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  • I'll have you played a bit of parka.

  • Uh, something you do have.

  • Seriously?

  • Not really.

  • Like, I usually just have a few beers and play.

  • Uh, you know, like, I know how to play.

  • Yeah, Robin's out like, particularly good, but yeah, um, that's where all the table not know the high roller table.

  • Coleman.

  • So before we get into any of the trading stuff, let's chat a bit about what you were doing before hand leading up to that.

  • Because I know some of things you were doing where I think very interesting.

  • And it says a lot about your character.

  • I don't recall if it was you were running the yogurt shop before year, So I ran. 00:00:55.580 --> 00:01:0.030 I guess toe everyone so out of high school, actually wanted to be a doctor, right? 00:01:0.270 --> 00:01:1.490 What sort of doctor? 00:01:1.630 --> 00:01:2.910 I hadn't really decided. 00:01:2.910 --> 00:01:10.290 I just wanted to do medicine is something that interested May and I got, like, the marks that I needed to in, like this one aspect.

  • But then the ah, like university entrance thing.

  • I didn't get in, like with the I think it's called a you Matt or something.

  • I just just missed out on getting the marks there.

  • So I went toe university and some like, I guess, separate course.

  • I think it was like diagnostic radiography or something like that.

  • And then realize that had no clue.

  • Look what physics waas.

  • So I dropped out of that within, like, four weeks and then Ah, I actually started working at the casino at Star City.

  • Yeah, um and then I figured out that waking up to a M driving into the casino toe work for eight hours wasn't my thing either.

  • So was that what shift was it?

  • Yeah, s 04 I am to midday was my shift, and we're into midday rush. 00:01:58.890 --> 00:02:1.720 If you don't have to wake up in, like, 2 a.m. And then I'd get home. 00:02:1.720 --> 00:02:6.400 Like having micro sleeps behind the well heeled almost on, then sleep. 00:02:6.400 --> 00:02:7.770 And, you know, it was just really bad. 00:02:7.770 --> 00:02:11.690 Like special is a 19 18 year old like you have no social life.

  • So yeah, um, get that away.

  • And then I was selling cars for a bit, and then I got a job, but like a that's what you call a boutique stockbroking firm.

  • Um, did that for a little while.

  • And then once I quit there, I started a business with one of my mates.

  • Um, it was like a We just start our own frozen yogurt shop.

  • So we thought that might be the next big thing that turned out to be a fad.

  • Yeah.

  • Just going back to the dealing at the roulette table.

  • Yeah.

  • What was that like, like, was it bit of an eye opener, I imagine.

  • Like those people who work behind the at the tables in the casinos, you know, they must say some shit.

  • Yeah.

  • I mean, you know, it's it's kind of depressing because no one's winning, right?

  • You like sweeping away of runs chips, and they just, like, hate you.

  • Yeah. 00:02:59.840 --> 00:03:2.600 So, yeah, it wasn't like the greatest atmosphere. 00:03:2.600 --> 00:03:5.190 Plus, you know, there's no clocks. 00:03:5.190 --> 00:03:6.480 You don't really know what's going on. 00:03:6.530 --> 00:03:16.410 The only good thing about bizarre ever like you worked for one hour and then you got, like, 15 minutes a break, and I was free food in there, Like back of house area.

  • So that was one of the perks, but right, Yeah.

  • Once the food gets old, Yeah.

  • Yeah, it's It's good for about a week.

  • Yeah, you're Cohen.

  • So after that, you went thio selling cars, selling cars?

  • Yeah.

  • How did that work?

  • We car salesman, and we don't know anything else.

  • Yeah, his car salesman.

  • So I kind of had a have always had an interesting cars.

  • I used to go with my dad to like Battiston got all those races and stuff.

  • So I guess selling cause, like, made sense to me.

  • Um, I was pretty out of it.

  • Yeah, I was pretty good at it.

  • Like it's selling stuff, huh?

  • What's that?

  • Cars were selling Are selling Kay across a jape and Dodge, huh? 00:03:57.220 --> 00:04:0.470 I guess back in those days, selling case wasn't the easiest Sell. 00:04:0.870 --> 00:04:3.250 I think I got a bit of a better reputation now. 00:04:3.250 --> 00:04:7.220 The Yeah, and having to do that for think was about a year. 00:04:7.350 --> 00:04:8.410 Maybe I can. 00:04:8.420 --> 00:04:10.350 Yet And then she went from there.

  • And you did the frozen yogurt venture.

  • Ah, yeah, a little bit down the track, so I did the frozen yogurt.

  • I think I was, like, 23 at the time.

  • Um, we did that for 15 months or so.

  • Yeah, well, that's a bit about that.

  • Like, how did that come about?

  • Because, I mean, it's it's pretty balls, Ito.

  • Just decide that you know, you and you made it going to get some cash together and, yeah, open an actual shop like that has some riel overheads and some real expenses that you've got to cover.

  • And yeah, you know, it's it's a pretty significant risk.

  • Yeah, I guess we're a little bit naive.

  • Like thinking.

  • Um, yeah, it's retail like everyone conduit and way Probably we didn't really understand. 00:04:49.890 --> 00:05:1.080 Like, how horrible retail as, ah, an industry is in a stroke like there's plenty of competition possible are dealing in something that's like so neesh given that it's dessert. 00:05:1.540 --> 00:05:5.880 Um, yeah, you don't have dessert every single day. 00:05:5.890 --> 00:05:6.460 Do you know what I mean? 00:05:6.460 --> 00:05:9.260 So you're dealing, like, trying to get people in. 00:05:9.700 --> 00:05:17.370 Um, it is difficult because even if you go out for dinner or something, like, you're not always gonna have dessert afterwards.

  • It's pretty optional.

  • Yeah, and it's a little bit seasonal, too.

  • Like you imagine some of the ice cream shops down on the course.

  • So here, probably doing it tough during the way.

  • Yeah.

  • Another like we'll face without the challenges as well, Like the So we did it?

  • Well, no, Just down the South Coast and, ah, they're redoing the whole, like main strip of one.

  • Long said there was a lot of roadworks, and basically they tore off the road in front of access was difficult.

  • Yeah, just made a bad situation worse, compensated in any way for that.

  • Or it's just not that their pictures like it's for the future.

  • You're gonna benefit in the long. 00:05:59.980 --> 00:06:1.180 Okay, B A. 00:06:1.180 --> 00:06:2.130 We didn't hang around too. 00:06:3.660 --> 00:06:4.750 So experience it. 00:06:4.760 --> 00:06:7.840 What were you doing in the business like you? 00:06:7.970 --> 00:06:10.020 So serving customers doing a lot.

  • So I may might make we worked.

  • We split the shift into into so it work.

  • The shot would be open for 12 hours every single day.

  • So we do 66 hours h Monday through Sunday.

  • Um, and yet was just everything.

  • So preparing the yoga, cutting up the toppings, and even on the business side of things like figuring out that stuff.

  • So it was like, I don't regret doing it is pretty rewarding.

  • Like you learn quickly.

  • Um, we want like, uh, I think it's business of the year or something in war.

  • Long.

  • Alright, that's pretty cool.

  • Yeah.

  • So it was a good thing, right?

  • Like we had to figure out everything because it wasn't like we took on a franchise.

  • We just started our own brand, and yeah, it's kind of learnt on the go.

  • Yeah.

  • Yeah.

  • And why Frozen yogurt? 00:06:59.720 --> 00:07:1.820 Um, what was it at the time? 00:07:1.820 --> 00:07:8.150 Like I know, I think that was really taking off, and we thought we're actually like when you went traveling over to the U. 00:07:8.150 --> 00:07:8.650 S. 00:07:9.080 --> 00:07:13.750 Um, to see if we could, like, think of any concepts over there that we could bring to Australia.

  • Yeah, but then well, I kind of got sidetracked, like going out and partying instead of actually like doing any research.

  • So we kind of already had the yogurt idea to begin with, and then we're like, Okay, we'll just do that.

  • Yeah, because you didn't say anything else.

  • Yeah.

  • Okay.

  • Now it's funny how, like, sort of there are certain foods and sometimes certain desserts which just become like the in thing for you.

  • 12 months, I was definitely a fat black.

  • I think our shop is still in operation down there.

  • Um and it's the only one there.

  • So I think at one point there about four frozen yogurt shops in bowling gong on Ellis is the only one that made it through s o.

  • What we did well was we made sure, like we're off. 00:07:58.590 --> 00:08:4.330 We weren't, like, contracted to like like a Westfield or a J P t group type thing. 00:08:4.710 --> 00:08:10.530 So we were just outside the kind of shopping precinct, so that meant that out rent was substantially less.

  • And that's obviously the biggest, the biggest overhead.

  • So we're Yeah, the rent wasn't Burnham's burdensome.

  • And that's kind of what gave us the ability to have that longevity, I suppose.

  • And did you have to lock in a lace for a certain amount of time?

  • Usually, commercial leases usually run for a couple years.

  • Don't know.

  • Yeah, I think we had a three year lease, and maybe the last year is an option.

  • So we structured that pretty well.

  • I thought which was good and we negotiated pretty hard for, like, favorable terms for us.

  • Yeah, that's pretty cool, man.

  • It's a big thing to take on, like, always, sort of had a bit of respect for anyone who does that, because it's not like just standing on line business where it's like that.

  • Your biggest cost is Web hosting in your name and a few other bits wrong. 00:08:58.750 --> 00:09:3.770 There's not, like huge ramifications, yes, but in that environment it can get pretty nasty. 00:09:3.780 --> 00:09:14.350 Assed were saying with liking retail food group and some of those franchises that it just going belly up and it leaves people in some serious strife.

  • So yeah, well, lucky.

  • Like we just worked hard, paid off the debt, um, and then sold the business once we saw, like, more entrance coming in.

  • So just like we need a poor shoot.

  • Yeah.

  • So why did you sell the business?

  • Because you fear of competition, competition.

  • And also, we're just getting over it like we're literally working seven days a week.

  • You like no breaks.

  • I think in one year I probably have black five days off for something.

  • Um, and I was studying university four times.

  • Should Erica did you have any stuff?

  • No.

  • We're effectively working for free.

  • Like we're working just to pale.

  • Yeah, the debt.

  • Yeah.

  • And, you know, we just we got out.

  • I think I had, like, negative 500 bucks to my name at the end of that, okay?

  • Or guests, you know, over. 00:09:59.400 --> 00:10:2.310 No, let's At least you weren't under a rock. 00:10:2.320 --> 00:10:4.740 You excited off your debts and all that. 00:10:5.940 --> 00:10:9.820 And so what about the sale of the business, like, was that a win view? 00:10:9.820 --> 00:10:16.370 Was that just so that that basically just paid down like the lost remainder of the debt?

  • Um and then So we we actually, we got a broker Thio to try and sell the business.

  • And then we are even, like all this guy's like not doing anything, just like waiting for someone to walk in and buy it.

  • And we had we paid, like, this listing fee, and then I was gonna be, like, a 10% commission or something.

  • And then I'm like, I'll screw this sec.

  • So I put advertising on gum tree myself, and I sold it, like with my mate.

  • I sold it thio, like, to this guy, and then we can we just left.

  • And then the brokers I passing us because the contractor was saying, you know, no matter how you sell the bit, since he's still only like a commission.

  • Yeah, and I was about just robbed me, right? 00:11:0.080 --> 00:11:3.050 Rob me, like up the rural I like completely, sir. 00:11:3.860 --> 00:11:4.890 I didn't get paid. 00:11:5.340 --> 00:11:10.540 I negotiated it down like I'm like, Oh, the listing favorite paid.

  • That's part of your commission.

  • And then we'll just top you up to 10% or whatever it waas.

  • At that point, we'll just psycho like we're just happy to have this behind us is always, like, hush money.

  • Just Yeah, no, I know the feeling.

  • And then So what happened from there?

  • So he sold up the the frozen yogurt business.

  • What was kind of that the next step after them.

  • So then I got a job, um, working at a company called Wholesale Investor.

  • So that was basically you get sort of pre I p o, um, Predappio deals.

  • And I guess, present their company would present to, like, a bunch of high net worth or sophisticated investors.

  • So I was just doing business development work for them.

  • So that's what you were doing?

  • Yep. 00:11:53.900 --> 00:12:0.050 See, you were on the phone's just ringing up, as was probably Maury male bass and meetings than, like, phone work. 00:12:0.460 --> 00:12:3.700 Yeah, it wasn't like I really like high pressure sales top thing. 00:12:3.740 --> 00:12:5.750 Yeah, Um, say I did that for a bit. 00:12:5.750 --> 00:12:11.500 And then at that point in time, I was, like, getting ready to go overseas to do a year of exchange.

  • Um, so that's kind of when the trading thing came, came about, Um, obviously someone you found on the podcast before Bryce, Um, we work together, like, probably closer to 10 years ago.

  • Now, um, and hey, a sort of approach me like you'd probably be pretty good at their sec if you I want to give it a go like, let me know, and I can help you.

  • And I was kind of like army and hiring about it because I wanted to save money so that I could go over overseas, and I didn't know if I'd be risking that if I tried and failed.

  • But then eventually, I'm just like I guess I've got that gambling not not gambling, but like that instinct of just giving something a shot and seeing if it works.

  • Yeah.

  • So I just spit the bullet and then Yeah, so maybe trading. 00:12:58.910 --> 00:13:2.920 Where were you and Bryce working to go At the very take stockbroking firm. 00:13:2.930 --> 00:13:3.370 I can. 00:13:3.380 --> 00:13:3.550 Yeah. 00:13:3.560 --> 00:13:4.440 Yeah, I thought so. 00:13:4.870 --> 00:13:5.200 All right. 00:13:5.820 --> 00:13:7.850 I didn't realize it would have been that long ago. 00:13:8.340 --> 00:13:12.100 Yeah, I think it would have been, like 2010 2011 around their car.

  • Yeah.

  • Said you do any any good IPO's at the Broken Fear boner.

  • What were they were just pretty small.

  • It was like I don't Yeah, they do like a few corporate deals.

  • But it was mainly, like placements and stuff, like, as opposed to IPO's and was like, it was super small.

  • Firm was not like, Yeah, that wouldn't be doing many appears Mecca.

  • So yes, of Bryson sort of turned you on to this trading thing.

  • Had you done any trading in the past, I'd like, punted around when I was, like in, I think in high school.

  • Possibly.

  • Like when I was 18 I think I bought, like, some glass dick hole shares or something.

  • I had no idea what I was doing.

  • I bought them, and then they got a takeover offer.

  • Sounds like this is pretty easy.

  • Famous last words.

  • Yeah.

  • And then I put, like, the profits from that into something else and that basically went to zero. 00:13:59.170 --> 00:14:1.470 So got a reality check really quick. 00:14:1.480 --> 00:14:2.010 Nice. 00:14:2.020 --> 00:14:2.350 Yeah. 00:14:2.360 --> 00:14:2.900 Okay. 00:14:3.260 --> 00:14:7.310 Um, So how did you so when you started getting into trading? 00:14:7.320 --> 00:14:7.620 Yep. 00:14:7.920 --> 00:14:12.230 But you sort of had this idea that, you know, this is something I'm gonna have a go at now.

  • Yeah, like, how did you go about that?

  • Sort of.

  • How did you go in those first few months?

  • Like what was sort of your I got your introduction to it.

  • Yeah.

  • My approach was like I was just trying to be a sponge like loan as much as I could off Price.

  • And you know, other people in the chat room that I'm in, Um, and just try and absorb.

  • And basically, I got obsessed with it like it was every waking hour.

  • I'm like, yeah, replaying stuff on spark Or, um, yeah, I just obsessing about it like, couldn't wait for Monday like I hated weekends.

  • And did you have a job at the time?

  • Or was it?

  • Yeah, I did.

  • So the first, like, three months.

  • I was basically trading from work.

  • Unbeknownst to my boss, Andi, what was your job at that time? 00:14:59.300 --> 00:15:1.470 That was with wholesale Invest our Yeah. 00:15:1.500 --> 00:15:11.620 So there was a fair bit of downtime like it wasn't like you had to be constantly on the phones, so that kind of gave me the opportunity to spend a bit of time doing that.

  • Like, I would even come in tow, work like 6 a.m. To do some of the business development work for, like, an hour or two so that I could, uh, prep in the morning and then, um and then tried the open pretty much.

  • And then I just go from there.

  • I could.

  • And then So you kept that up for about three months, and then you get away.

  • The job?

  • Yeah.

  • What?

  • I was going to give away the job anyway, because I was going overseas.

  • So yeah, I quit.

  • And then I basically became full time.

  • Like that was my job from that point.

  • So, what was your experience like in those 1st 3 months?

  • Like, were you profitable?

  • We up over at the end of those first initial three months.

  • Yeah.

  • So I think the first month like I'm out of lost about, like, 300 bucks or something.

  • Um, And then the next month, I think I made, like, 800. 00:15:57.840 --> 00:16:0.570 And then yes, I would 10 grand. 00:16:0.650 --> 00:16:5.550 And then once I made like that, 800 bucks, I was like, OK, I've done this for two months now. 00:16:5.550 --> 00:16:6.860 I'm, like, more or less break even. 00:16:7.150 --> 00:16:13.910 I'm gonna add another 10 grand just so that I could do a little bit more, um, and then basically kicked from there.

  • So I think the next month I did, like, five grand.

  • I think I did six Dane and then 36 then 65.

  • So rammed up, like, pretty quickly.

  • Yeah.

  • Did it ever.

  • Yeah.

  • Um, yeah.

  • Not many people can say that.

  • Well, how much like how big we tried in those 1st 3 months?

  • Like, how much will you you risking on a trade?

  • So when I first started out, like, I've made a post about this on Twitter about, like, leverage and risk.

  • So the way I look at things is always like, you know, what's a tick value of of this?

  • Trades are size according to that.

  • So I'd be like okay, I'll try.

  • Make things fairly, Bonner. 00:16:51.720 --> 00:17:0.040 It'd be like, Okay, I'm very confident in this set up working on confident but not as confident in this. 00:17:0.040 --> 00:17:1.620 So then I'll just adjust accordingly. 00:17:1.620 --> 00:17:10.220 So I might, in a highly confident trade, I would be risking, like, $50 a tick, um, on something I was less confident about.

  • Might be, like 25 then I just focused on building that up from there, if that makes it okay, so if it's if you're saying $50 a tick, let's say, Got $10 stock.

  • Okay, that's other things.

  • So I was only trading stocks between, like 30 cents and $3.

  • Really?

  • Yet, uh, for obvious reasons.

  • Like because, you know, on a $10 stock, you might get, like, 50 tick moving a day, for example, on Biff, you're starting with your 10 grand, and it's $50 a take like you could go broke pretty quick.

  • Like if it goes wrong.

  • Okay, so if you're trying to $33 stock, let's say yep, that what's a tick?

  • What's the smallest that can move?

  • It's It's half a centers and, uh, notes.

  • They get a false sense over to box The Tizer?

  • Yep.

  • And then it's half cents below two bucks down to 10 cents. 00:17:58.630 --> 00:18:0.270 And then it's, like, 100.1 of a cent. 00:18:0.590 --> 00:18:1.100 Okay. 00:18:1.110 --> 00:18:2.050 Yeah, right. 00:18:2.660 --> 00:18:4.980 Because you're doing 50. 00:18:6.030 --> 00:18:7.470 So how many ticks would you risk? 00:18:7.470 --> 00:18:10.980 Ana tried, ideally, like 0 to 1.

  • So a lot of what I was doing initially was just purely doing match treads.

  • So I'd be leaning on, um, like, surplus bid or something.

  • So jumping in front and then basically, if I saw, you know, selling action like someone hitting the bid, and I would just get out and I'd be basically out for brokerage a worst case scenario if that if it got, like, wiped in one go and it went offered, then I'd pretty much has hit out straightaway.

  • So can you just explain that a little more like, What do you mean by your doing matched rides?

  • So if there's a catalyst like news, for example, um, and you say a bunch of buyers coming in and you can lean on, like a similar quality in the bid, so it might be like, say, 50,000 shares surplus bid once it matches. 00:18:57.300 --> 00:19:7.350 Um, then I would look to jump in front side, put my order higher than the indicative match price and then would match so I'd get my fill at the match price and that's still be a bid there. 00:19:7.740 --> 00:19:9.490 So then that allows me. 00:19:9.990 --> 00:19:14.760 It's basically getting a free look at the next couple of seconds of action.

  • So then you want, say, like, Oh, morbid is coming at a high price.

  • I say it's it set Masters at $2.50 for example, and I bought in its surplus bid.

  • You know that someone might jump up to like to 55 for a bid, and then I just sell into them or something along those lines.

  • But then, if I still like Cell is coming in the book and volume being down on the bid, then I would just hit out straight away kind of thing.

  • Okay, See you is very, very scalp E to begin very scalp you.

  • And would you trade the rest of session or we wouldn't always trade the rest of session?

  • I'll bet I'd always watch.

  • Like I say to people work, I feel like the markets like a story.

  • If you're not watching or being observant like observant the whole time. 00:19:59.390 --> 00:20:1.230 It's like you're missing, like, couple chapters of the book. 00:20:1.230 --> 00:20:9.170 So if you trading just the open and then you come back the next day like so much stuff has happened between when you left. 00:20:9.190 --> 00:20:17.150 Now, if you just kind of loses valuable information like yesterday, that might have been a a constant buyer at this level where there was a constant cellar.

  • And if you don't know that, like you find yourself in in trouble because, yeah, you don't have the full story.

  • Yeah, yeah.

  • Um, okay.

  • And doing those sort of tried to imagine you'd only be able to take like, a couple trades a day.

  • Like, if If you're sort of if you're trade, is trading the open?

  • Yeah, um, you'd probably about to get it like yeah, like, write the beginning.

  • The first probably three months.

  • I think I was probably only doing like, three or four tried today.

  • I can't be five, but then, you know, I basically just focus purely on, like this one type of setup.

  • I think that's important for, like, you traded out there. 00:20:55.640 --> 00:21:4.070 Thio just hone in on one thing that you can do and do it well on then That buys you time Thio figure out, you know, other setups that you can do. 00:21:4.070 --> 00:21:5.940 So I just did that. 00:21:5.990 --> 00:21:6.910 That gave me time. 00:21:7.060 --> 00:21:13.250 I made money doing it, but then it's OK, the edges is going away there, So you start looking at other stuff.

  • And for me, that ended up being like short selling a bit.

  • Is that what he found?

  • That the edge did start to fade away?

  • Yeah, it was It wasn't as good like after a little while.

  • Um, so I now almost like, don't even do those trades.

  • When you said surplus bid, what would he mean by that?

  • Do you just mean that the bids in the book a thicker than the offers?

  • Or so when when the market matches?

  • Um, it's like I don't know, like the full why it works per se.

  • But it's basically just balancing the supply at the particular price.

  • And then they'll always be like a surplus beard or to be so when it matches, right?

  • So they'll be still some volume left. 00:21:59.670 --> 00:22:0.550 That hasn't been done. 00:22:0.920 --> 00:22:7.690 So it's basically just getting, um, on the advantageous side of that by queue jumping effectively. 00:22:7.770 --> 00:22:15.780 Okay, So do you recall any kind of breakthrough moments during your let's such a safe 1st 12 months of trading?

  • Not really.

  • Um I think it was more just that feeling of, like I drew down the account a little bit.

  • I think like from 10 grand, I end up down it like 8700 bucks or something like that.

  • And then once I quarterback toe even, I'm kind of like I could probably do this, Um, and a bit of a confidence boost.

  • Bit of a confidence boost like, Yeah, I haven't just whittled this away and failed, and then that kind of just gave me the confidence, But I was pretty fearless to begin with.

  • I think I've always been relatively comfortable with, like, putting on risk, whether it be playing poker or sports betting or something like that. 00:22:54.520 --> 00:23:0.690 So I wasn't particularly like, fearful of losing money, um, so that that helped a lot. 00:23:0.690 --> 00:23:8.060 And I think that's a lot of people don't necessarily have that ability to be comfortable with having risk on. 00:23:8.140 --> 00:23:8.520 Yeah. 00:23:8.890 --> 00:23:15.980 Do you think there's a way that people can become more comfortable with the idea of losing money because It's a lot to lose money.

  • Yeah, yeah, yeah.

  • Just money Thio to figure it out, right?

  • Yeah.

  • I mean, that interview I did with Rambo recently, that was one of the big things that that he really sort sort of tried to drive home was detached from the money.

  • Yeah, but it's, like, easy enoughto win.

  • The hardest part about trainer's learning toe losing to sound crazy.

  • But, you know, listening back over that interview and some of things he said it.

  • It really kind of was like, you know, that's that's not at all, in a sense, Yeah.

  • Yeah.

  • So how long have you been trading for now?

  • Just under three years.

  • Three years?

  • Uh, the beginning of all this will be three years for May, and you've had no breaks during that time. 00:23:59.310 --> 00:24:1.600 You've just sort of been at the market every day. 00:24:1.800 --> 00:24:2.760 Now, I wouldn't say that. 00:24:2.760 --> 00:24:13.010 So in 2016 when I was on exchange my attention to the market, I guess was a little bit patchy because I was kind of living the college experience as well.

  • Um, and just try adding when I could s o I guess.

  • Like once I got over there.

  • I didn't really have any friends, obviously.

  • So I was, like, purely focused on trading.

  • But then, as I like, formed a friendship group, and then they invite you out, Like all let's do this or, you know, go on a holiday or something like that.

  • Then my attention to the market kind of slipped a bit on My performance suffered as a result.

  • So I'd be looking my equity curve.

  • It kind of it kicks at the beginning, and then when I go overseas, it's sort of it's still going up.

  • But other less steep Rapid, right?

  • Yeah.

  • But then once I go back to Australia in January last year um, yeah.

  • Then I was like, I treated it like a job, huh?

  • Yeah. 00:24:58.080 --> 00:25:1.530 So what is your your style of training? 00:25:1.530 --> 00:25:4.980 Let's just sort of go over a bit of an overview, I guess. 00:25:4.990 --> 00:25:5.260 Yep. 00:25:5.940 --> 00:25:7.100 How would you describe your? 00:25:7.110 --> 00:25:8.080 You'll start of trading? 00:25:8.430 --> 00:25:10.560 Um, I'd tell him like a scalper.

  • Um, Andi, just trading basically off catalysts eso whether being used or, um, you know, macro moves like that kind of stuff.

  • Ah, have a bias towards being short.

  • I just feel like a little bit more comfortable.

  • For some reason, I think one of the reasons are like it is because usually stock sell off quicker than they, then they go up.

  • So as a scalper, it makes it, I guess, a zia.

  • Because you could make money quicker, I guess.

  • And you don't have to have, like, a lengthy exposure to the market.

  • You could be done in, like, five or 10 minutes.

  • But that's obviously something that I'm trying to evolve from because I'm missing out on, like, way bigger trades.

  • Just because I'm to scalp e.

  • You're leaving a lot on the time exactly.

  • Um, yes.

  • So when you say scout mostly a scalper.

  • Yeah. 00:25:59.550 --> 00:26:4.450 At this point, um, what would you say is your average kind of hold time? 00:26:5.540 --> 00:26:9.660 Probably 10 to 20 minutes, maybe.

  • Yeah, like sometimes I could be out in a minute or two.

  • Um, and then sometimes I mean for a bit longer, but yeah, I want to get to that point, like, especially in the morning, where I I'm holding suffer at least an hour if it's working in my favor.

  • Okay.

  • That's one of things I found in the mornings is that it's very easy to give some of your profits back.

  • Yeah, um, or were profits back because the market will move so quickly in one direction and then snap right back and yeah, You know, all of a sudden you've gone from having a recently good profit toe nail back to break even or slightly negative.

  • Tried.

  • So, um, you know, do you think that's one of those things you can sort of get around?

  • Yeah, I think you've just got to, like, continued to work on it.

  • Like I think the key is knowing when to hold on when not to hold. 00:26:59.650 --> 00:27:5.460 And I think that's one thing that I'm struggling with it the moment like, I'm trying to hold stuff. 00:27:5.470 --> 00:27:9.500 But I'm not necessarily holding stuff that I should be holding like or I'm being.

  • I'm being scalped me when I should hold on.

  • I'm holding when I should be scrappy.

  • So I think it's a big skill is being able to identify you when it's right toe.

  • Hold him when it's not.

  • Yeah.

  • Yeah.

  • So I think I need to work on structuring things, so, uh, you know, I can figure out Okay, this is a trade where I need to be holding.

  • I order to get out.

  • I need to have a reason to sell or reason to cover, like not just doing it, because I'm trading my pain.

  • L kind of thing.

  • Yeah, yeah.

  • So let's let's start at the beginning of the day.

  • Like, how do you prepare for the upcoming session yet?

  • So, Basie, I come in, I have a bunch of, ah, watch lists, have a bunch of watch lists and then I basically I've got evidence shape and I'll just going to populate. 00:27:59.990 --> 00:28:1.610 I guess what the macro themes are. 00:28:2.480 --> 00:28:9.080 So it was the us up last night was a d doing what bonds do commodity 80 efs, that kind of thing. 00:28:9.460 --> 00:28:15.260 So that gives me an idea or a picture of what stocks I'm gonna be looking to trade that day.

  • Um, and then I go through like, I'll have a list in each of the group open, so five groups and I'll have the list from yesterday and then I'll filter through those stocks and see, by looking at the market depth.

  • Do I think that this stock is gonna move again today?

  • Um, and then I keep it on the list if if I think it will.

  • And then I delayed the ones that I think probably out of play.

  • And then as news filters through in the morning about 8 30 then I start adding stocks back onto that list that I think might move on use.

  • Okay, So how many stocks would kind of bay in your your watch list by this by the time the market opens 40?

  • Probably that many.

  • Yeah, OK.

  • And how are you monitoring those stocks on the open? 00:28:59.770 --> 00:29:9.000 Like you just do You just have a watch list with the, um kind of, you know, how much each one's moved or do you have 40 different charts across you? 00:29:9.280 --> 00:29:11.220 40 different things.

  • Soldiers lined them up on spark for each group opens.

  • I'll have I've got, like, four screens of spark open.

  • I'll have two stocks on H screen in each group thing, and then, well, basically, just click through them as the next open face start.

  • Okay?

  • So I might get on a position in group one, and then Ah, and then I just kind of keep that up in the background while I'm getting on another position like Group three or something, and then I kind of just, like, juggle them, um, going forward just in case anyone's not familiar with the way that air sex work.

  • So you know, if any U.

  • S listeners or whatever just explained the groups in the different opening times?

  • Yep. 00:29:55.820 --> 00:30:1.530 So there's five groups that are just divided into alphabetical order. 00:30:1.530 --> 00:30:17.410 So, like Group One is stocks with tickers beginning with A or B Group two is stocks were takers that start with, like, see through the F and then it's J through the ah, I can't remember, but yes, so it basically will.

  • Then they'll open, like, two minutes apart, and it can open a 32nd window.

  • So it's the first group will open at 10 o'clock on zero seconds plus or minus 15 seconds so it could open at 9 59 45 seconds or at 10 on the dot and 15 seconds.

  • Yeah.

  • Do you know what they do that?

  • Uh, no, I think it's just the white, the white eye.

  • I have always done it.

  • So, yeah, I think it's a good thing that it's not just 10 o'clock on the dot and then everything goes crazy or where you go, Yeah.

  • Does that sometimes give you bit of an advantage in itself?

  • Like that's a bit of an edge, because you can do more stuff, right? 00:30:59.920 --> 00:31:2.380 You can look at more things because you've got time. 00:31:2.730 --> 00:31:19.100 You don't have to, I guess prioritizes much into like one or two trades because you can do something in Group one and you still have, like, a bit of five minutes until Group four is opening or like eight minutes until the last group opens.

  • Does it also potentially give you a bit of an insult?

  • That's I, um Let's say a stock opens in Group two.

  • That's an oil stock on this line group for you.

  • Get an indication.

  • Yeah.

  • Sometimes I look at that like you could probably get a read through is to what the market's thinking.

  • So if it, you know, annoy ll stocking Group one opens in its down 5% but the one ingrate five looks like it's gonna match down 1%.

  • You can either be like, Oh, well, maybe this sounds off too much.

  • Sure that one needs to sell so you can play around with that.

  • Do you do those sort of things. 00:31:55.390 --> 00:32:1.340 Or if you've got enough to focus on, I think there's enough to focus on where there's better, probably probabilities. 00:32:1.340 --> 00:32:4.360 But if there's nothing doing, then I might look something like that. 00:32:5.240 --> 00:32:11.960 Um, So what are some of the things which you're looking at as kind of a catalyst to decide what's gonna go on your list?

  • You briefly mentioned it before, but can we go into that a little more like What's?

  • Ah, like, why would a stock go on your watch list?

  • Like maybe just an example of, Yeah, sort of one.

  • That's pain.

  • It's on your list because of a news catalyst of some sort.

  • Like yet, Yes, I'm in news by far, is the the best?

  • Is there any sort of news like a pit earnings announcements Usually pretty good or like, a contract winds or, um, yeah, that that sort of stuff.

  • Really?

  • Okay, What about like they're broken up rides and young grades?

  • It's not so much in use, is it?

  • Yeah.

  • I mean, they good, like, you know, the stock will usually be in play, but I wouldn't say it's has like they They can be powerful with, and sometimes they don't work like it's a bit of a hidden miss type thing. 00:32:59.660 --> 00:33:1.710 Um, so I'm not. 00:33:1.710 --> 00:33:7.720 I wouldn't sound like constantly trading broker calls, but it just is another string to to you, Bo. 00:33:8.900 --> 00:33:14.450 You know, when there's not much when there's not much news, then you're hopefully there might be a broken call, so there's something you can do.

  • Oh, okay.

  • And one of the things I've noticed is it seems like you're quite knowledgeable about so not every business on the air sex, but there's a lot of businesses which you seem to know quite a bit about.

  • Why get that impression anyway?

  • Like, you know who the management is, what they've done in the past, who is holding this, you know, when they sold their shares, et cetera.

  • Do you spend a lot of time researching that sort of thing?

  • Or is it just kinda.

  • I think it's just being around it like nine hours a day like from 7 a.m. Toe for 10.

  • Yeah, you just kind of pick up on things.

  • And I guess I'm kind of like a pretty cynical person.

  • So, like, I'm always looking for the negative and something, yeah, typical short seller. 00:34:0.040 --> 00:34:6.070 Um, because of that, um, I believe you actually got into Cem. 00:34:6.400 --> 00:34:7.920 I'm gonna say legal strife. 00:34:7.930 --> 00:34:16.160 But you had some sort of Ah, you received a letter or some sort of noticed sort of stop a safe and desist.

  • Yeah.

  • Okay.

  • Can you can you share that story?

  • Because I don't actually know much about it.

  • I've heard it mentioned bits and paces and but yeah.

  • What happened?

  • Yes.

  • So basically, there was this stock called Get Swift.

  • A fair few of the Australian like traders or investors have probably heard of it.

  • But basically, I was just kind of surprised how quickly thing went up.

  • And then one night I was just bored.

  • So I went on my computer and, like, start doing a bit of research on guy just whipped up, like in two hours, like a four page summary of what I thought of the business.

  • And then I just posted on Twitter like this is kind of just when I'd started using Twitter, I think was back in, like, October last year. 00:34:59.340 --> 00:35:8.160 Um, then you're a couple people read it, and then I'm like, Okay, people seem to be interested in the things I was like, Okay, that's pretty cool. 00:35:8.530 --> 00:35:16.790 And then, like two weeks later, I get this email with a cease and desist letter from their lawyers saying that I breached, like, all this ASIC stuff.

  • And, um, you know, we're reporting you to ask.

  • Like, what you're doing is Bob.

  • Bob.

  • Bob.

  • I can't remember exactly what was in the letter.

  • Now some psycho crap.

  • What's this about?

  • I'm just a day trader back home in mind.

  • Depends coming after work for all this stuff.

  • So what did you think of the company?

  • Like, what was in this four page report that you put out?

  • I mean, I don't know if you can go into the details of it or Yeah, I think it's still on.

  • Might still be on my twitter somewhere.

  • Um, but yeah, I was basically just going through because there, the way they structured like their performance rights and stuff was based around numbers of deliveries.

  • So there.

  • Ah, like an app. 00:35:58.270 --> 00:36:3.820 I think they call themselves like the uber of delivery, or like, logistics or something like that. 00:36:3.820 --> 00:36:17.370 So they would sign up businesses and then give them this software and that would get paid, like what they said was 30 cents for every delivery that was done using their platform.

  • Andi incentive or their performance rights were based on how many deliveries there were doing.

  • And I didn't think that was right.

  • Because you know, if you're a shareholder like you, do you really care how many deliveries like you want to see?

  • I think it made more sense to see revenue based performance rights being granted, not deliveries, because if you put someone on trial and they're doing deliveries on the trial and they're not paying for them all, that's a little bit deceptive on basically, a lot of their announcements were like pure spin.

  • Um, they just I didn't think they were being particularly truthful about, like some of the contracts and our embellishing, Um, a fair bit.

  • I thought like that I caused this contract is going to be worth, you know, $1.15 billion in revenue or whatever and like since then haven't heard a single thing about any of like any of this stuff.

  • The Army announcements have been coming out recently is the fact there's like three class actions pending on are really so was this in newly listed stock at the time?

  • I think it listed in December 2016.

  • So it had been on when I, like, write the thing.

  • I think I've been on flight nine months, Right?

  • Still, obviously.

  • Well, today, Yeah, it went up to, like, 4 50 or something from 20 Cent appear well, um and then, Ah, it's not like 35 cents or something.

  • So we assured it I would short in today, but yeah, I'd never hold, like, an overnight position.

  • Short it just cause, like, that's one of my rules.

  • I don't hold overnight, but yeah, I really like Rub rubs me up the wrong way, like them tryingto get legal on me, sir.

  • I then just went to the air far and then gave them all because I was gonna write another report, because in the process of writing, like a more in depth and it's a little bit more a professional report on what I thought, because I don't have done more research, and then they send me this some marker out, or I shouldn't push the envelope.

  • I'm not gonna say anything else publicly.

  • So then I just went to the Afar and said his old information.

  • And then the fr basically just went to town.

  • Did they Really?

  • Yeah.

  • What?

  • They don't write out writing articles and then that started doing some of their own research.

  • And yeah, on the whole thing blew up.

  • Okay, so what were they threatening like in this email?

  • Ah, that was saying, like they're calling, like, stock price manipulation or something.

  • Um, and yeah, I was in breach of, like, corporations act like a bunch of these things, and we've reported the thing to ask Bob are like it was very much is to shake down. 00:38:54.930 --> 00:39:2.500 Um, and I just went to see a lawyer, and I showed them, like everything that I had written on the Internet about the company. 00:39:2.500 --> 00:39:4.830 And I like, and I don't think you really have anything to worry about. 00:39:4.830 --> 00:39:7.160 But don't go like poking the hornets nest. 00:39:7.170 --> 00:39:9.050 Just don't post anything else. 00:39:9.820 --> 00:39:10.810 So much fun.

  • Did you have a ring?

  • Did you ever hear anything from ASIC know there's probably a bluff?

  • Yeah.

  • Yeah.

  • Okay.

  • There must be a bit of a red flag in itself that, um you know, county was coming on to that strong after you said a day trader home.

  • Just exactly like if I wrote a four page research pace on Tell Straw I'm not getting any sex and desist letters from them.

  • They're like, Well, yeah, the proof is in the pudding.

  • Yeah, Another tells is a great stock, but absolutely no, the point is out de legit, you know?

  • Yeah.

  • Did you try Telstra a couple weeks back after their, um, investors mating?

  • You know, we had that did it successfully.

  • Okay.

  • Yeah.

  • How come you weren't successful in that? 00:39:57.630 --> 00:40:2.550 Like, I think with that, Because it's like it doesn't have huge moves. 00:40:2.550 --> 00:40:3.890 And the books, like, So thick. 00:40:3.900 --> 00:40:9.320 Yes, I get, like, a bigger position on where I might be, like, 500 or $1000 a teak. 00:40:9.740 --> 00:40:11.630 Um, so then, like it?

  • I'm kind of like super reactive and a little bit uptight about it.

  • Just cause it's like, yeah, that might be $5 million on the beat or something, and that will just get instantly wiped.

  • I'm like, it's no issue kind of thing.

  • So that means you your risk is a little bit higher because it can go against you because then you gotta cross the spread to get out again.

  • So it's yet another thing that I need to work on.

  • But I prefer usually, like a little bit less liquid, um, less liquid stocks.

  • Yeah.

  • Yeah, because I traded it that day as well.

  • And also not successfully.

  • Yeah.

  • Ah, and I just feel like bit of immediate.

  • Afterwards, I I felt really naive actually trying toe right, trade a stock like that just cause it attracts a very different sort of participant yet, And, I don't know, it just was something I should have stayed out of yet, but yeah, it's not like one of my favorite stocks to trade, But again, it's something that I need to get better up because there's a lot, a lot of liquidity there.

  • And if you can't get comfortable trader on these catalyst, all these news events, it could be pretty profitable, so yeah.

  • Yeah, defund.

  • It is always opportunities.

  • Each day, as in light, is always a catalyst that there's always a stock in play.

  • Yeah, there's always something.

  • If there's nothing, it just means you haven't looked hard enough.

  • Um, or you're too hung over or something.

  • Okay.

  • And where do you Where do you get most of your information from in the morning. 00:41:46.130 --> 00:42:0.210 Like, were you doing sort of your research and prep like there any sites that you frequently visit or yes, I've just got like, first of all, like I was saying, those 80 f's and stuff but, um, into, ah, like in my iris. 00:42:0.310 --> 00:42:1.840 So I just bring that up each morning. 00:42:2.030 --> 00:42:5.580 That helps me populate the list, and then I'll look at other stuff like investing. 00:42:5.580 --> 00:42:17.820 Dot com is a decent one, so you can get, um, live commodity process on their finbiz to say, like, what sectors moved in the US They've got, like, a market map thing as well.

  • Um, also the final futures in the Italian Commodity exchange.

  • So there's a link there that I look up, but that's pretty much it.

  • And also a fr perused a fr end.

  • See what people are talking about because that could be pretty good.

  • Yeah, when you're looking at these a t.

  • F.

  • So what do you actually looking out?

  • You're just looking to see if the oil the tips up 3% more just like the magnitude of the move.

  • Like if a cooperating F is up 5%.

  • Then I'll be looking at copper stocks to safe.

  • They they follow here, okay?

  • Or the lithium, A T F gets smashed or something, and then you you might look too short. 00:42:59.690 --> 00:43:0.520 Lithium socks. 00:43:0.660 --> 00:43:3.570 That's kind of just one way of getting tried ideas. 00:43:3.650 --> 00:43:4.030 Yeah. 00:43:4.700 --> 00:43:8.800 Would that be enough for you to actually get involved in some copper stocks? 00:43:8.810 --> 00:43:12.230 Like just the fact that the copper e t f might be up 5%?

  • Yeah.

  • How do you then decide which copper stocks you might actually talk, so I'll just look, I'll have them on my watch this and then I'll watch just before the market opens.

  • Like if I see buyers rushing in or it looks like you know, this thing wants to go just by focusing on the market depth.

  • Then I'll make a decision based on that.

  • And you're obviously also taken into consideration.

  • If, like health, I put down when a stock might be reverend.

  • Matches were so I could say the cooperate ifs up 5% but like Oz, minerals or sand fire or something is up 10%.

  • Well, then, I'm probably not gonna buy that, because I think overall it's probably gapping too much to get involved. 00:43:58.200 --> 00:44:6.730 Yeah, now, just sort of talking about the sum of the setups and strategies that you tried today. 00:44:6.740 --> 00:44:7.030 Yeah. 00:44:7.190 --> 00:44:12.220 Um, I noticed that most days you post something on your Twitter?

  • Yes.

  • A quick review of the day.

  • You know, like a trading report.

  • Um, you often, like, grade your setups.

  • Yeah.

  • I'm interested to just hear a bit more about how you how why you do that.

  • How that actually influences.

  • Have you tried each of those set ups?

  • Um, yeah.

  • Can you just show a little bit inside to s o do the grading?

  • That's kind of based on around.

  • Like, I guess Mike Belfiore is like, tried review thing.

  • And then Austin Mitchum started doing doing that.

  • So then I My God, maybe I should consider you're tryingto grade or like rank.

  • What I'm doing in terms of like, Is this like something where I've got a huge edge in doing?

  • Or have I taken that trade sort of for no real reason. 00:44:57.540 --> 00:45:1.910 So I think it's just important to Aiken internalize You know what you're doing right? 00:45:1.920 --> 00:45:3.300 And then also what you're doing wrong. 00:45:3.510 --> 00:45:12.760 And that's kind of what the whole idea of grading the setups is about, if you let's say you have, ah, set up, which is great, I

I'll have you played a bit of parka.

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澳交所日間交易員Nick Fabrio (淨利潤:100萬美元以上) (ASX Day Trader, Nick Fabrio (Net profit: $1,000,000+))

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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