If you are
looking at purchasing or leasing a trading system, or looking at following a publisher's trading signals, a legitimate
question to ask the vendor is "do you trade this with your own money?"
While
the answer to this question can be illuminating, and assuming you get a truthful answer, is it really important if the vendor
trades with his own money?
For 100% mechanical systems, I'd say absolutely yes - the vendor
should trade that system with real money, and should be able to prove it via independent accounting audits, brokerage statements
or third party verified results. Asking for statements might work, but watch out - they can be easily Photoshopped.
I'd be seriously concerned if a vendor didn't trade a 100% mechanical system with real money. After all, if
the system is so good, why wouldn't he or she trade it with real money?
But, there
could be good reasons why a vendor would not trade a 100% mechanical system. For example, maybe the large capital requirements
put it out of the vendor's reach. Or, maybe the system requires a fast internet connection, and the vendor lives
in a dial up area.
At the same time, however, a vendor who does not trade a 100% mechanical
system raises many red flags. Is it because the results are unobtainable in real life? That could be the case
for a scalping system. Or, maybe the vendor has no trading capital because almost every previous system he traded with
real money failed. That is true more than you'd like to think.
For
discretionary systems (ones where some or all of the decisions are made by the vendor, not by a set of definable computer
instructions), I'm not as convinced, and I'll tell you why. The emotions of making and losing real money can very
easily cloud one's judgment. I've seen good discretionary traders go "bonkers" when something terribly good
or terribly bad happens. When real money is on the line, some people become reckless (trading like crazy), and some become
timid (not trading at all). Maybe they would have made better decisions if their real money wasn't at stake. Maybe they
would have made better decisions - who knows?
What I would recommend if you are interested
in a discretionary system is to ask the following questions:
A. Do
you trade this with real money (and how much)?
If answer to A is yes:
B.
What, if anything do you do to control your emotions while trading? Do you work with a trading coach? Do you think emotions
are important?
If answer to A is no:
C. What is preventing
you from trading with your own money?
These questions should help you get in the discretionary
trader's head, and then you can make a better decision.
There are many questions
you should ask before buying any type of trading advice, be it a computer program, "black box" system or trading
signals. The question "do you trade this with your own money?" is worth asking, and should definitely be a
part of your due diligence investigation.