any time anybody tells you that you don't understand it means you probably do. What it means is that they have convinced themselves that they are very, very clever indeed. We haven't. We're very simple indeed. We describe ourselves as sort of not the genius, but the idiot savant. We don't know very much about anything, but what we do know we really do know.

Niels

I feel that I have to deviate a little bit here and ask you a question because I think it's so important to understand and that is, what do you think the larger managers with the 50 or 100 PhDs, what do you think it is that they do, actually, because performance wise, sometimes, not always, but sometimes, it's very, very difficult to tell the difference between the firm that has 50 PhDs and the firm that has 1 PhD or no PhDs. What do you think actually they do other than creating more capacity. I do understand that that can be a big part of research which is to find out how do we execute 10 billion. That I understand, but what else do you think that they achieve with all of this research?

Chris

The answer to that is I don't really know. There are one or two very, very good examples of firms that are extremely well run from a business point of view, from a research point of view, from a trading and execution point of view, who you would say is a level of genius brimming full of PhDs. I would speak of Winton for example. You would think of some others, which I won't name, who are sort of want-to-be Winton’s, who might come out of the blocks looking like geniuses, but soon stumble and fall on their face and just look a bit silly for all the semi-intellectual nonsense that they have spewed forth. Why I don't know. You'd have to ask them. I really don't know. Tamiso would say that this is an extremely easy business. There's nothing to this business, because you keep score in dollars and you get a printout every night. Are you up or are you down: a black number or a red number; a plus sign or a minus sign, this is not hard. Now you might have all sorts of reasons as to why the number isn't as big or there's a minus number or whatever, but it doesn't change the number. The same with prices for that matter. You see people talk about the price of the stocks or whatever it is, that's all very well and good but you might think the price is wrong and you often hear people say, well the price is wrong, we’ll have a view on that, you might think the price is wrong and you might be right - it might be high or low, it doesn't matter, the fact of the matter is it doesn't change the price. What do these PhDs do? I don't know. Maybe they argue with the price.

Niels

I wanted to go back and ask you about your models because you mention the fact that you are a trend follower, but you also mention the fact that volatility and increase in volatility and I want to make sure that I understand it correctly. Can increase in volatility completely cause an exit of that model, or is it a reduction of position size? The reason I ask that is because we know, of course that trend following as a general rules means that the trend actually has to change before you get out. So I just wanted to see whether there was a bit of a twist here when you talk about trend following that in fact it's trend following but it's with a chance at least to actually get out during the trend because of changes in volatility rather than a price change.

Chris

Yeah, the volatility is generally what takes us out. One of the problems that we've had over the last year, I suppose, 11/10, 10/11 months is volatility has been so low it's resulted in us being in all 16 trades all the time. Now the average holding period for a losing trade has remained the same, 6 days. The holding period for a winning trade has dropped from 16/18 days down to about 6 days as well. So that's the statistical definition of the trend followers nightmare which is getting whipsawed. Now over this last month we've noticed that we are now getting taken out of some of these trades. This is brilliant. This is excellent, because, now, for example, instead of having 16 trades on, we have 12 trades on. This shows to us that volatility is slowly returning, and this is an environment which is more acceptable and more amenable to our type of system. I can't speak for other people who describe themselves as trend following, but certainly from our point of view this is a positive development. So just to confirm, each of the 16 markets and therefore crosses, and therefore models, they work completely independently, so all 16 could be involved. So if it's to do with the Euro, there is no overriding exposure limit on that?

Chris

No, because each price stream has its own characteristics which vary from time to time. It really has its own stop and the stop is based upon volatility so the volatility of Euro/yen is entirely different than the volatility of Euro/dollar.

Niels

You've looked at obviously many different indicators over time I'm sure. I'm just curious, in general, if we are going to help the listeners and maybe the people who are aspiring to become a manager of funds at some point in their career, are there any indicators that you feel are more.....

Ending

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