There are many different ideas about what it takes to succeed in trading.
Developing a statistically-significant strategy, learning market structure, developing self-control, and learning to think in probabilities are all some of the qualities traders need to assimilate into their everyday lives to become professionals, but all effort would be futile without one key quality: risk management.
Consider the trader who can predict, with relatively good accuracy, what the market is going to do in the short term. To an outsider, this ability would mean success in the markets, but traders know better. Even if your accuracy is a staggering 90%, you would still lose money if, on average, your losses are ten times the size of your winners. This is not conjecture; its math.
In short selling, the importance of risk management is amplified, as losses are theoretically infinite when trading to the downside. Additionally, short sellers experience complications that long traders do not, adding to complications to an already difficult task of consistent risk management.
Aside from practice and study, selecting a short-friendly broker can help traders significantly improve their risk management and instill the principles necessary for long-term success in the markets. Trader Stephen Johnson found his help through TradeZero, a broker with a host of favorable short-selling features.Takeaways From The TradeZero-Benzinga Interview
In an interview with Benzingas Spencer Israel, Johnson and TradeZero CEO Daniel Pipitone tackle the subject of risk management in short selling.
The episode starts off on a sobering note. Trading isnt easy, says Johnson. Lets just say that first. For anyone who has attempted to trade for a long enough period, this is an opinion that resonates. You will often find it scattered around the web where the concept of trading arises in the discussion, but it is also reiterated through more formal sources like academic studies.
The easiest way to control risk is to make small trades, says Johnson. When traders first start, they must start with a sum of money theyre comfortable handling. This sum is different for each trader. If traders begin with too large a sum, emotions will sink in, prompting irrational decisions.
Were always encouraging people to set short stops, says Pipitone. TradeZero empowers the trader by allowing the broker to manage risk for them. For example, traders can set daily loss limits, which prevent them from trading after reaching a loss threshold.
Make Keep It Simple, Stupid (KISS) rules, adds Johnson. KISS is a design principle with U.S. navy origins, but the framework is relevant to trading. A simple rule like dont trade past 10:00 AM is a KISS-approved risk management strategy that could save opening-bell traders tons of money. Applying KISS rule-making can help prevent many unnecessary losses.
Take small losses, concludes Pipitone. This is one of the most repeated truisms on Wall Street, and for good reason: It helps. Trading requires a detachment from ones ego and pride, and learning to take losses gracefully is key to sustaining a healthy win-to-loss ratio, a crucial element in risk management.Picking A Short-Friendly Broker
Aside from the daily loss limits, TradeZero offers a variety of short-selling functions to the retail community.
The broker specializes in producing some of the hardest-to-find locates on the market, meaning traders have a much higher likelihood of finding stocks to borrow for their short positions. This extensive locating ability comes with commission-free trades (with a few exceptions) and no compromise on the quality of execution prices.
TradeZero is taking its short-selling abilities to new heights with its patent-pending credit back feature, which allows traders to sell back locates they did not use or no longer need to other TradeZero traders. TradeZerp won the Benzinga Global Fintech Award for Best Brokerage for Short Selling in 2020, 2021, and recently 2022.
Want to take a stab at short-selling? Click here to learn more about short-selling with TradeZero.
Featured Photo by Dimitris Chapsoulas on Unsplash
This post contains sponsored advertising content. This content is for informational purposes only and not intended to be investing advice or a recommendation as to any security or trading strategy. Trading securities can involve high risk and potential loss of funds. Likewise, short selling as a securities trading strategy is extremely risky and can lead to potentially unlimited losses. Any views or opinions expressed in the content are those of the author or the interviewed third parties and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of TradeZero or its employees. Daniel Pipitone is a co-founder of TradeZero. Stephen Johnson is a paid marketing partner for TradeZero and may receive compensation for introducing customers to TradeZero.
RALEIGH, N.C. — The Carolina Hurricanes have signed goaltender Frederik Andersen to a one-year contract for next season, worth $2.75 million for the 35-year-old veteran.
General manager Eric Tulsky announced the deal Saturday, a little over 48 hours before his team starts the second round of the playoffs against the Washington Capitals.
Andersen could earn up to $750,000 in incentives for games played and his participation in a potential run to the Eastern Conference finals next season. He would get $250,000 for playing 35 or more games, another $250,000 for getting to 40 and $250,000 if the Hurricanes reach the East finals and he plays in at least half of the playoff games.
“Frederik has played extremely well for us and ranks in the top 10 all-time for winning percentage by an NHL goalie,” Tulsky said. “We’re excited that he will be staying with the team for next season.”
Andersen and the Hurricanes, the No. 2 seed in the Metropolitan Division, advanced past the New Jersey Devils in Round 1 last week. They will meet the Capitals, who won the division crown, for the right to make the NHL’s final four.
Extending Andersen could give the team a goaltending tandem with Pyotr Kochetkov for less than $6 million combined.
Anderson, a Denmark native who previously played for the Anaheim Ducks and Toronto Maple Leafs, has become coach Rod Brind’Amour’s most trusted option in net. He is expected to return to the starting role for Game 1 of the Capitals series after getting injured in the first round against New Jersey.
Sky News can reveal that the government has rowed back on a national compensation scheme for victims of child sexual abuse, despite it being promised under the previous Conservative administration.
Warning – this story contains references to sexual and physical abuse
A National Redress Scheme was one of 20 key recommendations made by the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA), but a Home Office report reveals the government has scrapped it because of the cost.
Marie, who is 71, suffered alleged sexual, physical, and emotional abuse at Greenfield House Convent in St Helens, Merseyside, between 1959 and 1962, and is still fighting for compensation.
Image: Greenfield House Convent, where Marie says she was abused
As soon as she arrived as a six-year-old, Marie says her hair was cut off, her name changed, and she experienced regular beatings from the nuns and students.
She claims a nun instigated the violence, including when Marie was held down so that her legs were “spread-eagled” as she was sexually abused with a coat hanger.
Merseyside Police investigated claims of abuse at the convent, but in 2016, a suspect died before charges could be brought.
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Marie has received an apology from the Catholic body that ran the home; she tried to sue them, but her claim was rejected because it was filed too long after the alleged abuse.
Image: Marie, 71, is still fighting for compensation for the abuse she says she suffered as a child
In February, ministers said the law would change for victims of sexual abuse trying to sue institutions for damages, which was a recommendation from the IICSA.
Previously, people had to make a civil claim before they were 21, unless the victim could prove a fair trial could proceed despite the time lapse.
Campaigners argued for the time limit to be removed as, on average, victims wait 26 years to come forward. Changes to the 1980 Limitation Act could lead to more people making claims.
Image: Peter Garsden, President of The Association of Child Abuse Lawyers
Civil cases ‘can take three to five years’
But Peter Garsden, president of the Association of Child Abuse Lawyers, worries that when it comes to historical abuse where the defendant is dead, institutions will still argue that it is impossible to have a fair trial and will fight to have the case thrown out of court.
Mr Garsden said it takes “between three and five years” for a civil case to get to trial.
He warned that claimants “can end up losing if you go through that process. Whereas the Redress Scheme would be quicker, much more straightforward, and much more likely to give justice to the victims”.
Victim awarded £10 compensation
Jimbo, who was a victim of abuse at St Aidan’s children’s home in Cheshire, took his case to the High Court twice and the Court of Appeal three times, but, after 13 years, all he ended up with was £10 for his bus fare to court.
Despite the Lord Justice of Appeal saying he believed that the abuse had occurred, Jimbo lost his claim because of the time limit for child sexual abuse claims to be made.
Neither Marie nor Jimbo is likely to benefit from the removal of the time limit for personal injury claims, which is why Mr Garsden is calling on the government to implement a National Redress Scheme for victims of sexual abuse, as recommended by the IICSA.
Hundreds of millions paid to victims
The governments in Scotland and Northern Ireland have set up compensation schemes and paid hundreds of millions of pounds to victims.
In 2023, the then Conservative government said a similar scheme would be organised for England and Wales.
But the Home Office admitted in its Tackling Child Sexual Abuse: Progress Update that it “is not currently taking forward any further steps on the IICSA proposal for a separate, national financial redress scheme for all survivors of child sexual abuse”.
“In the current fiscal environment, this recommendation is very difficult to take forward,” it added.
For victims, the scheme was the last chance of compensation for a lifetime blighted by abuse.
“The money is about justice and about all the other people who have had to suffer this abuse,” Marie said.
OKX founder and CEO Star Xu has publicly defended the crypto exchange after Tron founder Justin Sun accused it of failing to act on a law enforcement request to freeze stolen funds following a recent hack of Tron’s official X account.
“OKX also has consumers protection policy according to law, we can’t freeze a customer’s funds according to your personal X post or an oral communication. I think you should understand it as the CEO of HTX,” Xu said in an X post.
OKX says there is no communication in the spam box, either
Xu said that the crypto exchange had not received any related correspondence through OKX’s official channels. “Our LE cooperation team just checked the email, including the spam box; we haven’t received any request related with this case,” Xu said.
In what is now an unavailable X post, but was screenshotted by Xu, Sun had earlier claimed that OKX has not responded to a “freeze notice” sent to its official email address from a “relevant law enforcement agency.” Sun said that he had no other way to contact OKX’s compliance department.
“These stolen funds do not belong to me; I’m acting to protect the community,” Sun said. On May 3, Tron DAO told its 1.7 million X followers that its account had been compromised. Tron explained that during the breach, an unauthorized party posted a malicious contract address, sent direct messages, and followed unfamiliar accounts.
“If you received a DM from our account on May 2, please delete it and consider it the work of the attacker.”
In response to Sun’s claims of inaction, Xu publicly called on him to provide a screenshot showing when and where the law enforcement request was made.
The Tron incident is one of several recent security breaches involving high-profile crypto accounts on X.
Kaito AI, an artificial intelligence-powered platform that aggregates crypto data to provide market analysis for users, and its founder, Yu Hu, were the victims of an X social media hack on March 15. The hackers opened up a short position on KAITO tokens before posting that the Kaito wallets were compromised and advised users that their funds were not safe.