Post
by earik » Mon Jul 27, 2015 6:31 pm
I remember back when I first found Gann and started learning about him, I thought that it all sounded really interesting, but it was also very obvious that if I were ever going to get to the bottom of Gann and all those coded books he wrote, it might take me 20 years of researching to do it (and there was no guarantee that I'd actually find anything). So I decided that if I were going to put that amount of time and energy into trading, I'd be much better off focusing on markets myself and coming up with my own solutions. Now that I'm on the other end of that 20 years, I'm very glad I chose the path less traveled, especially after meeting a few of the other traders out there that went the other way and basically became Gann historians (but unfortunately not profitable traders).
I like Gann, and I resonate to a lot of what he was doing, however:
1) Not all of his forecasts were correct. Many were completely wrong.
2) When he died, he had $100k in the bank. Not bad for those days, but not $50M either.
3) His son, who is still alive, said that Gann couldn't trade, and made all of his money selling his courses.
The Gann traders explain the second two points away using what amounts to conspiracy theory, and unfortunately there's really no way to know the truth in this particular case since Gann isn't with us anymore. The nail in the coffin on my end happened a few years back when I was going through his mechanical system on US steel, which he published in one of his courses. He gives very definite rules on how to enter, and goes through a bunch of trades doing a backtest. His numbers are insane, and he ends up quadrupling his account in a few months or so. Anyway, I took that exact same method, and applied it to modern stocks (US Steel is still on the boards), and my results in modern markets were pretty horrible.
Gann may have been an awesome trader, but markets back then were different. If you look at old futures charts from around the early 1900's, you see these huge swings, and I think you could make money just going with the flow for the most part. Modern markets don't look like that anymore. Now we've got chop and weird sideways moves, and all sorts of difficulties. A system that may have worked back in the early 1900's doesn't work so well anymore, and if that's the case, it says a lot about all the rest of the tools as well...
Anyway, my point is - if you're going to study someone, why not study some of the awesome modern traders? You won't find anyone making crazy predictions, or getting 98% accuracy, but you will find traders who have taken 100's of millions of profit out of markets, and who are relatively open in discussing how they did it. There are no legends to sift through, or codes to crack, or misdirection to have to overcome either, and those people are alive and well today. It's not nearly as romantic as solving Gann, and becoming master of the universe, but that's also much more of a fantasy than a reality if you really think about it...
All for now,
Earik