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TTU80: Managing Your Emotional Capital ft. Mike Coleman of RCMA Asset Managementz – 2of2
20th April 2015 • Top Traders Unplugged • Niels Kaastrup-Larsen
00:00:00 01:04:25

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In the second part of our conversation with Mike Coleman, we explore the different commodity markets and how RCMA trades them, and look back at the drawdowns that Mike has gone through and what he has learned from them. We discuss risk, idea generation, and what it takes to build a successful firm.

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In This Episode, You’ll Learn:

  • How correlation plays an important role in what Mike does.
  • What he thinks of the current oil market and the outlook for oil.
  • How they use relative value trading and what that is.
  • What process they have for getting an idea into an actual position.
  • How they have a different relationship between trader and analyst than other firms do.
  • How he defines risk and how he looks at risk management.
  • What he has learned from the drawdowns he has gone through.
  • How to get the investor’s confidence in the manager to a place where they don’t drop out at the worst time.
  • Why regulatory risk is something that keeps him up at night.
  • How his strategy has changed over time.
  • If it’s possible to backtest any part of his strategy.
  • What the typical investor in his firm looks like.
  • What location means for a business like Mike’s.

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Transcripts

Niels

en you said that difficult in:

Mike

So, correlation plays a big role in risk because we're running a VAR model. So to the extent that things are getting more or less correlated than a VAR model would be allowing us more risk or less risk. On a more macro level, a challenge always for us, is how do you weight the fundamental analysis against the…

Niels

Statistical side.

Mike

Well, against technicals, and against macro drivers. So we're actually just seeing a great example of it in the petroleum market. So, in the last week petroleum prices, they rallied from $48 to $54 and have dropped back to $50. And fundamentally things have got worse.

Niels

Explain that.

Mike

So, during the course of last week we had US inventories continue to build to levels that have never been seen before. You've had the Saudi Arabian's announce that they've just pumped more oil that they've ever pumped in a month before at 10.3 million barrels a day. You've got the prospect of Iranian production coming back. Yet for some reason investors at the end of last week chose to pick on one slender little piece of potentially good news: that week on week US onshore oil production had fallen for the first time since January by 50,000 barrels a day or something and triggered a short-covering rally that moved the market 10% in 3 days.

Niels

How do you make sense of that? Because if you were systematic, you wouldn't care about why these things were happening. You wouldn't have to worry about it, you'd just say, "Okay, the price is up so you either get stopped out, or you stay with your position, or you reduce it. You don't worry about this." But…

Mike

So if you like, yes, we do a combination of those with the added human element that we worry about it.

Niels

Yeah, exactly.

Mike

So that's a great point about sometimes the markets are driven mostly by fundamentals; sometimes they're driven more by flow. So the art of what we do is to handicap the one against the other. Basically if we have a strong fundamental view and we think that short term the market is behaving, from our point of view, rationally then we might be more inclined to stick with the position.

Niels

Yeah. If you don't mind me asking because it's such a great example, everybody knows and follows, I guess, oil at the moment. Do you mind sharing how you're playing oil at the moment, sort of in general? But also given these kind of counter rallies we see. What do you think about oil? What do you make of all this at the moment?

Mike

Well really since the summer of last year, we've been generally on the bear side of the oil market because fundamentally big surpluses were developing. The OPEC meeting was a real game changer. It essentially meant that the Saudis were going to let the market take care of the price, and, therefore, that would mean prices won't be $80 or $90, prices will be $40 or $50. And we have the strong down move from October through to mid-January. Since mid-January we've had a more two-way market with some quite sharp rallies, and the market's now arguing if you like, is the bottom in?

ved similarly to today was in:

What's been different this time is because investors who wouldn't normally be able to trade commodity futures had an easy vehicle. To take a view on oil prices, you had a tremendous amount of bargain hunting come into the market, which probably came in at too high of a level, or too early. It stopped the price going as low as fundamentals say that the price should go. So, the net results of that is maybe there's enough money being thrown at it, that a bottom is being created here. However, that will come at the cost of future oil prices because the price hasn't moved low enough to change future production. So, a lot of those canceled drill rigs might well be not canceled. So, it's an interesting... a more equity-like dynamic, so commodity supply-demand analysis and the behavior of commodity markets historically, has been backward looking and reactive. It hasn't really been forward looking, whereas equity markets, people look further forward. So there's a limit to which a commodity can look forward because commodities need to be stored, and they're real, and so on. But, it definitely creates a different dynamic.

Niels

Yeah, you know, I think often you think about discretionary traders and… I guess discretionary traders have often become the stars. Meaning systematic firms, they rarely make it on the cover of the big papers, but a discretionary trader, someone making a big call like Paulson did on US housing, and so on and so forth. They take a lot of sort of the limelight. Some people suspect that discretionary traders in some ways, also make the use of models, like a simple trend following model, would help in many situations to guide discretionary bets, and then you could trade around this. I mean, do you also make use of basic trend following models to guide you as to where the price is heading? Or do you not look at that at all?

Mike

We will consider technical factors on timing, and on setting stop losses or profit targets.

Niels

But technical analysis to me is a little bit different from trend following models…

Mike

We do not use systematic models to guide.

Niels

Right, so more looking at charts?

Mike

Yeah, so we look at charts, and we say, "Okay?" Depending on what the… we sort of refer to it as voodoo science, like we're there with our voodoo dolls as well from time to time. But, you know, what's the fib in actual retracement? You know, where have the moving averages crossed? And so on and so forth. Actually it's a thing we've discussed down the years is, should we make use of systematic models at least to sort of understand the dynamic of what's going on with other people.

Niels

Sure, sure, but the jury is still out, I guess? Or?

Mike

Well, the issue a little bit is you have to be true to your style. If you start trying to overlay your fundamental with a systematic, you run the risk of not really trusting either, and so we tend to… Our competitive advantage our strength is our fundamental analysis, and we'll bet on that, and we'll use our risk process to keep us from losing too much money if either we're wrong, or the market doesn't… usually, we're not wrong, we're either in too early or stay too late.

Niels

Sure, sure. Just a quick question on the markets you trade. You trade a lot of different commodities, but I did notice that you don't trade precious metals. Why is that?

Mike

We don't trade base metals either; it's a function of a need to have a network and understanding. So, I'm a rubber trader who became a petroleum trader; Doug's a grain trader who became a petroleum trader. We don’t have the networks.

Niels

That's very simple; that's very simple. Now, I wanted to round off the trading strategies as a whole. We talked about the directional side and so on and so forth. Maybe you could just enlighten us a little bit about the relative value side. You have the intra-commodity types trading, and you have the inter-commodity trading, can you give some examples for people who may not really understand what that means? What are these kinds of strategies that you employ?

Mike

g and then beginning in about:

First of all off the Canadian tar sands, and then more laterally off the US shale, suddenly you started to overwhelm the delivery logistics in Cushing, which is the delivery point from WTI. The markets diverged because the conditions that had lead to mean reversion didn't exist anymore. That spread went all the way to -25, so that's by way of preamble. So then we sort of break the world down into, as you say, several different types of generic relative value trades. First one is; you said intra-commodity which is calendar spreads. So, same commodity, same market, different place on the time curve.

Niels

So July corn versus December corn for example?

Mike

Yeah, and that's the sort of bread and butter of commodity markets, so the calendar spread and the care we charge, it's very deeply fundamental. Generally oversupplied markets are in contango, generally undersupplied markets are in backwardation, and the severity of the contango and the backwardation are very closely correlated to the level of oversupply or level of undersupply. Therefore, it tends actually to go quite closely with the directional to the extent that long the near, short the forward, or as bond traders would say, a curve tightener. It's called a bull spread. Short the near and long the forward, or a curve steepener is called the bear spread. Again, that's only 7 times out of 10, not 100 out of 10. Then the next broad category is inter-commodity which are different things but closely related in our case. So, the crack spreads, gasoline against crude oil, heating oil against crude oil, the products against themselves, so gasoline against heating oil. So, you've got a set of relationships around refining economics. By analogy, if you crush a soybean you get soybean oil, and soybean meal, and so you have a crush spread, where you trade soybean against its products. Then you have a… you can think about sort of supply site substitutions. So, are you going to use WTI or Brent? Are you going to use sweet crude or sour crude? Rather than cracking crude oil, are you going to crack fuel oil? If you're generating power, are you going to burn nat gas or are you going to burn coal? And then there are sort of consumption supply economics, robusta coffee, arabica coffee, so when Nestle is making the gold blend, how much cheaper robusta are they going to blend in with expensive arabica? Is a vegetable oil maker going to use more palm oil or more soybean oil? So there's a whole range of relationships in the inter-commodity space.

Niels

Sure, and of all the strategies that you run, are they any that you would say are more core? Where you put more risk budgeting towards…?

Mike

We're very opportunistic. It's the way the cookie crumbles. Sometimes markets… you know, crude oil in December and January, there was no point being relative value. It was all about that the price couldn't be $80 or $90 anymore; it needs to be something under $50. Then there were other times when there isn't particularly a strong directional move, and then it's more about relative value. I was just doing some work actually, over the life of the fund, approximately 55% of our return has come from directional. Last year it was 58% from directional, so last year was a bit more of a directional year than others.

Niels

Okay, sure, sure. Talk to me a little bit about sort of the trade idea generation to implementation into the portfolio. What's the typical process for something like that? I know you're opportunistic, so obviously I'm sure ideas could come and go. What's a typical process you have to go through in order to get an idea into an actual position?

Mike

Ours is very simple, because we have a risk committee. The risk committee meets once a week and the traders present their current positions and their ideas, and the risk committee decides how much risk it's allocating to each sector and each trader. Then it's up to the trader to decide how he's implementing that. We don't have an investment committee that pre-approves trade ideas. So, the trader is given his risk budget, and within his risk budget and his mandated sphere of operation, it's his call. Then he obviously reports it back and gives us his thinking. So, we don't sit there and say, "No, we think that's a terrible idea, don't do it."

So, that's very… and that's the function of us being a small team, we know each other very well. So, basically what each trader is doing is he is following the commodities that he's responsible for, and his primary responsibility is to find the best ideas. The world we grew up in is very different from let's say the classic capital markets model, banking model, where you have analysts feeding traders with ideas, and the traders, essentially being tactical executors of analyst generated ideas. In the model that we grew up in, to the extent that we're even analysts at all, their job was to help the trader in his research. So, always the expectation was that as the trader, you're primarily responsible for your idea generation. In a way, we find it a little bit bazaar. Why would a trader with 30 year’s experience take guidance from a 5 year analyst?

Niels

Sure.

Mike

We'll take ideas from a 5 year analyst, so it's a bit back to front, in our way of thinking.

Niels

So the traders obviously have a lot of room to do what they feel is right. So the question I have here is, are the traders… and I'm not entirely sure how many on your team you regard as…

Mike

Three.

Niels

Okay, so are they very different types of traders? I know they trade different markets, but are they also different in their style of trading?

Mike

Yes, everybody has individual styles. Some people are naturally more relative value while other people are more directional. For instance in my trading career, I'm much more of a relative value trader. I'm not a great directional trader. Doug, my partner, is a very strong directional trader. Typically somebody will be one or the other. It's very rare to find somebody who's… I guess to use a soccer analogy, you know, two footed players are quite rare, yeah?

Niels

Sure, no that's very true.

Mike

So part of the thing we're looking for, at the minute... It's a small trading team, but always if we were adding to the trading team, there'd be balanced criteria around what's the style of the guy we're adding? Will he complement and fill the gap we currently have. If we think that the team at the minute is a bit more relative value than it is directional, maybe we need to add a guy who's stronger directionally. That would become a factor at team expansion time.

Niels

In managing the sort of risk side (maybe jumping a little bit here) but just in managing that, do the traders have specific stop losses that when they put on a trade, or… ?

Mike

No, no, so we don't require stop losses on trade initiation. So, our whole risk management process is really about managing the whole portfolio. We start to require stop losses when the whole portfolio gets into drawdown… is hitting drawdown triggers. Then we require the traders to get very specific on, what are you cutting? What do you want to hold? Where are you cutting?

Niels

Sure. Now, you mentioned that you were involved in the risk management side. So I just wanted to jump to that area and just ask you, in general, how do you define risk? Is it just the VAR that for you is your measure of risk? Or are there any other types of risks that you look at?

Mike

We have a sort trade parity process, so we have our VAR model. To catch the tail in the VAR, we run a stress test, and a stress model. Then we have our P&L de-risking triggers. So, P&L trumps stress and VAR; stress trumps VAR, if that makes sense?

Niels

Right, can you say that again?

Mike: So P&L overwrites everything. So, if we're losing more than 5% for the week, or more than 5% from high water, we are cutting risk even if we're only 50% invested against our VAR and our stress tests. Secondly the stress test overrides the VAR, so we have a stress limit of 10%. So, it's conceivable, and it does happen where you might have a day where the VAR against our VAR model was only 85% invested, but against our stress model was 11%. In that case, we would cut risk. We will tolerate being over VAR, so as long as P&L and stress are okay, we might allow the VAR to go over target rather than to arbitrarily take profit on a position or reduce the position.

Niels

Sure, sure. Now, in the systematic space, and I'm just curious how that translates into your world, a lot of people focus on how many winning trades do we have compared to how many losing trades. Do you even know that, and do you follow that from a perspective?

Mike

We follow it at the strategy level. So, not each individual buy and sell, but each individual… so every trade we do goes into a strategy, and every strategy is part of a theme. So let's say a theme might be that we are bearish petroleum. That then might be expressed in that we are bear spread the calendar, we are directionally short, and we're short gasoline, long heating oil, because it's winter and heating oil demands relatively better than gasoline. So, that would all be thematically, a big part of that theme is that we're bearish oil prices. Then the individual strategies then are various ways of expressing that. We have a win to loss ratio over the life of the fund of about; I want to say 7 out of 10?

Niels

Wow, that's high.

Mike

agement is very important. In:

Niels

Okay.

Speaking about those periods, you mentioned it, it kind of drives me into the next sort of area that I just wanted to touch upon, which is drawdowns in general. Not so much the specific drawdowns, but really more about what do you learn? What do you take away from the drawdowns you've had over the years? And what have you perhaps changed as a consequence of being in a drawdown?

Mike

a hole, stop digging. So, in:

Niels

Be more aggressive in your cutting of risk.

Mike

Yeah. So we, after:

Niels

Sure, sure, and I also guess we talked a little bit about it, but I mean I also guess emotionally dealing with it, I guess that's something you learned from I guess?

Mike

Well again it's a learning lesson. It's something we talk about a lot, the idea that in addition to protecting and preserving your physical capital, it's also the concept of emotional capital. Everybody's got different levels of emotional capital to spend and how quickly they spend it, but as a general rule you don't want to be in a position where your emotions are clouding your judgment. We talk a lot about, does it feel like a struggle? Does it feel like we're fighting the market? And a sort of general learning over the years has been if it feels like a struggle if it feels like you're fighting, you should probably scale down or get out.

The beauty of running a fund relative to a physical commodity book is that in the fund you're in control of when you take risk. You are deciding each day do I want to take this risk, or don't I? In a physical business, you get the risk given to you by your need to maintain your customer. You need to maintain market share both with customers and producers. So, a big part of what… in my role as risk manager is to keep reminding the traders of that. You're in control. If it feels too much like hard work today, don't fight it. There will be other opportunities next week or the week after. Don't get sucked into a war of attrition that you don't need to fight.

Niels

Why do you think… clearly we as managers feel the emotional side of drawdowns, but something inside us I guess makes us overcome these periods and believe that over time if the strategy is sound it will come back. And you know, for many, many, many people it can be said that they always come out of their drawdown. If we just take the analogy to the trend following space, how often have we heard that trend following is dead just because it's in a drawdown, and rightly... So then a year later it's at a new peak. So, why do you think it is so difficult to convey this to investors? Because what we've seen, and what you've seen as well is they always tend to jump ship at the worst possible time.

Mike

Well I think again, it's asymmetry of knowledge. So, they don't see what you're doing day to day. They can't have the same confidence in you as you have in yourself. Then I think that there is that most of the people managing money, it's not their own money. They have a future responsibility to somebody else, and, therefore, that overrides… The decision becomes, "Do I stick with a merchant commodity fund because I'm pre-convinced (Mike and Doug) haven't suddenly become stupid, that they aren't blowing the fund up because they've had a nervous breakdown or something. Therefore I'm probably sticking with them and trusting that they'll work their way through this. But the consequence is if I do that I might lose my job."

Niels

Sure sure, no no, I mean this is the thing. I mean it takes years of data and analysis for people to become convinced and comfortable with an investment strategy, but it only takes a few months of bad performance for them to jump ship.

Mike

Again which is, you can sort of… you understand I guess why many people when they get to a certain size deliberately dial the risk down, because why take that chance?

Niels

Sure, sure. Have you ever been tempted to do that?

Mike

No, because philosophically again, you have to be true to your own process and style. So from our point of view we wouldn't give money to a commodity strategy personally for a bond plus return. Commodities are intrinsically very volatile, and therefore ideally the allocation that's coming to you should be from the higher risk seeking part of somebody's portfolio. It shouldn't be a base load to a normal portfolio.

Niels

No, that's very true. Now, last question on risk. What keeps you awake at night Mike? Is there anything when you look at the whole universe of different types of risks that you think more about… where you say, "Hmm, I wouldn't…"

Mike

Regulatory compliance. So in my case I spent 32 years living with market risk, that's the sea we swim in, that's the life we've chosen, and by definition if you've been… You know the first 5 years sorts out people who are comfortable living with market risk from people who aren't. So if you're still doing it after 15-25 years, then you're comfortable with market risk. Yes, you know that you're not going to win every time, that unexpected stuff is going to happen, but that's the life you've chosen. You've got your risk management processes to take care of that, and so on and so forth. Regulatory risk is becoming… that's something where you fill the form in wrong, and you might get a big fine. That's a whole different arena.

Niels

No, yeah that's very true. I wanted to jump to another area that I don't know exactly how it plays out in your business, so maybe there isn't so much to talk about, but maybe there is? And it's just research in general. I mean do you as a business, do you have people who do research? Meaning, and the best example I can think of is that as things change, whether it be China playing a bigger role, whether it be technology as a whole. I mean do some of these strategies that you employ, do they also change and therefore you need to kind of do separate research in order to keep up or learn new things?

Mike

I think, let's say that in the business of analyzing commodity fundamentals, to the extent that changes. It changes with shifts and supply in demand patterns. So, it's become… having good intelligence in South America has become much more important in the last 10 years than it was previously as Brazil, Paraguay and Argentina have become much bigger soybean producers. Therefore, where you focus your research efforts, where you focus your networks that evolve over time, and how that information is collected changes over time. So, for instance in petroleum now, you have this company Genscape that uses helicopters and infrared cameras to see inside oil tanks, so you can see how full the tanks are in Cushing and so on.

We don't view ourselves as a research-driven organization, so we buy in a lot of our research. What we think our competitor's advantage is, is in what does it mean? So, typically what will happen is, let's say we're looking at the next year's US soybean crop. Typically at the beginning of the growing season you'll start with a range of expectations around what the crop size is going to be. As the growing season goes on, those expectations will narrow and change. What we're trying to do is basically say, "Well okay, here's what the market's pricing at the moment, and do we think the consensus is right?" If the consensus is wrong… So if the bean yield isn't 43 but it's 40, what does that mean for the price? So, we're trying to come up with where we think the yield is actually going to be and what does that mean on price? We're not sending agronomists into the fields in Iowa to count the pods or anything, and that's not our competitive advantage.

e talk to macroeconomists. In:

Niels

Sure, sure. Are there any of your strategies that can be backtested? I mean are there any…?

Mike

No. Well, I shouldn't say no. I'm saying no because we are non-quantitative guys! So, actually you could do regression analysis on… and lots of people do, I was just reading a piece of research today that was looking at the level of contango in WTI time curve with the stocks, you know with the days of cover that's in inventory. So, people do that, and they say, "Well okay, today we've got 430 million barrels." Which is… you know the US consumes 20 million barrels a day, so we've got 20 odd days of cover, and so that's quite high, and therefore plotting on this linear regression… you know the time curve should be 150, not 130. So there are people who do that analysis; we don't.

Niels

No, no, that's fine, that's fine. I wanted to ask you just a couple of questions on the business side if I can call it that. And that is just to better understand, so what's the typical investor in your fund? What do they look like? Obviously you're somewhat unique in the bigger space, and you can go back in time and look at it.

Mike

Yeah, so today is not represented.

Niels

Sure.

Mike

So let's say over the period:

Niels

Another question I get from listeners probably more frequently now. First of all in your fund, I'm not even sure what the margin to equity is, but I imagine that you have quite an amount of spare cash if you're using futures? What do you do with your cash today in a world of zero interest rates and potential more risk with governments and their ability to repay an ever growing debt?

Mike

is not worth it. So, prior to:

Niels

Sure. I mean you mentioned Singapore, which is something I just wanted to ask you about. Location freedom in our business is obviously very strong. You're based in Singapore; you have some presence in London as well, but what does location mean for a business like you now that it's become fund management rather than physical trading of commodities? And let's disregard the fact that you also have a physical trading business.

Mike

Yeah, so Singapore is probably still the best place to run a business. So in terms of the tax regime, the relative cost of quality office space, availability of talented people, so on and so forth. Singapore is a fantastic place to run a business. In terms of the strategy, we trade it's a great place to trade things like rubber and palm oil. It's a great place to get a good sense of the pulse of what's going on in China or in India. It's a terrible place to be time zone wise for trading grains and petroleum, and therefore we've always split the trading team between Singapore and Europe. In terms of fundraising, Singapore is still weaker than London or New York. So it is easier for people to raise money in Europe than it is sitting in Asia.

Niels

Yeah, but at your peak days, what was the geographical distribution of assets actually?

Mike

It was about 75% Europe, about 20%... 70-75% Europe, 15-20% Asia, and the balance of some South America, some Cayman.

Niels

Okay, before we go to the last section, I wanted to ask you, I mean you've obviously been in many, many different types of due diligence situations, whether it be conference calls or meetings. With a strategy like yours, what do you think that potential investors fail to focus on or should be focusing on when they come and want to really drill down to get a handle on you, and your strategy, and so on?

Mike

Well I think we've always had the challenge, and it's a bit like you prefaced our conversation with: the world of commodities and fundamental approaches to commodity trading are not areas most general investors are familiar with. So, when an investor comes in to do due diligence on an equity long-short fund or a bond fund. He's very comfortable; he understands what the manager's doing. When he comes in to see us for the first time, we have to try and explain to him what we're doing and does he have the time and the inclination for that process? We would say that a key part is how does the risk process work? Because you are trading leverage, and why it's not scary. Commodities scare people because of their volatility. So, what we're trying to get over is, here's our approach, here's our risk process, and this should give you more comfort around what we're doing.

Niels

Now the last section Mike, that I wanted to talk to you about is, I call it general and fun. It's a little bit just to get people to better know you, maybe a little bit better and get some good advice from your side as well. But I wanted to ask a question initially, we talked about a little bit why you, during the difficult time, kept going. You didn't want to leave the business at the time of a drawdown, and so on and so forth. Now, today you're at a new peak in terms of performance, so you've done and delivered what was one of the driving forces of staying in the game. But drives you today? What motivates you to continue to do what you do at this time?

Mike

Well we have a vision of a… we want to build a commodity franchise that encompasses a commodity asset management business, but we also have a physical trading business. There's a great synergy between those businesses, and so the physical business can give the… and does give the fund business great insights into what's... that visibility and into real time supply in demand, and so on and so forth. A successful fund management business with a decent amount of assets is a great free cash flow generator. That free cash flow can help build a physical business. So, there's a… from our point of view we want to grow both pillars of this commodity franchise. It's mutually reinforcing.

Niels

Sure, and in doing that… I guess at some point succession planning must come into the conversation with you and Doug. I mean are you thinking about that?

Mike

ement business prior to March:

Niels

In your career, I mean you said earlier on that you like laying down on the couch reading books. Which books would you recommend people to read? Either to improve them as an investor or a trader or just as a businessman?

Mike

I don't read! My reading is… It's interesting, as you know Singapore just went through the loss of its founding father, Lee Kuan Yew, and there was a little piece that caught my eye, which is very typical as Lee Kuan Yew as a man, where he said when his wife of many years was incapacitated and so on, that he would… she'd studied English literature, and he would read to her, her favorite books, Jane Austin, and so on. But he said for himself personally, he'd never waste time reading a novel. The only thing he read were non-fiction that could… that he could profitably use in the business of governing Singapore. I'm the complete opposite, I read for pleasure! My great passion is military history, so I love reading military history books, and I read novels for relaxation. For military history, I think I talk a lot, and the guys sometimes look at me funny, but the concept of time and space, and defense and death. So give yourself time and space, don't get backed into a corner. So I'd always recommend to people read those very famous British military strategist of the interwar period, a guy called Liddell Heart, Basil Liddell Hart. He developed the earliest theories of combined… how to use tanks basically. The British, not being honored in his own land, the British took no notice but Guderian and Rommel read Little Heart. So, the blitzkrieg was actually conceptually developed by a British military strategist! So, more broadly I actually found quite useful, I read several years ago, some books on the sort of physiology of traders by a guy called Daniel Levy, which I thought were very useful. They were about the importance of preserving emotional capital and so on.

Niels

Sure, sure. With that interest in terms of sort of a military strategy, I think on your next flight back to Europe, which I think is not so far away, if you haven't seen it already I'll recommend the Imitation Game which is obviously about how the British broke the enigma code of…

Mike

I've seen that!

On a more broad topic, many traders tend to be very mono-focused types of individuals. I've always thought that it is important to have a hint of land as people say, not to be just your job. So, I do enjoy reading fiction and so on.

Niels

Sure, sure. Now I know you mentioned earlier that you have children who are grown up now, but if you could pass on just one of your own skills to your children, what would that be and why?

Mike

They'd tell you lots of my weaknesses! I think intellectual robustness.

Niels

Mhm, what does that mean?

Mike

So the ability to argue, counter argue and not be crushed or to be able to be beaten in an argument and to come back and just… I guess just flexibility… I'm not articulating that very well.

Niels

No, no that's absolutely fine. Now, can you tell me a fun fact about yourself Mike? Something that even people who know you don't perhaps really know about you?

Mike

Well one, well you've met me personally so this probably makes more sense to people who've never met me in person. So to see me, you'll get a sense of this because, for those of your listeners who don't know me, I'm a big guy. I was a rugby player, and I look like a former rugby player. I once, in my high school days, amongst my other extracurricular activities, I was the lead Obo player in the school orchestra.

Niels

Wow, that I wouldn't have expected!

Mike

So that's normally one that gets people laughing. I was also an altar boy until I was 18.

Niels

Ah okay, there we are! Now I asked earlier about one of the investors who come to see you, potential investors who come to see you, what do they miss in terms of asking you the right questions? So I have to turn that on myself as we wrap up as well. To give you justice, and that is, what have I missed in our conversation today? What are the things that we should also make sure we touch on if anything, before we end our conversation? To make sure we do justice to you and your firm?

Mike

I think that 2 hours and 9, coming to 10 minutes, I think I've only myself to blame if there's nothing we've touched on that's… so I think we've come quite along.

Niels

Okay, great stuff. Now, before we do finish our conversation, can you tell us where the listeners can learn more about you? What's the best way to get in touch and learn more about RCMA?

Mike

Either contact myself, or my colleague Yiquian for all marketing and investor relationships handled out of Singapore.

Niels

Sure, great, and we will of course, on the TOPTRADERSUNPLUGGED.COM, and we'll put all the details for that. So I think there's only one thing left for me to say and that is to thank you Mike for your time! It's been a great conversation! I really appreciate your transparency and your willingness to share all of this experience. That has been very unique and a big learning curve for me as well. As I said, the listeners can find all the details on your firm and our conversation today in the show notes on TOPTRADERSUNPLUGGED.COM. So I hope Mike, that we'll be able to connect at a later date and get an update on all the great work you're doing, and I wish you and your firm all the best!

Mike

Thank you very much Niels!

Niels

All the best, take care.

Mike

Okay, bye bye.

Ending

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