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BIO: Stephen Kalayjian is a Chief Market Strategist and Co-Founder of Ticker Tocker, a firm that researches and develops software to help identify trends, reversals, patterns, and divergences in the marketplace for all asset classes and time frames.
STORY: Stephen once risked his entire $3,000 savings on a call option trade at his father’s friend’s brokerage. Unfortunately, that trade went bad. He summed up his experience of loss into five core values—consistency, discipline, confidence, patience, and passion—with discipline at the heart of his approach.
LEARNING: Never average down on a losing trade and always preserve capital. No trade is bigger than the market, and cutting losses early is crucial.
“If you’re gonna invest or trade, you have to have discipline.”Stephen KalayjianGuest profile
Stephen Kalayjian, Chief Market Strategist and Co-Founder of Ticker Tocker, has over 30 years of experience in the industry trading stocks, futures, and currencies, having begun his career at the American Stock Exchange in 1983.
In 2005, Stephen founded his firm to research and develop software to help identify trends, reversals, patterns, and divergences in the marketplace for all asset classes and time frames. Stephen seeks to generate high alpha trading ideas throughout the day. He and his team employ technical analysis through utilizing the proprietary charting software he developed on Ticker Tocker to forecast the market.
Stephen has traded nearly 2 billion shares over his career.
Worst investment everStephen’s worst trade was one that he made early in his career. When he was 19, a just-graduated high school student, he had saved about $3,000 by doing odd jobs for years. He was eager to leave some mark on the trading floor and opened a brokerage account, staking everything on one notion.
In August 1983, he purchased 50 call options on a blue-chip stock for about $2.75 each, confident that the stock would rise. But Stephen was a call-option novice. He didn’t realize their worth deteriorates over time, and he certainly didn’t have a stop-loss plan.
He buys more as panic sets inAs the stock began to fall quickly, Stephen panicked. He continued to buy more calls as the stock fell (averaging down), digging himself in further. By Thanksgiving, the position was worthless, and his account was “broke beyond broke.” He remembers entering a trading post with his head in his hands, piling up losses, wondering how many times he had gotten it wrong.
A December market rally gave him just enough to salvage a thin margin on his trade: he sold some call contracts in January that ultimately closed out the position and kept the profit. As he describes it himself:
“I had no risk, no discipline… I just rolled the dice,” Stephen admits, describing how his savings vanished.
The inevitable turning pointIn retrospect, that catastrophic first trade was a turning point. Stephen summarizes the lesson he lives by in the five words: consistency, discipline, confidence, patience, and passion – and discipline is “everything” in trading. What had seemed like a ruinous loss proved to be his best teacher.
Lessons LearnedStephen took away some hard-earned trading lessons from that episode – lessons he now teaches to others:
Andrew draws several takeaways from Stephen’s experience that apply to every trader:
To put Stephen’s lessons into practice, all traders can implement these steps:
Stephen’s number one goal for the next 12 months is to inspire and teach traders the right way through Ticker Tocker. His goal is to help people change their lives by making trading knowledge accessible and practical.
Connect with Stephen Kalayjian4.9
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BIO: Stephen Kalayjian is a Chief Market Strategist and Co-Founder of Ticker Tocker, a firm that researches and develops software to help identify trends, reversals, patterns, and divergences in the marketplace for all asset classes and time frames.
STORY: Stephen once risked his entire $3,000 savings on a call option trade at his father’s friend’s brokerage. Unfortunately, that trade went bad. He summed up his experience of loss into five core values—consistency, discipline, confidence, patience, and passion—with discipline at the heart of his approach.
LEARNING: Never average down on a losing trade and always preserve capital. No trade is bigger than the market, and cutting losses early is crucial.
“If you’re gonna invest or trade, you have to have discipline.”Stephen KalayjianGuest profile
Stephen Kalayjian, Chief Market Strategist and Co-Founder of Ticker Tocker, has over 30 years of experience in the industry trading stocks, futures, and currencies, having begun his career at the American Stock Exchange in 1983.
In 2005, Stephen founded his firm to research and develop software to help identify trends, reversals, patterns, and divergences in the marketplace for all asset classes and time frames. Stephen seeks to generate high alpha trading ideas throughout the day. He and his team employ technical analysis through utilizing the proprietary charting software he developed on Ticker Tocker to forecast the market.
Stephen has traded nearly 2 billion shares over his career.
Worst investment everStephen’s worst trade was one that he made early in his career. When he was 19, a just-graduated high school student, he had saved about $3,000 by doing odd jobs for years. He was eager to leave some mark on the trading floor and opened a brokerage account, staking everything on one notion.
In August 1983, he purchased 50 call options on a blue-chip stock for about $2.75 each, confident that the stock would rise. But Stephen was a call-option novice. He didn’t realize their worth deteriorates over time, and he certainly didn’t have a stop-loss plan.
He buys more as panic sets inAs the stock began to fall quickly, Stephen panicked. He continued to buy more calls as the stock fell (averaging down), digging himself in further. By Thanksgiving, the position was worthless, and his account was “broke beyond broke.” He remembers entering a trading post with his head in his hands, piling up losses, wondering how many times he had gotten it wrong.
A December market rally gave him just enough to salvage a thin margin on his trade: he sold some call contracts in January that ultimately closed out the position and kept the profit. As he describes it himself:
“I had no risk, no discipline… I just rolled the dice,” Stephen admits, describing how his savings vanished.
The inevitable turning pointIn retrospect, that catastrophic first trade was a turning point. Stephen summarizes the lesson he lives by in the five words: consistency, discipline, confidence, patience, and passion – and discipline is “everything” in trading. What had seemed like a ruinous loss proved to be his best teacher.
Lessons LearnedStephen took away some hard-earned trading lessons from that episode – lessons he now teaches to others:
Andrew draws several takeaways from Stephen’s experience that apply to every trader:
To put Stephen’s lessons into practice, all traders can implement these steps:
Stephen’s number one goal for the next 12 months is to inspire and teach traders the right way through Ticker Tocker. His goal is to help people change their lives by making trading knowledge accessible and practical.
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