Articles

Home  >  Commodities  >  Articles  >  General Articles  >  Commodity Trading Blunders - My Early Days as a Novice Trader
Printer Friendly Version

Commodity Trading Blunders - My Early Days as a Novice Trader

Page: 1 2
by Thomas Cathey -  May 14, 2007
7.2 (from 25 ratings)

There is always "year one" for every commodity futures trader. I had mine and made every mistake a trader can make and more. Here's my story of how I stumbled into the lion's den, got gored a few times and even made some money. My hope is that beginners will read this and avoid some of the more obvious stuff. Here's to all new traders!

It all started in the spring of 1979. I was 28 years old. I was in the office of my new retail electronics company. I was going over some paperwork and got a call from a young and excited broker from Boston Commodities, or some name like that. He must have had the list of new businesses and was cold calling the small business owners.

I had no idea, but at the time sugar was in a major bull market trading at around 11 cents and destined to reach 45 cents later in the year. Gold, silver and copper were also making new highs. Bunker Hunt was cornering silver on its way to $50 an ounce. Gold was destined to hit $800. Anyway, this kid from Boston was on fire and told me I was missing the opportunity of a lifetime in sugar futures contracts. He wanted to mail me some hot news off the commodity news wire. He was looking for a $15,000 stake; a lot of money in the late 70’s. He said he would buy me four futures contracts of sugar. I didn’t know anything about commodities at this point, but told him to send over the info anyway.

When it arrived, it was the usual bullish hype about shortages, disease and reasons sugar had nowhere to go but up. Somehow he knew to call the moment I received it. He convinced me I could make an easy double or triple, so I agreed to send him $15K. Now, this part gets interesting. I hadn't opened an account or sent him money yet. He said he needed to put me on the phone with trading to lock in my four futures contracts for the next day. I was confused, but agreed.

The next thing I knew a guy answers the phone with a gruff voice and yells, “TRADING!!!” I said I didn’t know if I should be talking with him because I didn’t know what to order. I think they had me on a speaker-phone because I heard some guys laughing in the background. He said, “OK, you’re locked in for four Oct sugar commodity futures contracts on tomorrow’s open." I said, “OK, I guess,” and hung up. By the way, why is it the most aggressive brokers put on a gruff, hoarse voice act, like they’ve been in the trading pit yelling all day? I hear it all the time... ridiculous.

The kid commodity broker called right back to congratulate me on my smart decision. He sent me the commodity account forms by overnight service. I must admit I was excited. I had no idea about the commission rates, risk potential, position sizes… nothing! But I wanted in! I was the perfect sucker. When the account forms arrived I filled them out and was getting ready to send everything back.

By coincidence, I got a call from my CPA on a different matter. I explained to him about this new venture. Somehow he knew something was amiss and told me to let it go. I called the Boston Commodity Kid back and told him my CPA gave it thumbs-down. I had a hard time getting the kid off the phone. He called me spineless; he said I needed to be a real man, and I’d regret missing out. He also said I needed to stop acting like a woman. For the next three days his buddies took turns working me over trying to close the sale. Meanwhile I started reading about commodity futures trading. That was the first right move I made!

The final day the Boston Broker From Hell called, I was loaded for bear. I asked him how much he charged for commissions. He balked and tried to sidestep it. After a while I got him to admit they were taking $4,500 off the top to cover commissions. $4,500 chopped from a $15,000 account! That’s over 30%. He said that over a year's trading I would blow that much in futures commissions anyway. I later figured out they would put you into a futures contract position and let it sit until the margin call came or they rolled it into another trade. If the money grew, they would want another cut off the top. Gads. Needless to say, I insulted him and hung up.

A month later he called back and beat me up again. Sugar future contracts was now at 15 cents and I would have been up $16,000! Well, after their commission chop, make that $10,500. The kid was cockier than before and was really sounding smug. Now he wanted me to get into lumber futures.

But by this time I had read a commodity trading book called, “Trident - a trading strategy,” written by Lindsey. A young Larry Williams was one of the promoters for the seminars. It was a $1500 seminar. I didn’t attend - just read the book. I was now enlightened. I told the Kid from Boston, “the swing objective of sugar is 18 cents.” I asked him why I needed to pay his $4,500 commissions when I had all the answers... HA! He realized I was a lost cause and said good bye for good.

As a fitting epitaph, I understand the CFTC shut them down and they were fined for violations years later. I guess I dodged a commission bullet. Despite it all, I might have lucked out and made money in this great sugar bull market. Commodity bull markets can often forgive stupid blunders and mistakes along the way. We can be sloppy as heck and still do well at times, until the bull party ends.

Reading can be a powerful thing, especially with today’s wonderful internet. Be fully informed before you make a decision – especially if you're new to the game. Just because firms and commodity brokers are registered with the NFA and CFTC doesn't mean a few won’t try to take advantage of you.

The modern day version is the so called, “$200 commission commodity houses.” They usually put your entire $5,000 account into five $800 options at a $250 commission each. To demonstrate how heavy these expenses are, if you broke even with entry and exit price on FOUR successive trades, your account would be wiped out from option commissions alone. FOUR trades (five options each trade) equal $5,000 in commissions. Yikes! Then there's the offshore Forex option scams. Please be careful out there.

Page: 1 2
» page 2




Copyright © 2001-2008 Trade2Win Ltd.