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Christopher Uhl – Write it Down
6th June 2019 • My Worst Investment Ever Podcast • Andrew Stotz
00:00:00 00:26:43

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After graduating from college at potentially the worst time in recent history, Christopher Uhl began his decade-long career in the world of corporate finance. Having become a Certified Management Accountant (CMA) and yet feeling unfulfilled with corporate life, he decided to follow his passion for trading stocks and options and created 10minutestocktrader.com in 2017. There he teaches aspiring traders how to manage a stock and option portfolios in only a few minutes a day through his free courses and access to his completely open and transparent portfolio.

In 2018, Christopher created the How To Trade Stocks and Options podcast, a top-25 investing podcast that is broadcast daily and dedicated to teaching the tools, tips and tricks to help his growing audience trade faster and trade smarter. Finally, Christopher was honored in Redwood Media Group’s The Top 100 People in Finance magazine.

Christopher is following his passions and using the power of the internet to generate multiple streams of income while continuing to expand his influence and network. He holds a BBA and an MBA from Henderson State University in Arkansas, United States.

 

“There’s no reason to think that you’re smart enough to pick the bottom.You’ve got to be able to see what’s going on … and reverse the course if you have made the wrong choice. Be true to yourself, figure out that you are wrong, make adjustments and move on.”

Christopher Uhl

Worst investment ever

 

Confessions of a reformed contrarian investor

 

Christopher’s story is quite recent, starting in the northern hemisphere’s summer of 2018. He had his website 10minutestocktrader.com operating, and life was going well as he looked for trades. Historically, when he had worked with other traders, he had developed a contrarian trading style. So if someone said they liked the commodity “corn”, for example, and they were going to bet on the price of corn to go up (to go long), Chris would say: “You don’t know what you’re talking about, I’m going to go short on corn.” Meaning he would invest on the idea that corn’s price was going to fall.

 

So last summer, gold was in a clear downtrend. Chris called its fall so “glorious” that if anyone had traded on that trend, they would have made a lot of money. But Chris thought he knew better and this was where all his problems began. So as he was looking at gold he noticed it had a high implied volatility rank. He explained that when selling options, one of the things that to look for is a high implied volatility rank.

 

“You want to sell something where it’s priced like a Mercedes, and then buy it back when it’s priced like a Hyundai, right? But it’s the same security.”  

Christopher Uhl

 

Of entire account, investor puts 60% of his account into a long bet on gold

 

Based on its high implied volatility rank, he believed gold had found its bottom and he decided to go long. His contrarian attitude looked at the trend and he decided to go the opposite way, for no reason than it was his trading style (which he now says he has completely scrapped). He then went on seeking confirmation on Twitter, “a terrible idea” that he has also learned from, trying to find as much reinforcement as he could and trying to find other people who were also going long on gold. Percentage wise of his entire investment account, he had committed more than 60% into a long bet on gold and he admitted being excited about it.

Used Twitter to seek support for his very style-based trading thesis

 

Another error was that he accidentally pressed four as in four contracts on gold instead of two, but left it as is thinking it would be fine. He then scanned Twitter every day to make sure everyone in that sphere agreed with his gold position. All this comes in spite of undeniable evidence that gold is going down every day. Chris admits to overconfidence and thinking he knew better than the market when the market was saying loud and clear that its direction was down, down, down. Chris has told this story many times on his podcast How To Trade Stocks and Options but he’s never gone into much detail about it.

 

Gold drops 2% in a day while investor is on vacation

With all his contracts investing in the idea that he had picked the commodity’s bottom and that gold would go up from there, he went on vacation. While away, he received queries about how the trade was going, to which he replied: “Things are going great. Hitting all-time highs in the account and everything’s wonderful.” One day, he pulled up the trade on his phone and saw that gold had dropped a massive US$22 that day, a 2% move. Amid a sinking feeling, he asked himself the question sitting in the hotel in Orlando about to visit Disney World: “Oh, geez, did I just do something wrong?”

He finally cuts his losses after doubt murmurs for too long

Almost in denial, he admitted that the worst part of that was his inaction. He didn’t want to deal with his mistake because he was on vacation. But in the back of his mind, he was thinking: “What have I done?” When he and his family returned from Disney World, he watched as gold slid from $1,300 dollars an ounce, to 1,250. Then it fell to 1,200 and he continued to hold his position the entire time. It fell further to 1,180 and 1,160 and, at some point, he realized he had to stop because the bleeding had gone on for far too long and he cut his losses.

With nine years of trading experience, he blew around 60% of his portfolio

Chris had been trading for nine years at this point and he didn’t know why he just decided that he was ready to use 60% of his account, which he called way too much and then decided to look to Twitter in one of the standard types of errors found in investing, he pointed out was confirmation bias or recency bias. He noted he was on vacation, he let things go, and that rather than having a stop loss in place and cutting his losses amid clear indications that the market was right, he decided to let it play out, even though there was absolutely no reason for it to turn around.

It could have been a perfectly normal trade

In the end, he took what could have been an absolutely fine trade. He admitted that it could have been perfectly normal. He could have simply used his trading plan to put on a trade, see that it was not going his way, cut his loss, and move on, perhaps investing in the other direction. However, he took what could have been a small loss and let it turn into the biggest loser he has ever experienced. He also pointed out that it was a loser in which he lost a lot of sleep, and gained a lot of stress, all while he was supposed to be getting away from it all, on vacation with his family.

 

“At some point, I was like, ‘Oh, my God, I have to stop. This bleeding has gone on for far too long,’ and I cut my losses.”

Christopher Uhl

 

Some lessons

 

Find trading tools and a trading plan that best suit your personality. Chris learned the hard way that that he had been trading for years without a trading plan. Your plan must include asking yourself vital questions such as: What are my entry levels? What are my exit levels? Why am I entering? Why and when would I exit?

Objectively look at your plan, charts, information and circumstances. Then you can act beyond ego and personal bias when you really need to change course, and not be emotionally wrapped up in a trade.

Your plan must include having a set of risk parameters in place. But you have to stick to your own rules and hold yourself accountable when things change so that you can adapt with that change and not let things get out of control.

 

“There is no reason to think that you or me or anyone else can pick a bottom, you cannot just decide you will be the contrarian person … (and this applies from a) broader (view) than just the stock market. You can’t tell me when the recession is going to hit. You can’t tell me when Lehman Brothers is going to collapse.”

Christopher Uhl

 

Andrew’s takeaways

Be extra cautious about calling a trend reversal. Andrew’s PhD thesis was basically on this topic, that analysts have almost no ability at picking a trend reversal. His original title was: Analysts are only wrong by 25%. The research he did looked at all companies across the world, I at all analysts across the world, from a period 13 years previously. He found that analysts would generally forecast that a company would make say “125”, then the company would make 100. So they were optimistic by 25%. You hear a lot from analysts when they market flies, but those same analysts are nowhere to be found when they market crashes.

Having a plan is vitally important. Most serious professions never start doing anything without a plan. Even so, many people in the stock market, beginners and experienced people, just rush in with no plan at all and throw money at an idea.

 

Andrew’s six-step plan for making a sound investment.

During the time this podcast has been running, Andrew has learned a lot from guests, so much so that he has designed six steps to investing, the essentials of what makes sense to him from the lessons learned:

  1. Find the investment idea.
  2. Research the return. What’s the potential upside? Why am I so excited about this?
  3. Assess the risks.
  4. Create an investment plan
  5. Execute the plan. Andrew has learned from some guests that they had really good ideas, but that they missed the opportunity to exploit them.
  6. Monitor the progress of that plan. In any good plan, you have your exits as part of risk management, which is key.

But the main point of this plan is the separation of researching the return and assessing the risk. Andrew said he tries to teach myself to be Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Mr. Hyde gets excited about the return but at some point he has to calm down and turn back into Dr. Jekyll, stop the research on the return and turn the logical attention to carry out research on the risk.

“Investing in the stock market is … a roller coaster. And some people decide that they’re going to be right in the front car of the roller coaster, and people who are trading and really focused on the market. Man, it can drive you up and down like crazy.” 

Andrew Stotz  

 

Actionable advice

Take the time to make a comprehensive plan of entry and exit, and then hold yourself accountable to that plan.

 

No. 1 goal for next the 12 months

Chris has not one but nine goals and this is his plan for working to achieve them

  • He has a whiteboard beside his bed on which he has written down those goals.
  • Every night when he goes to bed, he reads his goals.
  • Every morning when he gets up, he reads his goals, as he’s getting ready for the day,
  • He gets a note card and writes down all nine of his goals.
  • He draws a line across the bottom of the goals.
  • He writes below each of the goals one action he could do in that day to move the nine goals closer to completion.
  • He keeps that note card in his pocket.
  • He refers to it during the day, looks at the actions and does one of them as soon as he can.

It just takes time and a portion of his day. All he needs to do is set aside that time. He has found this method has made the biggest change for him so far this in 2019. His goals more clear every day because his taking these actions daily to realize them.

 

Parting words

Life can be so much fun and give offer so many opportunities. Don’t be scared of the opportunities. Take them the opportunities while you are given them. But have a plan in case the opportunities don’t work out.

You can also check out Andrew’s books

 

Connect with Christopher Uhl

 

Connect with Andrew Stotz

Further reading mentioned

Jason Zweig (2007) Your Money and Your Brain: How the New Science of Neuroeconomics Can Help Make You Rich Kindle Edition

 

 

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